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Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has Died

INTERNATIONAL: The pugnacious son of a Nevada hard-rock miner who rose from poverty to become the U.S. Senate majority leader and earned a reputation as a fierce partisan fighter during an era of political gridlock in Washington, Harry Reid, has died at age 82, after a four-year battle with pancreatic cancer, Senator Chuck Schumer has confirmed on Tuesday. Reid had undergone surgery for pancreatic cancer in May 2018.

Reid, a former amateur boxer, has represented Nevada in the U.S. Congress as a Democrat for more than three decades in both the Senate and House of Representatives.

As majority leader, Reid has served as Democratic President Barack Obama's point man in the Senate. In spite of furious Republican opposition, Reid in 2010 has helped secure congressional passage of Obama's signature healthcare law known as Obamacare.

He chose not to run for re-election in 2016, a year after suffering broken ribs and facial bones and injuring an eye in an accident while exercising at home.

Reid had ascended to the job of majority leader in 2007 after the Democrats won control of the Senate. Despite being a political moderate who differed from others in his party on abortion, the environment and gun control, Reid regularly clashed with the Republicans. He maintained poor relations with the opposition party's congressional leaders.

During Reid's time as majority leader, major legislation languished because Democrats and Republicans could not make compromises, with each side blaming the other. His relationship with McConnell was so strained that the Republican leader shunned Reid during crucial U.S. fiscal policy talks and dealt directly with Vice President Joe Biden, a Democrat and former senator who McConnell trusted.

In 2013, fed up with Republican procedural moves blocking Obama's judicial and executive branch nominees, Reid has pushed through the Senate a historic change to the Senate's filibuster rules, preventing a minority party from blocking presidential appointments except those to the Supreme Court.

Republicans said the move was a naked power grab.

Reid was first elected to the House in 1982 and was sent to the Senate by Nevada voters in 1986. He showed remarkable resilience, fighting off spirited re-election challenges.

Tact was not Reid's strong suit. He called Republican President George W. Bush a "loser" and "liar" and said Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan was "one of the biggest political hacks we have in Washington."

He apologized in 2010 for referring to Obama, the first black U.S. president, in private conversations two years earlier as "light-skinned" with "no Negro dialect."

Reid became a Mormon as a young man and eventually became the highest-ranking member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in U.S. public office.

Harry Mason Reid was born into a low-income family in the tiny desert mining town of Searchlight, Nevada, on December 2, 1939. His father was a hard-rock miner with an eighth-grade education who committed suicide in 1972. His mother, who never finished high school, took in laundry from brothels to help out financially.

The family lived in a small cabin with no indoor plumbing, hot water, or telephone.

Reid attended a two-room school through eighth grade, then hitchhiked 40 miles (64 km) each week to high school, boarding with local families before hitchhiking home each weekend.

He graduated from Utah State University in 1961 and then worked nights as a U.S. Capitol policeman while he attended law school at George Washington University in Washington.

Reid was a trial lawyer and held various Nevada state offices. He headed the Nevada Gaming Commission from 1977 to 1981, a post in which he combated organized crime's influence in the state's casinos and endured death threats from mobsters.

In the Senate, Reid won passage of an ethics measure barring senators from accepting gifts, meals, or trips from lobbyists in 2007.

He voted for Iraq war resolutions in 1991 and 2002. While Reid remained a backer of the first Iraq war, he reversed himself and opposed the second one, accusing Bush's administration of misleading the nation into it.

Reid and his wife, Landra, had five children.



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