Difference between revisions of "Jack Kemp"

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|constitutes=sportsman, politician
 
|constitutes=sportsman, politician
 
|interests=terrorism
 
|interests=terrorism
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|militarist-monitor=https://militarist-monitor.org/profile/jack-kemp-1935-2009/
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Kemp
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Kemp
 
|image=440px-Jack_Kemp_official_portrait.jpg
 
|image=440px-Jack_Kemp_official_portrait.jpg
 
|image_alt=Jack Kemp official portrait.jpg
 
|image_alt=Jack Kemp official portrait.jpg
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|description=Closely associated with the hawkish wing of the Republican Party.
 
|image_width=220px
 
|image_width=220px
 
|spouses=Joanne Kemp
 
|spouses=Joanne Kemp
 
|alma_mater=Occidental College
 
|alma_mater=Occidental College
 
|website=http://kemppartners.com/about-jack-kemp/jack-kemp-bio
 
|website=http://kemppartners.com/about-jack-kemp/jack-kemp-bio
|birth_date=1935-07-13, 1935
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|birth_date=July 13, 1935
 
|birth_name=Jack French Kemp
 
|birth_name=Jack French Kemp
 
|birth_place=Los Angeles, California
 
|birth_place=Los Angeles, California
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==Promoting the "War On Terror"==
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Jack Kemp was a member of the [[U.S. House of Representatives]] (R-NY) for nearly two decades and was closely associated with the hawkish wing of the [[Republican Party]].
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Kemp first rose to national prominence in the 1960s as a quarterback for the San Diego Chargers and later the Buffalo Bills. After retiring from football, he entered politics, becoming a leading figure in the Republican Party for several decades. He represented the area of Buffalo, New York, in the U.S. House from 1971-1988. In 1989, he was given a cabinet post in the administration of President [[George H. W. Bush]], serving as secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
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Kemp was well known for his advocacy of limited taxation and militarist U.S. foreign policies, including waging a broad “[[war on terror]].” He once declared, “[[Radical Islamists]] have declared war on [[freedom]], [[democracy]], and [[modernity]]. Their weapons are acts of [[terrorism]]. We must ask all people who cherish freedom to join us in fighting this war. It must be won and as MacArthur said, ‘There is no substitute for victory.’”<ref>Committee on the Present Danger, “Member in Brief: Jack Kemp,” http://www.committeeonthepresentdanger.org (accessed on May 4, 2009).</ref>
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Jack Kemp spoke at the seminal 1979 [[Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism]] on "The Unseen Hand." and attended the 1984 [[Washington Conference on International Terrorism]].
 
