Everything about Abraham Ribicoff totally explained
Abraham Alexander Ribicoff (
April 9,
1910 –
February 22,
1998) was an
American United States Democratic Party politician. He served in the
United States Congress, as governor of Connecticut and as
President John F. Kennedy's
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. He was Connecticut's first and to date only Jewish governor.
Born in
New Britain,
Connecticut to Polish-Jewish immigrants Abraham A. Ribicoff, a factory worker, and Rose Sable Ribicoff, he attended local public schools. His relatively poor parents valued education and insisted that all his earnings from part-time boyhood jobs go toward his future schooling. After high school, he worked for a year at a nearby factory of the G. E. Prentice Company in order to earn additional funds for college. He enrolled at
New York University in 1928, then transferred to the
University of Chicago after the Prentice Company made him their Chicago office manager. While in Chicago, Ribicoff coped with school and work schedules and was permitted to enter the university's
law school before finishing his undergraduate degree. Still a student, he married Ruth Siegel on 28 June 1931; they'd have two children. Ribicoff served as editor of the
University of Chicago Law Review in his third year and received an
LL.B. cum laude in 1933, being admitted to the Connecticut bar the same year. After practicing law in the office of a
Hartford lawyer, he set up his own practice, first in
Kensington and later in Hartford.
Now interested in politics, he began as a member of the
Connecticut state legislature, serving in that body from 1938 to 1942. From 1941 until 1943 and again from 1945 to 1947 he was judge of Hartford Police Court. During his political career Ribicoff was a protege of powerful Democratic state party chairman
John Moran Bailey.
He was elected as a Democrat to the
81st and
82nd Congresses serving from 1949 until 1953. During that time he served on the
Foreign Affairs Committee (a position usually reserved for members with more seniority) and generally proved to be a loyal supporter of
Truman administration foreign and domestic policies. Generally liberal in his outlook, he surprised many by opposing a $32 million appropriation for the construction of a dam in
Enfield, Connecticut, arguing that the money was better spent on military needs and foreign policy initiatives such as the
Marshall Plan.
In 1952 he made an unsuccessful bid for election to fill a vacancy in the
United States Senate, losing to
Prescott Bush.
After returning to his legal practice for two years, he ran for governor against incumbent Republican
John Davis Lodge, winning the election by a little over three thousand votes. As governor (1955-1961), Ribicoff soon faced the challenge of rebuilding his state in the wake of devastating floods that occurred in the late summer and fall of 1955, and he was able to lead bipartisan efforts to aid damaged areas. Ribicoff then successfully argued for increased state spending on schools and welfare programs. He also supported an amendment to the state constitution that enabled local municipalities to have greater governing powers. Easily reelected in 1958, Ribicoff had by now become active on the national political scene. A longtime friend of Senator
John F. Kennedy, Ribicoff had nominated his fellow New Englander for vice president at the
1956 Democratic National Convention and was one of the first public officials to endorse Kennedy's presidential campaign.
When Kennedy became president, Ribicoff was offered his choice of cabinet posts in the new administration. He reportedly turned down the position of
attorney general, fearing that as a Jew he might create needless controversy within the emerging civil rights movement, and instead chose to be secretary of
health, education and welfare (HEW). Although he did manage to secure a revision of the 1935
Social Security Act that liberalized requirements for aid-to-dependent-children funds from Congress, Ribicoff was unable to gain approval for the administration's medicare and school aid bills. Eventually he tired of attempting to manage HEW, whose very size made it, in his opinion, unmanageable.
He was finally elected to the
United States Senate in 1962, replacing retiring incumbent Prescott Bush by defeating Republican nominee
Horace Seely-Brown with 51% of the vote, and served in the
Senate from
January 3,
1963, until January 3, 1981.
Initially a supporter of
Lyndon B. Johnson's programs, Ribicoff eventually turned against the
Vietnam War and the president's management of it, believing that it drained badly needed resources away from domestic programs.
At the
1968 Democratic National Convention, during a speech nominating
George McGovern, he went off-script, saying, "If George McGovern were president, we wouldn’t have these
Gestapo tactics in the streets of
Chicago." Many conventioneers, having been appalled by the response of the Chicago police to the simultaneously occurring anti-war demonstrations, promptly broke into ecstatic applause. As television cameras focused on an indignant Chicago Mayor
Richard J. Daley,
lip-readers throughout America claimed to have observed him shouting, "Fuck you, you Jew motherfucker." Defenders of the mayor would later claim that he was calling Ribicoff a faker. Ribicoff spent the remaining years of his Senate career fighting for such liberal issues as school integration, welfare and tax reform, and consumer protection.
In 1972, after the withdrawal of Senator
Thomas Eagleton from the Democratic vice-presidential nomination, presidential nominee
George McGovern asked Senator Ribicoff (among others) to take Eagleton's place. He refused, publicly stating that he'd no further ambitions for higher office. McGovern eventually chose
Sargent Shriver as his running mate. That year, following the death of his wife, he married Lois Mell Mathes in 1972.
During his time in the Senate he was chairman of the
U.S. Senate Committee on Government Operations (
94th and
95th Congresses) and its successor committee, the
U.S. Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs (95th and
96th Congresses).
Current Connecticut Sen.
Joe Lieberman worked in Ribicoff's Senate office as a summer intern, and met his first wife, Betty Haas, there.
In 1981, Ribicoff retired from the Senate and took a position as special counsel in the New York law firm of
Kaye Scholer LLP and divided his time between homes in
Cornwall Bridge, Connecticut and Manhattan.
Having suffered in his later years from the effects of
Alzheimer's disease, he died in 1998 at the Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale in
The Bronx, New York City and is buried at Cornwall Cemetery.
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