Nancy Kassebaum

Nancy Kassebaum
Chair of the Senate Labor Committee
In office
January 3, 1995 – January 3, 1997
Preceded byTed Kennedy
Succeeded byJim Jeffords
United States Senator
from Kansas
In office
December 23, 1978 – January 3, 1997
Preceded byJames B. Pearson
Succeeded byPat Roberts
Personal details
Born
Nancy Josephine Landon

(1932-07-29) July 29, 1932 (age 91)
Topeka, Kansas, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouses
  • (m. 1955; div. 1979)
  • (m. 1996; died 2014)
Children4, including William and Richard
Parent
Education

Nancy Josephine Kassebaum Baker (née Landon; born July 29, 1932[1]) is an American politician who represented the State of Kansas in the United States Senate from 1978 to 1997. She is the daughter of Alf Landon, who was Governor of Kansas from 1933 to 1937 and the 1936 Republican nominee for president, and the widow of former Senator and diplomat Howard Baker.

With her victory in the 1978 U.S. Senate election in Kansas, Kassebaum entered the national spotlight as the only woman in the U.S. Senate, and as the first woman to represent Kansas. She was also the first woman ever elected to a full term in the Senate without her husband having previously served in Congress.[a]

In her three terms in the Senate, Kassebaum demonstrated a political independence that made her a key figure in building bipartisan coalitions in foreign affairs and domestic policy.[1] As chair of the Senate Subcommittee on African Affairs, she played a limited role in legislation to sanction the racist apartheid regime in South Africa. The legislation which was enacted in 1986, over a presidential veto, was drafted by Senators Lugar, Roth, McConnell and Dole, although later in life Kassebaum claimed credit for it. As chair of the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, she led the fight for major health care reforms that, for the first time, assured health insurance coverage for people changing jobs with pre-existing medical conditions.

  1. ^ a b "Nancy Landon Kassebaum". U.S. House of Representatives, Office of History, Art and Archives. June 5, 2023. Retrieved June 5, 2023.


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