Jack Kemp spoke at the seminal 1979 [[Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism]] on "The Unseen Hand." and attended the 1984 [[Washington Conference on International Terrorism]].
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 +
==Presidential Campaigns==
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After serving nine terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, Kemp ran for the 1988 GOP presidential nomination. After getting trounced by [[George H.W. Bush]], he was appointed secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Bush administration. Kemp left government after Bush’s loss in the 1992 election, affiliating himself with a number of rightist [[think tanks]] and institutions.<ref>Kemp Partners, “Principals: Jack Kemp,” http://www.kemppartners.com/principals-jk1.htm.</ref>
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Kemp’s 1988 campaign platform featured starkly conservative stances on economic issues. It also included planks aimed at legitimizing U.S. support for “[[freedom fighters]],” such as the right-wing Nicaraguan [[Contras]], and deploying the “Star Wars” [[strategic missile defense system]]. Concerning Star Wars, Kemp once said, “as important as it was to put a man on the moon at the end of the ’60s, it is more important now to defend our country and our allies in [[Europe]] and [[Israel]].”<ref>Maureen Dowd, “Kemp to Seek Presidential Nomination,” New York Times, April 7, 1987.</ref>
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In 1996, Kemp was selected as Sen. [[Bob Dole]]’s (R-KS) vice presidential running mate in his failed bid for the White House. Serving as Kemp’s campaign speechwriter was [[Paul Ryan]], then a nascent figure in the Republican Party firmament. During the 2012 presidential campaign, when [[Mitt Romney]] chose Ryan—by then a member of the U.S. House from [[Wisconsin]] — as his VP running mate, many observers noted Ryan’s connections to Kemp, who served as an important mentor.<ref>Bernie Becker, “GOP congressman: Ryan natural heir to Jack Kemp,” The Hill, August 11, 2012, http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/243195-gop-congressman-ryan-natural-heir-to-jack-kemp.</ref>
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In 2008, Kemp served as an economic advisor to 2008 Republican presidential nominee Sen. [[John McCain]] (R-AZ). Because of Kemp’s track record as coauthor of the 1981 Kemp-Roth tax-cut legislation (the “Reagan tax cuts”), observers speculated that if elected, McCain would have pursued tax policies in line with Kemp’s views.<ref>ABC News, This Week with George Stephanopolous, February 17, 2008;</ref> In a May 2008 column defending McCain’s tax platform, Kemp wrote, “McCain's support for the lower marginal tax rates on capital gains and dividends is on the right side of history, as well as the right side of the electorate—no pun intended.”<ref> Jack Kemp, “McCain’s Tax Policies Best for Nation’s Future,” Townhall.com, May 6, 2008.</ref> (Kemp’s 2008 support for McCain contrasts with his opposition to him in 2000, when he told writer Frank Schaeffer, “McCain is a war maker, and I'm a peacemaker, so is George Bush. McCain would be too dangerous as president.”)<ref>Frank Schaeffer, “The Cult of the Warrior: Jack Kemp Was Right—McCain Would Be Too Dangerous As President,” Huffington Post, May 18, 2008.</ref>
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==Foreign and Defense Policy==
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Kemp is frequently associated with hawkish U.S. overseas policies, having been a stalwart [[Cold Warrior]], a supporter of the Nicaraguan [[Contras]], and a member of numerous militarist advocacy groups during his political career. However, during the lead up to [[the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq]], Kemp was reluctant to see the United States use military force, writing in early 2003 that “it would be a tragedy if a few War Hawks pushed us into an unnecessary invasion and occupation of an Arab country.”<ref>Jack Kemp, “Give Iraq a List,” Copley News Service, January 21, 2003, http://web.archive.org/web/20031008141108/www.empoweramerica.org/stories/storyReader$678.</ref>
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After the invasion, Kemp was largely supportive of the Bush administration’s efforts in [[Iraq]] and the “[[war on terror]]” more broadly, generally limiting his criticisms to the economic realm. In 2006, he explained, “My most serious problem is that there is no economic component to the war on terror. … I think we should be building on President Bush’s idea of a trade zone in the Islamic world, but there has to be aid and some type of hope that life can be better for women, their children, families and, as the general [Peter Pace] pointed out, some economic component that will lead to jobs and an opportunity to better one’s life.”<ref> “Transcript for March 5: Peter Pace, John Edwards and Jack Kemp,” Meet the Press, March 5, 2006.</ref>
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Until his death, Kemp remained closely tied to policy circles through numerous board and think tank positions, as well as his lobbying and consulting firm, Kemp Partners. The firm counted among its major clients [[Rafael Armament Development Authority]], an Israeli manufacturer of missile defense systems and [[drone|unmanned aircraft]].<ref> Rafael Armament Development Authority, “Products,” http://www.rafael.co.il/marketing/abclist.aspx?FolderID=183&letter=S; OpenSecrets.org, “Lobbying: Kemp Partners: Groups That Have Retained Kemp Partners (2008),” http://www.opensecrets.org/lobby/firmsum.php?lname=Kemp%20Partners&year=2008.</ref>
