Former Sen. Arlen Specter dead at 82

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter — who served as a Republican in the Senate from 1980 until he switched allegiance to the Democratic Party in 2009 and lost his primary the following year — died Sunday morning at the age of 82

His family said in a statement he passed away “at his home in Philadelphia, from complications of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.” Specter had been in poor health for a number of years; he was treated for Hodgkin’s disease in 2005 and cancer in 2008.


“Arlen Specter was always a fighter,” President Obama said in a statement Sunday. “From his days stamping out corruption as a prosecutor in Philadelphia to his three decades of service in the Senate, Arlen was fiercely independent – never putting party or ideology ahead of the people he was chosen to serve.”

Specter was the longest-serving senator in Pennsylvania history. On the issues, Specter was a moderate who opposed most gun control, supported a woman’s right to choose, voted to repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and voted in favor of authorizing the Iraq War.

( PHOTOS: Arlen Specter 1930-2012)

One of Specter’s biggest splashes on the political stage came in 1991, when he toughly questioned Anita Hill during the hearings on Clarence Thomas’s appointment to the Supreme Court. Specter accused Hill of committing “flat-out perjury” as she testified that Thomas had sexually harassed her.

He also openly criticized the Republican Party in 1999 for impeaching President Bill Clinton in the wake of the Monica Lewinsky scandal, and declared that his verdict was “not proven.” And — at what would turn out to mark the beginning of the end of his long career — Specter again broke with his party in 2009 to vote in support of President Barack Obama’s stimulus. Then he made the decision to permanently break with the Republican Party.

The Pennsylvania senator announced he would switch parties April 28, 2009, saying he felt the Republican Party had swung too far to the right. “I now find my political philosophy more in line with Democrats than Republicans,” Specter said in a statement.

( Also on POLITICO (2009): Specter: GOP moved far to the right)

“I am unwilling to have my 29-year Senate record judged by the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate. I have not represented the Republican Party. I have represented the people of Pennsylvania,” he said. “I have decided to run for reelection in 2010 in the Democratic primary.”

In 2010, Specter’s political career came to its stunning end with a loss in the Democratic primary to Rep. Joe Sestak. Sestak attacked Specter for his Republican past and for switching parties “to save one job: His, not yours,” as Sestak’s campaign starkly put it in one ad. Sestak went on to lose to Republican Pat Toomey, who took over Specter’s post Jan. 3, 2011.

“A man of sharp intelligence and dogged determination,” Toomey said in a statement Sunday, “Sen. Specter dedicated his life to public service and the commonwealth of Pennsylvania. His impact on our state and public policy will not be forgotten. My wife Kris and I send our thoughts and prayers to Joan and the entire Specter family.”

( Also on POLITICO (2010): The admiral sinks Arlen Specter)

Specter was born in Wichita, Kan., on Feb. 12, 1930, to Harry and Lillie Specter. When Specter was 4 years old, his father — who emigrated from Ukraine — took his youngest son to meet the Wichita sheriff, who told the youngster he would make him a deputy sheriff. Harry Specter sent a photo of Arlen sporting the sheriff’s badge to “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” and in 1934, a picture made it into the publication with the caption that Arlen was the youngest deputy sheriff in history, Specter wrote in his 2000 autobiography “A Passion for Truth.”

The Specter family later moved to the small town of Russell, Kan., where Arlen graduated from high school in 1947. He went off to the University of Oklahoma before transferring to the University of Pennsylvania to be closer to his family, which had moved to Philadelphia to find his sister a Jewish husband, Specter wrote. Specter spent his college years on the debate team and as a member of the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, and he met his future wife, Joan, at a dance during his sophomore year. Specter took Joan to a Saturday night party at a fraternity house for their first date in the fall of 1949, he told the Penn Current in 2011. He graduated from Penn in 1951 with a degree in international relations.

Specter then served stateside in the United States Air Force from 1951 to 1953 as a second lieutenant in the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, according to Specter’s Senate website. Joan and Specter married in 1953, just months before he entered Yale Law School. He went on to graduate in 1956 and began to practice law in Philadelphia after passing the bar. His career before joining the political fray included opening a law practice, Specter & Katz, and a stint as assistant district attorney of Philadelphia.

