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With a reputation for problem solving and a
voting record to support his common sense approach to issues,
Nebraska’s Senator Ben Nelson has carved for himself a
bipartisan role in a bitterly partisan Washington environment.
In a closely-divided Senate, Nelson’s ability to cross party
lines gives him an unusual amount of power and opportunity to
impact major legislation for a first-term Senator. While media
reports indicate that he is emerging as a consensus builder in
the Senate, Nelson has worked to forge compromises between the
Bush Administration and the Senate on tax cuts, Medicare reform,
and homeland security. But he has never forgotten that he
represents the diverse views of the citizens of Nebraska while
working to get things done in Washington.
Nelson is a native of McCook (Pop. 8000), a
southwest Nebraska town that has been home to two of Nebraska’s
U.S. Senators and three Governors. His mother, Birdella, started
a local taxpayers group to keep an eye on how property taxes
were spent. Nelson’s home-grown sense of fiscal responsibility
is reflected in Nelson’s many votes to reduce America’s tax
burden. At age 17 Nelson won his first election, as governor in
a mock legislature, sparking his interest in public service.
As governor, Nelson pressed to expand the
ethanol industry in Nebraska. He established the Governors’
Ethanol Coalition as part of the National Governors’
Association. Under Nelson’s leadership, Nebraska moved to the
forefront of ethanol production, increasing production from 15
million gallons to more than 300 million gallons in 1997. More
than 6000 Nebraskans are now employed directly or indirectly in
Nebraska ethanol production. In the Senate, one of the first
bills Nelson cosponsored is a bill to boost production of
ethanol and other renewable fuels, sponsored by Indiana Senator
Richard Lugar and South Dakota’s Tom Daschle. Nelson serves as
National Co Chair of Ethanol Across America, a grassroots
organization designed to increase ethanol awareness and
production.
Serving on the Senate Agriculture
Committee, Nelson’s priorities begin with the drought that has
plagued the United States for the last five years. As Governor,
Nelson helped establish the National Drought Mitigation Center
at the University of Nebraska and has tirelessly pushed Congress
to provide comprehensive emergency disaster assistance for
agriculture producers. He borrowed the practice of naming
hurricanes by naming the drought “David” as a ploy to raise
awareness of the devastating economic impact the drought is
having in rural America.
Nelson considers his role as a member of
the Senate Armed Services Committee to be one of pushing reform
and providing support to our armed services and military
personnel. He has had great success working to improve benefits
from health care to education to combat pay for America’s
service men and women.
Nelson has used his position on the Armed
Services Committee to serve as an advocate for Offutt Air Force
Base in Bellevue and other military installations in Nebraska.
He has directed defense research and development dollars to
Nebraska companies and has pushed for major modernization
projects at Offutt. Nelson also works closely with U.S.
Strategic Command officials to ensure the command’s role in out
national security and defense strategy remains prominent.
Nelson’s commitment to strengthening our
military to enhance national security goes beyond active duty
personnel. He is committed to keeping America’s promise to our
veterans. As a member of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee
from 2001 through 2004 he pushed to preserve access to health
care for Nebraska veterans and to expand Veterans
Administration’s use of clinics to provide quality care for
Nebraska veterans. Nelson has questioned administration polices
that change benefits for Nebraska’s veterans and has called for
full funding for the Veterans Administration.
As a young man at the University of
Nebraska - Lincoln, Ben Nelson spent his Sundays serving as a
lay minister to rural Nebraska congregations. In a nod to his
public service leanings, Nelson chose law school over the
ministry. He earned a bachelor’s degree in 1963, a master’s
degree in 1965 and a law degree from the University of Nebraska
in 1970.
Nelson enjoyed a successful career in
insurance law. He has served as CEO of the Central National
Insurance Group, as chief of staff and executive vice president
of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, and as
director of the Nebraska Department of Insurance.
In 1990, Ben Nelson entered the realm of
Nebraska politics by running for Governor. He won the Democratic
primary by only 42 votes. He won the governor’s office be
besting incumbent Kay Orr by 4,000 votes. Nelson’s eight years
in the governor’s office were highlighted by balanced budgets,
expanded health care for children, tax reductions, ethanol
production and approval ratings that reached eighty percent.
Nelson’s plan as Governor was to bridge the gaps between rural
and urban areas; he called his initiative “one Nebraska.” Nelson
was re-elected Governor in 1994 with 74% of the vote, the
largest margin of victory for a governor in half a century. His
second term agenda included creating a “more efficient and
effective state government.”
In 2000, Nelson ran for the U.S. Senate to
fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Senator Bob
Kerrey. Nelson carried the day even as George W. Bush won
Nebraska with 62% of the vote.
As a proud grandfather, Nelson enjoys
spending time with his family, reading, hunting, fishing, and
the whole of outdoor life. An avid hunter, Nelson has won both
the domestic Grand Slam and international World Slam for wild
turkeys and has hunted on safari in Africa.
Ben Nelson and his wife, Diane, live in
Omaha. They have four children and three grandchildren. Nelson
commutes home nearly every weekend to be with his family and
with the people of Nebraska |