Ted Kennedy, 1932-2009

Ted Kennedy, 1932-2009

Late U.S. Senator (D) Massachusetts

Senator Edward M. Kennedy represented Massachusetts in the United States Senate for forty-six years. He was elected in 1962 to finish the final two years of the Senate term of his brother, Senator John F. Kennedy, who was elected President in 1960.  Ted Kennedy was re-elected to seven full terms.

Throughout his career, Kennedy fought for issues that benefited the citizens of Massachusetts and the nation. His primary focus was making quality health care accessible and affordable to every American, but he was also active in education reform and immigration reform, raising the minimum wage, defending the rights of workers and their families, strengthening civil rights, assisting individuals with disabilities, fighting for cleaner water and cleaner air, and protecting and strengthening Social Security and Medicare.

Kennedy died after a long battle with brain cancer on  August 25, 2009.  He was 77. 

2 min
We shouldn’t have to shed our open-endedness, says Kennedy.
1 min
Senator Ted Kennedy prescribes love in his counsel.
2 min
Kennedy reminds us that we can’t take democracy for granted.
1 min
Walk humbly and love justice, suggests Kennedy.
2 min
The ideals are still there, and so is the money, Senator Kennedy claims.
9 min
Ted Kennedy discusses where he thinks we are as a country and as individual Americans.
2 min
The Senator from Massachusetts kept repeating to himself, “Don’t mix it up, Teddy.”