“Sometimes I am asked what is the best job I ever had, senator or district attorney, and I say assistant district attorney. That is where there is a great deal of experience,” Specter said in 2005.

But Specter soon entered the political sphere — in 1964, he served on the Warren Commission as assistant counsel, investigating the assassination of John F. Kennedy and famously authoring the “single-bullet theory” that supported the idea that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman in Dallas.

The following year, Specter was elected to serve as District Attorney of Philadelphia, a position he held until 1974. He was a registered Democrat at the time, but beat the incumbent and switched to the Republican Party, The American Spectator noted in an article about Specter’s book “Life Among the Cannibals.”

“I was the first Republican candidate to ever win the backing of Americans for Democratic Action,” Specter wrote in the book. “… I was apprehensive about running on the Republican ticket, which was almost like changing my religion.”

He lost his bid for a third term in 1973 and made his first run for Senate three years later, losing the primary to Sen. John Heinz. In 1978, Specter sought the governorship — and again lost the primary. But in 1980, he made a successful run and was elected to the Senate.

“Unlike nearly all the other 15 Republicans elected to the Senate in 1980,” Specter wrote in “Life Among the Cannibals,” “I did not fly in on Reagan’s coattails as part of ‘the Reagan revolution,’ but in some ways in spite of it.”

The essential contradiction for Specter was that he was an obvious political opportunist but saw himself as a principled man buffeted by a changing world.

His famous Scottish Law rationale in Clinton’s impeachment captured both this and his intellectual vanity that could make him seem a bit of a fool. That said, he belonged to a moderate school of Republicans that once had their place in the Senate — and were a real force. He was a strong proponent of abortion rights — something you don’t see any more, especially from a Republican who had a huge influence over health and education spending.

NIH owes Specter a lot, and he pursued money for medical research often at the expense of other priorities some would argue. He was a huge pork barrel artist too, and at the height of earmarks, the clerks would say that the Labor HHS budget was really two bills: the appropriations and then the earmarks.

Specter served on a number of committees during his long career in the Senate and as the chair of the Intelligence, Veterans’ Affairs and the Judiciary committees. He supported expanded veterans’ rights, worked for the reauthorization of the Patriot Act, introduced several immigration bills and supported funding for medical research during his time in office. Additionally, Specter called for an investigation into practices at Guantanamo Bay in 2006 and for a congressional vote on military action in Iraq in 2002, according to the New York Times.

Specter was also a senior member of the Appropriations Committee, serving as both chairman and ranking members of the Labor-HHS subcommittee. Specter used that post to stuff the bill with hundreds, sometimes thousands, of earmarks, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and he defended the practice as well within the rights of a senator and Congress as whole.

While Republicans were furious at Specter in the aftermath of his party switch, many remembered him as a tenacious senator who seemed to insert himself prominently into the debates dominating Congress.

Pointing out that Specter’s roots were from neighboring Kansas, Missouri GOP Sen. Roy Blunt noted the bond between the two states was strong.

“He gave a lot of dedicated service to the country,” Blunt said. “I didn’t always agree with him, but I was always amazed by his determination to be in the fight, to be in the debate, to look for a position that made him a significant factor in whatever discussion was going on.”

David Urban, Specter’s former chief of staff, remembered the former senator as “the toughest, smartest guy in the room.”

“People may find controversial some of the positions he took, but the guy was incredibly hard working, incredibly smart, incredibly dedicated to the job,” Urban said.

”If you were involved in litigation you’d pick the toughest, smartest lawyer to litigate your case in front of a jury and that’s Arlen Specter. He’s the toughest smartest guy in the room.”

Specter stayed busy after leaving office, sitting behind home plate at Phillies games, joining the University of Pennsylvania Law School as an adjunct professor in 2011 and trying his hand at stand-up comedy at an open-mic night that year.

“I’ve been in comedy now for 30 years — the only difference is that it’s not stand-up. We all have comfortable chairs,” Specter joked. “It costs about $27 million to win a seat in the United States Senate, so when you win one, you like to sit down.”

Specter is survived by his wife Joan, his sons Shanin and Steve, and four grandchildren.

- David Rogers, Anna Palmer and Manu Raju contributed to this report.