Former US Senator Joe Lieberman, First Jew on Major Party Presidential Ticket, Dies at 82

Former US Senator Joe Lieberman, First Jew on Major Party Presidential Ticket, Dies at 82

Reuters and Algemeiner Staff


Former US Senator Joe Lieberman speaks at an event in Ashraf-3 camp, which is a base for the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (MEK) in Manza, Albania, July 13, 2019. Photo: REUTERS/Florion Goga

Former US Senator and Democratic Party vice presidential nominee Joe Lieberman died on Wednesday at age 82 in New York City after suffering complications from a fall, his family said.

“His beloved wife, Hadassah, and members of his family were with him when he passed,” the statement said. “Senator Lieberman‘s love of God, his family, and America endured throughout his life of service in the public interest.”

Lieberman was the Democratic Party’s vice presidential nominee in the 2000 election, which was won by Republican George W. Bush over Democrat Al Gore. Lieberman was the first Jewish candidate on a major party presidential ticket in the US. He was an ardent supporter of both Israel and Iranian opposition groups seeking to overthrow the Islamist regime in Tehran.

The former senator failed in a bid for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination, hurt by his support for the Iraq War.

A centrist, Lieberman was first elected to the US Senate in 1988. He lost the state’s Democratic primary in 2006, but retained his seat by winning the general election as an independent candidate.

In a further break from the Democratic Party, Lieberman endorsed Republican Senator John McCain for president in a speech at the Republican National Convention in 2008.

But Lieberman would later back Democrats Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020 in their bids for the presidency.

Lieberman retired from the Senate in 2013 after four six-year terms.

Joe was as fine an American as they come and one of the most decent people I met during my time in Washington,” Republican former President George W. Bush said in a statement.

Most recently, Lieberman was leading No Labels, a centrist group that hopes to launch an outsider bid for the White House.

In a recent Reuters interview, Lieberman discussed the effort and how it at times felt like building a plane in midair.

“We’re doing something that I think hasn’t been done before. We are on the ground getting on the ballot and going to let a candidate emerge and take on the rest,” Lieberman said.

“That’s quite different. So, frankly, there was no choice but to build a plane and fly it while it was being built. And I’m very grateful to how far we’ve come under those circumstances,” he said.

Lieberman, who held a law degree from Yale Law School, was a member of the Connecticut State Senate and then attorney general of Connecticut before becoming a US senator.

Lieberman had three children from two marriages; his first marriage ended in divorce.

Lieberman‘s funeral was set for Friday in his hometown of Stamford, Connecticut.


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