Harry Reid, former Democratic leader of the US Senate, is dead


(Washington) Former US Senate Leader Harry Reid, an iconic figure in the Democratic Party and in politics in the United States for decades, has died at the age of 82, his wife announced Tuesday.

 "He died peacefully this afternoon," she said in a statement, adding that the death followed a four-year battle with pancreatic cancer.

 Majority leader in the Senate between 2007 and 2015, the elected Democrat was a major figure in the end of George W. Bush’s presidency, and much of Barack Obama’s two terms.

 Harry Reid had notably used his long experience in Congress to help the Democratic president push through his Obamacare medicare reform, one of the most important legislative projects of his eight years in the White House.

 This calm and laconic speaker was born and raised in the small mining town of Searchlight, western Nevada, in a house with no running water.

 Considered more conservative than most Democrats in the Senate, this practicing Mormon was a staunch opponent of abortion, a position that frequently won him head-on opposition from some colleagues in his party.

 Tributes from the Democratic side quickly followed the news of his death.

 Barack Obama shared a letter Harry Reid's wife asked him to write shortly before his death, in which the former president thanked "a good friend."

 "I would not have become president if it had not been for your encouragement and support, and I would never have achieved most of what I have been able to accomplish without your talent and determination," writes Barack Obama.

 President Joe Biden, former vice president of Barack Obama, hailed a "giant in our history" for whom "it was not power for the sake of power.  It was the power to do good for people. "

 (Washington) Former US Senate Leader Harry Reid, an iconic figure in the Democratic Party and in politics in the United States for decades, has died at the age of 82, his wife announced Tuesday.

 "He died peacefully this afternoon," she said in a statement, adding that the death followed a four-year battle with pancreatic cancer.

 Majority leader in the Senate between 2007 and 2015, the elected Democrat was a major figure in the end of George W. Bush’s presidency, and much of Barack Obama’s two terms.

 Harry Reid had notably used his long experience in Congress to help the Democratic president push through his Obamacare medicare reform, one of the most important legislative projects of his eight years in the White House.

 This calm and laconic speaker was born and raised in the small mining town of Searchlight, western Nevada, in a house with no running water.

 Considered more conservative than most Democrats in the Senate, this practicing Mormon was a staunch opponent of abortion, a position that frequently won him head-on opposition from some colleagues in his party.

 Tributes from the Democratic side quickly followed the news of his death.

 Barack Obama shared a letter Harry Reid's wife asked him to write shortly before his death, in which the former president thanked "a good friend."

 "I would not have become president if it had not been for your encouragement and support, and I would never have achieved most of what I have been able to accomplish without your talent and determination," writes Barack Obama.

 President Joe Biden, former vice president of Barack Obama, hailed a "giant in our history" for whom "it was not power for the sake of power.  It was the power to do good for people. "

 For current Senate Leader Democrat Chuck Schumer Harry Reid "never forgot where he came from, and he used his boxing instincts to fearlessly fight against those who hurt the poor and the class  medium ".

 Former Democratic President Bill Clinton said that Harry Reid "never shies away from necessary political battles, but believes compromise is vital for a functioning democracy."  "Thanks to the laws he masterfully guided through ratification, millions of Americans are living better lives," he added.

 The leader of the Republicans in the United States Senate, Mitch McConnell, recalled that while "the nature of my work and that of Harry's has frequently led us to a sometimes intense conflict in matters of policy", "I have never doubted that  Harry always did what he deeply and sincerely believed was right for Nevada and for our country ”.

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