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Kemp was a member of the revived version of the Cold War-era [[Committee on the Present Danger]] and served on the board of advisors of the neoconservative-aligned [[Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs]], which promotes strategic cooperation between the United States and [[Israel]] on a variety of defense issues.<ref>Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, “Board of Advisers: Hon. Jack Kemp,” https://www.jinsa.org/node/492.</ref> He also was a fellow at the Heritage Foundation and Hoover Institution<ref>Online NewsHour,“Online Backgrounders: Biography of Jack Kemp,” http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/bio/kemp_bio.html.</ref>; served on the board of the [[Foundation for Defense of Democracies]], a neoconservative think tank founded by [[Clifford May]] shortly after the [[September 11, 2001]] terror attacks<ref>Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, “Biographies: Jack Kemp,” http://www.defenddemocracy.org/biographies/biographies_show.htm?doc_id=154708.</ref>; and was chairman of the Domestic Policy Committee of the International Democratic Union, “a worldwide organization of political leaders of the ‘center-right,’ dedicated to advancing the cause of democracy, freedom and free market economics.”<ref>Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, “Board of Advisers: Hon. Jack Kemp,” https://www.jinsa.org/node/492.</ref>
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In 2005, he became co-chair (with [[John Edwards]]) of the [[Council on Foreign Relations]]’ Task Force on Russian-American Relations, which focused mainly on exploring security and energy issues between the two superpowers.<ref> Council on Foreign Relations, “John Edwards and Jack Kemp Co-Chair Council Task Force on Russian-American Relations,” May 31, 2005.</ref> Task force members came from across the political spectrum and included [[Lorne Craner]] of the [[International Republican Institute]], [[Dov Zakheim]] of contractor [[Booz Allen Hamilton]], and [[Michael McFaul]] of the [[Hoover Institution]]. In 2006, the task force concluded that“U.S.-Russian relations are clearly headed in the wrong direction.” “Contention is crowding out consensus,” the report declared. “The very idea of a 'strategic partnership' no longer seems realistic.”<ref>Council on Foreign RelationsIndependent Task Force on Russian-American Relations, “Russia's Wrong Direction: What the United States Can and Should Do,” Task Force Report No. 57, 2006.</ref> Commenting on the report, Kemp told the Inter Press Service, “On a whole host of issues—Iran, energy, HIV/AIDS, and preventing terrorists from acquiring weapons of mass destruction—it's vital to have Russia on our side.”<ref> Jim Lobe, “US, Russia Moving Apart,” Inter Press Service, March 8, 2006.</ref>
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Kemp cofounded the pro-free market [[Empower America]] in [[1993]] with fellow conservatives [[William Bennett]] and [[Jeanne Kirkpatrick]]. The group, whose activities included launching the pro-war pressure group [[Americans for Victory over Terrorism]], was later merged with [[Citizens for a Sound Economy ]]and renamed [[FreedomWorks]], a [[Tea Party]]-affiliated group that has played an important role promoting right-wing Republican candidates. The group’s reputation, and Kemp’s, was tarnished in 2007 when [[FBI]] agents investigating fraud in the [[U.N. oil-for-food program]] in [[Iraq]] interviewed Kemp about his ties to lobbyist and oil businessman [[Samir Vincent]]. Vincent, who pled guilty to violating U.S. sanctions on Iraq, was listed in a FreedomWorks press release as a member of a committee Kemp had formed to develop a “21st century Marshall Plan” for economic development in the Middle East.<ref>http://www.newsweek.com/id/48025/output/print</ref>
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==Business and Other Interests==
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Kemp successfully leveraged his Washington connections to promote numerous business ventures. “I introduce companies to people who have access to capital,” he told the New York Times in 1999. “I'm involved in start-ups, in speed-ups. While I don't consider myself an expert, I can open doors and make introductions.”<ref>Leslie Wayne, “Coaching Entrepreneurs for Profit,” New York Times, November 7, 1999.</ref> As the Times reported, “Financiers say Mr. Kemp's advice is invaluable. ‘Only recently has Silicon Valley realized government exercises a big role,’ said Joseph G. Fogg 3rd, a venture capitalist and Empower America board member.” That board, the Times reported, was “filled with top names in private equity.”<ref>Leslie Wayne, “Coaching Entrepreneurs for Profit,” New York Times, November 7, 1999.</ref> Among the boards that Kemp sat on were [[Oracle]], Hawk Corporation, Free Market Global, and G2 Satellite Solutions.<ref>http://investing.businessweek.com/businessweek/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=612207&privcapId=37412460&previousCapId=25021373&previousTitle=FreeMarket%20Global%20Limited</ref>
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Born in Los Angeles, Kemp made large donations to [[Pepperdine University]], a Christian school where his late brother served on the Board of Regents, to found the Jack F. Kemp Institute for Political Economy. As the institute’s nascent website describes it, “The Pepperdine School of Public Policy's unique commitment to American democracy, free markets, and Judeo-Christian values makes it a fitting home for an important part of the Kemp legacy.”<ref>http://publicpolicy.pepperdine.edu/kemp-institute/</ref>
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==References==
 
