- Jim Sasser
Infobox Senator | name=James Ralph Sasser
nationality=American
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Tennessee
party=Democrat
term_start=January 3 ,1977
term_end=January 3 ,1995
preceded=Bill Brock
succeeded=Bill Frist
order2=6th United States Ambassador to the People's Republic of China
president2=Bill Clinton
term_start2=February 14 1996
term_end2=July 1 1999
preceded2=J. Stapleton Roy
succeeded2=Joseph Prueher
date of birth=birth date and age|1936|09|30
place of birth=Memphis, Tennessee
dead=alive
date of death=
place of death=
spouse=Mary Sasser
religion=Baptist
footnotes=James Ralph Sasser (born
September 30 ,1936 ) is an Americanpolitician andattorney . A Democrat, Sasser served three terms as aUnited States Senator fromTennessee (1977–1995) and was Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee. From 1995 to 1999, during theClinton Administration , he was the United States Ambassador to thePeople's Republic of China .Early life and career
James Ralph Sasser was born in
Memphis, Tennessee onSeptember 30 ,1936 . He attended public schools in Nashville. Sasser attended theUniversity of Tennessee from 1954 to 1955. He earned his undergraduate degree fromVanderbilt University in 1958; followed by his law degree from Vanderbilt Law Shool in 1961. He was admitted to the Tennessee Bar in 1961 and began practicing law in Nashville.From 1957 to 1963, Sasser served in the the United States Marine Corps Reserves.cite web|accessdate=2007-06-15
url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=S000068
title=Sasser, James Ralph — Biographical Information
work=Biographical Directory of the United States Congress]Originally from
Memphis, Tennessee , Jim Sasser was a long time Democratic activist, manager ofAlbert Gore, Sr. 's unsuccessful 1970 reelection campaign. Alawyer by trade, Sasser sought election in his own right and won his party's 1976 nomination for the Senate. He defeated, among others, Nashvilleentrepreneur and attorneyJohn Jay Hooker , then still considered to be a serious candidate due to his strong personality, his (intermittent) wealth, and his connections with the Nashville "Tennessean"'s controlling Seigenthaler family. His sonGray Sasser , also a lawyer, is the current chair of the Tennessee Democratic Party.enate Campaigns
1976 Election
Upon winning his party's Senate nomination, Sasser set out to attack the record of one-term incumbent Sen.
Bill Brock , heir to aChattanooga candy fortune. Sasser emphasized Brock's connections to former PresidentRichard M. Nixon and his use ofincome tax code provisions that had, despite his great wealth and considerable income, resulted in his paying less than $2,000 in income tax the previous year. Sasser was able to capitalize on the tax issue by pointing out that Brock had paid less than many Tennesseans of considerably more modest means.Sasser's campaign was also greatly aided by the efforts of ex-Senator Gore. Brock had defeated the elder Gore for the Senate in 1970 largely upon the basis of Gore's support for
civil rights , his friendship with theKennedy political family , and his opposition to theVietnam War . Sasser won rather handily over Brock, and went on to serve three Senate terms.Re-election, 1982 and 1988
He turned back a serious effort against him by five-term United States Representative
Robin Beard very handily in 1982. That showing was so impressive that his 1988 Republican opponent was a virtual political unknown named Bill Andersen, whose underfunded, essentially token campaign never stood a chance.enate accomplishments
With the retirement of Senator
Lawton Chiles in 1989, Sasser became Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee. In that role, he served as a key ally ofSenate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell ofMaine . Sasser helped negotiate the 1990 budget summit agreement with PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush . And in 1993, he engineered passage of PresidentBill Clinton 's first budget, which reduced the deficit by $500 billion dollars over 10 years" [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CEED8163BF93AA35750C0A965958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all Clinton and House Democrats Agree On Spending Cuts, but Ante Is Raised] ," by Michael Wines in theNew York Times .] " [http://www-tech.mit.edu/V113/N12/spending.12w.html Clinton to Cut Spending Further] ," by Eric Pianin and Ruth Marcus in theWashington Post .] but passed without any Republican votes.With this success under his belt, began to work his way upward in the party leadership. When Leader Mitchell announced his intention to retire, it seemed to be a foregone conclusion that upon his re-election in 1994 Sasser would be the new majority leader.
1994 campaign
There were two unforeseen events that negated this scenario. One was the large scale of discontent that the American people seemed to have toward the first two years of the Clinton administration, especially the proposal for a national health-care system largely put together and advocated by Clinton's wife,
Hillary Rodham Clinton . The other was the somewhat unexpected nomination ofNashville heart transplant surgeonWilliam H. Frist for the seat by the Republicans.Frist was a political unknown and a total novice (who never voted until he was 36) at campaigning, but was from one of Nashville's most prominent and wealthiest medical families, which gave him name recognition (in the Nashville area, at least), and resources adequate to match the campaign war chest built up by a typical three-term incumbent, a challenge most "insurgent" candidates find to be impossible. A further factor working to Frist's advantage was a simultaneous Republican campaign by
actor and attorneyFred Thompson for the other Tennessee Senate seat, which came open whenAl Gore had resigned to becomeVice President of the United States . To an extent, Frist was able to bask in the reflected glory of this formidable stage presence, and additionally developed some campaigning skills, which were almost totally absent in the early stages of his campaign. Another factor in Frist's favor was that Sasser was never seen as possessing much charisma of his own. During the campaign Nashville radio stations were derisive towards Sasser to the point of stating that he could only win "a Kermit The Frog lookalike contest." In one of the largestupset s in a night of political upsets in the November 1994 U.S. general elections, Frist defeated the 16 years older incumbent Sasser by approximately 14 percentage points.Ambassador to China
Sasser went on to serve as
ambassador toChina during the period of alleged nuclear spying and the campaign finance controversy that involved possible efforts by China to influence domestic U.S. politics during the Clinton Administration. Sasser again gained media attention when the U.S.Embassy inBeijing was besieged after U.S. warplanes mistakenly bombed the Chinese embassy inBelgrade during the U.S. intervention in theKosovo War . Shortly after the siege of the embassy was lifted, Ambassador Sasser retired (he was slated to do so before the siege, so his retirement was not a direct result) and returned to the United States, where he presently divides his time between Tennessee andWashington, D.C. , as aconsultant .Electoral history
*1976 Democratic Primary for U.S. Senate (TN)
**Jim Sasser, 44%
**John Jay Hooker , 31%
**Harry Sadler, 10%
**David Bolin, 8%*1976 General Election for U.S. Senate (TN)
**Jim Sasser (D), 52%
**Bill Brock (R) (inc.), 47%*1982 General Election for U.S. Senate (TN)
**Jim Sasser (D) (inc.), 62%
**Robin Beard (R), 38%*1988 General Election for U.S. Senate (TN)
**Jim Sasser (D) (inc.), 65%
**Bill Andersen (R), 35%*1994 General Election for U.S. Senate (TN)
**Bill Frist (R), 56%
**Jim Sasser (D) (inc.), 42%Notes
References
*cite news| url=http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2519/is_n4_v16/ai_16946739 | publisher=Campaigns and Elections | last=Beiler |first=David | date=1995-04 |accessdate=2006-02-22| title=Surgical Precision: How Senate Power Jim Sasser Was Stomped by a Political Novice in Tennessee
*cite web|accessdate=2007-04-22
url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=S000068
title=Sasser, James Ralph (1936– )
work=Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.