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Tom Harkin is a product of small town Iowa who has not forgotten
his origins.
He was born November 19, 1939 to a coal miner father and a
Slovenian immigrant mother who passed away when Tom was ten years
old. Tom, his three brothers and two sisters and their parents
shared a two-bedroom home in Cumming, Iowa (population 150). Tom is
a fourth generation Iowan, a father of two, a Navy veteran, and a
graduate of Iowa State University.
Growing up, the Harkin children learned well the importance of
family, community, responsibility, and hard work. Tom puts those
lessons to work for Iowa. He has earned a reputation for giving a
voice to those too often overlooked in Washington: working families,
women, people with disabilities, children, students, seniors, family
farmers, and small business owners. In Congress, Tom is a recognized
leader in areas including education, health care and agriculture.
Tom worked various jobs through his youth, on farms, as a paper
boy, on construction sites, and at a Des Moines bottling plant.
After graduation from Dowling High School in Des Moines, he attended
Iowa State University on a Navy ROTC scholarship. He earned his
degree at ISU in Government and Economics.
Following graduation from ISU, Tom joined the Navy where he
served as a jet pilot on active duty from 1962 to 1967 and
afterwards continued to fly in the Naval Reserves. He is an active
member of American Legion Post 562 in Cumming.
In 1968, Tom married Ruth Raduenz, the daughter of a farmer and a
school teacher from Minnesota. Tom and Ruth have two daughters: Amy,
born in 1976, and Jenny, born in 1981. Ruth currently works in the
private sector and is a member of the Iowa Board of Regents.
Tom first came to Washington, D.C. in 1969 to join the staff of
Iowa Congressman Neal Smith. As a staff member accompanying a
congressional delegation to South Vietnam, he revealed to the world
the infamous “tiger cages” inside a South Vietnamese prison camp
at Con Son Island. Withstanding tremendous pressure to withhold the
sensitive information, Tom’s photographs and detailed account of
the tiger cages were published in Life Magazine, exposing a cover-up
and unearthing the shocking, inhuman conditions political prisoners
were forced to endure. As a result, hundreds of tortured political
prisoners were released.
In 1972, Tom and Ruth graduated from Catholic University of
America Law School in Washington, D.C. and then returned to Iowa,
settling in Ames. Tom worked as an attorney with the Legal Aid
Society of Polk County, assisting Iowans who could not otherwise
afford legal help. Ruth won election as Story County Attorney.
Tom’s commitment to finding fair and responsible solutions and
promoting common sense reform has earned him broad-based support
across Iowa. He first won election to the U.S. Congress from Iowa’s
Fifth Congressional District in 1974, defeating an incumbent in a
long-standing Republican district.
Tom served in the House of Representatives for ten years and, in
1984, he again challenged an incumbent, winning election to the U.S.
Senate. Iowans returned him to the U.S. Senate in 1990, 1996 and
again in 2002, making him the first Iowa Democrat ever to earn a
fourth Senate term.
Tom pioneered the use of “Work Days” in Iowa, days spent on
the job working alongside fellow Iowans to gain both practical
experience and a hands-on understanding of Iowa’s needs. He has
worked as a cop on the beat, school teacher, farmer, bricklayer,
nurse’s aide, and construction worker. And Tom was the first
Member of the U.S. Congress to have a Mobile Office (now a flex-fuel
vehicle capable of running on E-85), the familiar Harkin van which
brings the services of the U.S. Congress to all of Iowa’s 99
counties.
As a member of the Senate subcommittee that oversees education
funding, Tom has led efforts to improve education. He has worked to
reduce class size, to give students better computer and Internet
access, expand school counseling and other school safety programs,
and improve teacher training. Tom has taken the lead in pushing to
modernize America’s crumbling schools. He secured funding for the
“Harkin Grants” for the modernization and repair of Iowa’s
public schools. Tom is now promoting legislation that builds on the
Iowa program to provide all children in our nation safe, modern
school facilities conducive to world-class learning.
Tom is also a long-time leader in the fight to improve health
care. As co-chair of the Senate Rural Health Caucus, he’s
successfully pushed legislation to bring health professionals to
small towns and rural areas. As a member of the Senate subcommittee
that funds most health programs, he’s guided efforts to focus more
on prevention and early intervention as a means of reducing costs
and improving quality. Tom has led the effort to double medical
research funding to speed up cures for killers like cancer, heart
disease, and Alzheimer’s. He’s put particular emphasis on women’s
health, doubling funding for breast cancer research and launching a
national breast and cervical cancer early detection program.
Iowa leads the nation in the percentage of its population aged 85
and older and Tom has long been a stalwart supporter of senior
citizens. He has fought to preserve and protect Social Security and
Medicare and is now working to dedicate much of the budget surplus
to shoring up these two vital programs. Tom has also led an effort
to root out waste, fraud and abuse in Medicare and is now working to
give seniors help with the rising costs of prescription drugs.
Tom Harkin’s late brother, Frank, lost his hearing at a very
young age, so he knows firsthand the challenges facing Americans
with disabilities. Harkin is a longstanding champion of persons with
disabilities and became a national leader on disability policy when
he authored the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act, which protects
the civil rights of more than 54 million Americans with physical and
mental disabilities. He’s also led efforts to improve educational
opportunities for children with disabilities.
A lifelong advocate for America’s family farms and rural
communities, Tom Harkin has risen to be Chairman of the Senate
Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee. He has promoted new
uses and markets for our agricultural products, such as ethanol,
soy-diesel and bio-plastics, and fought to restore security to
family farmers through improved farm income protection, increased
support for conservation and better demand and prices for farm
commodities. Tom has introduced legislation to improve food safety.
He has also devoted attention and resources to revitalize the
economies of Iowa’s rural communities and small towns. |