==References==
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Revision as of 05:39, 25 April 2021

Person.png Jack Kemp   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(sportsman, politician)
440px-Jack Kemp official portrait.jpg
BornJack French Kemp
July 13, 1935
Los Angeles, California
Died2009-05-02 (Age 73)
Bethesda, Maryland
Alma materOccidental College
ReligionPresbyterian
Children • Jeff
• Jennifer Judith
• Jimmy
SpouseJoanne Kemp
Founder ofEuropean Foundation for Democracy
Member ofCommittee on the Present Danger/Members, Council on Foreign Relations/Historical Members, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation
Interests“terrorism”
PartyRepublican
Closely associated with the hawkish wing of the Republican Party.

Employment.png United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
February 13, 1989 - January 19, 1993

Employment.png Chairman of the House Republican Conference

In office
January 3, 1981 - January 3, 1987
Succeeded byDick Cheney

Jack Kemp was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (R-NY) for nearly two decades and was closely associated with the hawkish wing of the Republican Party.

Kemp first rose to national prominence in the 1960s as a quarterback for the San Diego Chargers and later the Buffalo Bills. After retiring from football, he entered politics, becoming a leading figure in the Republican Party for several decades. He represented the area of Buffalo, New York, in the U.S. House from 1971-1988. In 1989, he was given a cabinet post in the administration of President George H. W. Bush, serving as secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Kemp was well known for his advocacy of limited taxation and militarist U.S. foreign policies, including waging a broad “war on terror.” He once declared, “Radical Islamists have declared war on freedom, democracy, and modernity. Their weapons are acts of terrorism. We must ask all people who cherish freedom to join us in fighting this war. It must be won and as MacArthur said, ‘There is no substitute for victory.’”[1]

Jack Kemp spoke at the seminal 1979 Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism on "The Unseen Hand." and attended the 1984 Washington Conference on International Terrorism.

Presidential Campaigns

After serving nine terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, Kemp ran for the 1988 GOP presidential nomination. After getting trounced by George H.W. Bush, he was appointed secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Bush administration. Kemp left government after Bush’s loss in the 1992 election, affiliating himself with a number of rightist think tanks and institutions.[2]

Kemp’s 1988 campaign platform featured starkly conservative stances on economic issues. It also included planks aimed at legitimizing U.S. support for “freedom fighters,” such as the right-wing Nicaraguan Contras, and deploying the “Star Wars” strategic missile defense system. Concerning Star Wars, Kemp once said, “as important as it was to put a man on the moon at the end of the ’60s, it is more important now to defend our country and our allies in Europe and Israel.”[3]

In 1996, Kemp was selected as Sen. Bob Dole’s (R-KS) vice presidential running mate in his failed bid for the White House. Serving as Kemp’s campaign speechwriter was Paul Ryan, then a nascent figure in the Republican Party firmament. During the 2012 presidential campaign, when Mitt Romney chose Ryan—by then a member of the U.S. House from Wisconsin — as his VP running mate, many observers noted Ryan’s connections to Kemp, who served as an important mentor.[4]

In 2008, Kemp served as an economic advisor to 2008 Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ). Because of Kemp’s track record as coauthor of the 1981 Kemp-Roth tax-cut legislation (the “Reagan tax cuts”), observers speculated that if elected, McCain would have pursued tax policies in line with Kemp’s views.[5] In a May 2008 column defending McCain’s tax platform, Kemp wrote, “McCain's support for the lower marginal tax rates on capital gains and dividends is on the right side of history, as well as the right side of the electorate—no pun intended.”[6] (Kemp’s 2008 support for McCain contrasts with his opposition to him in 2000, when he told writer Frank Schaeffer, “McCain is a war maker, and I'm a peacemaker, so is George Bush. McCain would be too dangerous as president.”)[7]

Foreign and Defense Policy

Kemp is frequently associated with hawkish U.S. overseas policies, having been a stalwart Cold Warrior, a supporter of the Nicaraguan Contras, and a member of numerous militarist advocacy groups during his political career. However, during the lead up to the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Kemp was reluctant to see the United States use military force, writing in early 2003 that “it would be a tragedy if a few War Hawks pushed us into an unnecessary invasion and occupation of an Arab country.”[8]

After the invasion, Kemp was largely supportive of the Bush administration’s efforts in Iraq and the “war on terror” more broadly, generally limiting his criticisms to the economic realm. In 2006, he explained, “My most serious problem is that there is no economic component to the war on terror. … I think we should be building on President Bush’s idea of a trade zone in the Islamic world, but there has to be aid and some type of hope that life can be better for women, their children, families and, as the general [Peter Pace] pointed out, some economic component that will lead to jobs and an opportunity to better one’s life.”[9]

Until his death, Kemp remained closely tied to policy circles through numerous board and think tank positions, as well as his lobbying and consulting firm, Kemp Partners. The firm counted among its major clients Rafael Armament Development Authority, an Israeli manufacturer of missile defense systems and unmanned aircraft.[10]

Kemp was a member of the revived version of the Cold War-era Committee on the Present Danger and served on the board of advisors of the neoconservative-aligned Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, which promotes strategic cooperation between the United States and Israel on a variety of defense issues.[11] He also was a fellow at the Heritage Foundation and Hoover Institution[12]; served on the board of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a neoconservative think tank founded by Clifford May shortly after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks[13]; and was chairman of the Domestic Policy Committee of the International Democratic Union, “a worldwide organization of political leaders of the ‘center-right,’ dedicated to advancing the cause of democracy, freedom and free market economics.”[14]

In 2005, he became co-chair (with John Edwards) of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Task Force on Russian-American Relations, which focused mainly on exploring security and energy issues between the two superpowers.[15] Task force members came from across the political spectrum and included Lorne Craner of the International Republican Institute, Dov Zakheim of contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, and Michael McFaul of the Hoover Institution. In 2006, the task force concluded that“U.S.-Russian relations are clearly headed in the wrong direction.” “Contention is crowding out consensus,” the report declared. “The very idea of a 'strategic partnership' no longer seems realistic.”[16] Commenting on the report, Kemp told the Inter Press Service, “On a whole host of issues—Iran, energy, HIV/AIDS, and preventing terrorists from acquiring weapons of mass destruction—it's vital to have Russia on our side.”[17]

Kemp cofounded the pro-free market Empower America in 1993 with fellow conservatives William Bennett and Jeanne Kirkpatrick. The group, whose activities included launching the pro-war pressure group Americans for Victory over Terrorism, was later merged with Citizens for a Sound Economy and renamed FreedomWorks, a Tea Party-affiliated group that has played an important role promoting right-wing Republican candidates. The group’s reputation, and Kemp’s, was tarnished in 2007 when FBI agents investigating fraud in the U.N. oil-for-food program in Iraq interviewed Kemp about his ties to lobbyist and oil businessman Samir Vincent. Vincent, who pled guilty to violating U.S. sanctions on Iraq, was listed in a FreedomWorks press release as a member of a committee Kemp had formed to develop a “21st century Marshall Plan” for economic development in the Middle East.[18]

Business and Other Interests

Kemp successfully leveraged his Washington connections to promote numerous business ventures. “I introduce companies to people who have access to capital,” he told the New York Times in 1999. “I'm involved in start-ups, in speed-ups. While I don't consider myself an expert, I can open doors and make introductions.”[19] As the Times reported, “Financiers say Mr. Kemp's advice is invaluable. ‘Only recently has Silicon Valley realized government exercises a big role,’ said Joseph G. Fogg 3rd, a venture capitalist and Empower America board member.” That board, the Times reported, was “filled with top names in private equity.”[20] Among the boards that Kemp sat on were Oracle, Hawk Corporation, Free Market Global, and G2 Satellite Solutions.[21]

Born in Los Angeles, Kemp made large donations to Pepperdine University, a Christian school where his late brother served on the Board of Regents, to found the Jack F. Kemp Institute for Political Economy. As the institute’s nascent website describes it, “The Pepperdine School of Public Policy's unique commitment to American democracy, free markets, and Judeo-Christian values makes it a fitting home for an important part of the Kemp legacy.”[22]


 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism2 July 19795 July 1979Israel
Jerusalem
The birthplace of the "War on Terror" doctrine, "a major international forum for the movement against détente".
Washington Conference on International Terrorism24 June 198427 June 1984US
Washington DC
A key conference in establishing the "War On Terror", 5 years after the seminal Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism

 

Event Witnessed

EventLocation(s)Description
Washington Conference on International TerrorismUS
Washington DC
A key conference in establishing the "War On Terror", 5 years after the seminal Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism
Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References

  1. Committee on the Present Danger, “Member in Brief: Jack Kemp,” http://www.committeeonthepresentdanger.org (accessed on May 4, 2009).
  2. Kemp Partners, “Principals: Jack Kemp,” http://www.kemppartners.com/principals-jk1.htm.
  3. Maureen Dowd, “Kemp to Seek Presidential Nomination,” New York Times, April 7, 1987.
  4. Bernie Becker, “GOP congressman: Ryan natural heir to Jack Kemp,” The Hill, August 11, 2012, http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/243195-gop-congressman-ryan-natural-heir-to-jack-kemp.
  5. ABC News, This Week with George Stephanopolous, February 17, 2008;
  6. Jack Kemp, “McCain’s Tax Policies Best for Nation’s Future,” Townhall.com, May 6, 2008.
  7. Frank Schaeffer, “The Cult of the Warrior: Jack Kemp Was Right—McCain Would Be Too Dangerous As President,” Huffington Post, May 18, 2008.
  8. Jack Kemp, “Give Iraq a List,” Copley News Service, January 21, 2003, http://web.archive.org/web/20031008141108/www.empoweramerica.org/stories/storyReader$678.
  9. “Transcript for March 5: Peter Pace, John Edwards and Jack Kemp,” Meet the Press, March 5, 2006.
  10. Rafael Armament Development Authority, “Products,” http://www.rafael.co.il/marketing/abclist.aspx?FolderID=183&letter=S; OpenSecrets.org, “Lobbying: Kemp Partners: Groups That Have Retained Kemp Partners (2008),” http://www.opensecrets.org/lobby/firmsum.php?lname=Kemp%20Partners&year=2008.
  11. Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, “Board of Advisers: Hon. Jack Kemp,” https://www.jinsa.org/node/492.
  12. Online NewsHour,“Online Backgrounders: Biography of Jack Kemp,” http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/bio/kemp_bio.html.
  13. Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, “Biographies: Jack Kemp,” http://www.defenddemocracy.org/biographies/biographies_show.htm?doc_id=154708.
  14. Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, “Board of Advisers: Hon. Jack Kemp,” https://www.jinsa.org/node/492.
  15. Council on Foreign Relations, “John Edwards and Jack Kemp Co-Chair Council Task Force on Russian-American Relations,” May 31, 2005.
  16. Council on Foreign RelationsIndependent Task Force on Russian-American Relations, “Russia's Wrong Direction: What the United States Can and Should Do,” Task Force Report No. 57, 2006.
  17. Jim Lobe, “US, Russia Moving Apart,” Inter Press Service, March 8, 2006.
  18. http://www.newsweek.com/id/48025/output/print
  19. Leslie Wayne, “Coaching Entrepreneurs for Profit,” New York Times, November 7, 1999.
  20. Leslie Wayne, “Coaching Entrepreneurs for Profit,” New York Times, November 7, 1999.
  21. http://investing.businessweek.com/businessweek/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=612207&privcapId=37412460&previousCapId=25021373&previousTitle=FreeMarket%20Global%20Limited
  22. http://publicpolicy.pepperdine.edu/kemp-institute/
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