:''For other people named Bill Nelson, see
Bill Nelson (disambiguation).''
'Clarence William "Bill" Nelson' (born
September 29,
1942) is the senior
U.S. Senator from
Florida, Nelson is a member of the Democratic Party. Nelson became the
second sitting member of the
United States Congress to fly in space when he flew aboard the
Space Shuttle Columbia as a
Payload Specialist during
NASA mission
STS-61-C (January 12–18, 1986).
Early life
Nelson was born in
Miami to Nannie Merle and C. W. Nelson.
[1] He attended the
University of Florida for three years, where he was a member of
Beta Theta Pi, and then transferred to
Yale University, where he received his
Bachelor of Arts in 1965. He served in the
U.S. Army Reserves from 1965 to 1971. During this time, Nelson studied at the
University of Virginia, where he received his
law degree in 1968.
Nelson married Grace Cavert in 1972; they have two children: Bill Nelson, Jr. and Nan Ellen Nelson.
Early career
Nelson worked as a fire marshal and later as a lawyer before beginning his political career in the
Florida House of Representatives. Nelson served in the state house from 1972 to 1979.
U.S. House of Representatives
Nelson was elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives in
1978. He served in the U.S. House from 1979 to 1991.
In 1986, Nelson became the second sitting member of Congress (and the first from the House) to travel into space. He went through NASA training, along with Senator
Jake Garn, of Utah. He was a
Payload Specialist on
Space Shuttle ''Columbia'''s
STS-61-C mission, with six other astronauts, from January 12–18. Ten days after his return, on
January 28,
1986, the
Space Shuttle ''Challenger'' exploded shortly after lift-off. Nelson was originally scheduled to be on that fateful Challenger flight, but a scheduling conflict bumped him to an earlier launch.
1990–2000
In 1990, Nelson ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination for
Governor of Florida. He lost to former U.S. Senator
Lawton Chiles, who went on to win the general election. During the primary campaign, Nelson tried to make an issue out of Chiles' health and age, a strategy that backfired on him in a state with a large population of retirees and senior citizens.
From 1995 to 2000, Nelson was the Treasurer and Insurance Commissioner of Florida.
U.S. Senate
Election
In 2000, Nelson won the
election for U.S. Senator from Florida, defeating then-Representative
Bill McCollum, the
Republican candidate. The election was to replace retiring Republican Senator
Connie Mack.
Political actions and positions
Nelson has been a vocal opponent of oil drilling off Florida's coast. He supports allowing the government to negotiate for lower drug prices from pharmaceutical companies in the Medicare prescription drug program. He is generally regarded as a moderate, and was among the few Democrats to vote in favor of
CAFTA. He has also voted in favor of tighter
bankruptcy restrictions and abolishing the
estate tax. Nelson has received a 75-percent rating from the
National Abortion Rights Action League [1]. He has voted against the
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act as it had no exception for the life or health of the mother.
[2] He has also voted against a bill providing for criminal penalties for anyone harming an unborn child during the commission of a crime.
[3] In general, Nelson has high ratings from other left-of-center political action groups.
[4]
Nelson has also introduced legislation banning paperless electronic voting machines
[5].
In 2007, the Senate Intelligence Committee voted on a measure to de-fund torture by the
CIA except in "dire emergencies." Nelson was the lone Democrat to vote against the measure, but all Republicans voted against it as well, thus defeating it
[6].
Senator Nelson is also a member of the
Congressional Cuba Democracy Caucus
2006 re-election campaign

Sen. Nelson works with government storm trackers during a hurricane-hunter flight into the center of Hurricane Charley in August 2004
Main articles: Florida United States Senate election, 2006
Nelson's job approval ratings were 49 percent during the 2006 campaign, three percentage points higher than fellow Florida senator
Mel Martinez, a Republican in a nominally
red state.
Republican Rep.
Katherine Harris won the Republican primary, and faced Nelson in the November general election. In an interview with
Sean Hannity on
March 15,
2006, Harris claimed that Nelson was a member of the ideological
far-left and had taken
bribes. She did not state from whom, nor did she give any other specifics as to these allegations. Nelson is generally regarded as a moderate in Florida.
[2]
Jim Dobson promised to launch a battle "from sea to shining sea" against Nelson's reelection if he participated in a filibuster of Bush's ''strict constructionist'' court nominees.
[3] Dobson has been joined by other activists, such as
Randall Terry, because of his opposition to
Samuel Alito and his refusal to join what were largely Republican efforts to block the removal of
Terri Schiavo's feeding tube. The Schiavo incident prompted
Brian Darling, a strategist in
Mel Martinez's staff, to write the
Schiavo memo that articulated a plan to use the Schiavo controversy as a campaign tool against Nelson in 2006. Darling resigned when it was traced to him, and Martinez apologized publicly to Nelson.
[7]
Nelson was reelected as Senator on
November 7,
2006 with 60 percent of the vote. His victory is the largest margin by a Democratic candidate in the state in many years.
[4][5][6]
As a relatively popular Senator from a Southern battleground state, he might be a good addition to a Democratic ticket as a vice-presidential candidate.
Trip to Damascus
On December 13, 2006, Nelson went to Damascus and met with Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad. This came following his appointment to the Senate Intelligence Committee. "He (Assad) stated that we in fact, have an interest, common interest, to stabilize Iraq. I think it is a crack in the door, and it is for discussions to continue," he said in a conference call from Amman, Jordan after meeting Assad in Damascus. The White House said that members of congress should not be going to
Syria. "I think it is a real stretch to think that the Syrians don't know where we stand or what we think. We have made it clear and we will continue to make it clear,"
White House spokesman
Tony Snow said.
In the days following Nelson's meeting with Assad, Senator
Arlen Specter flew to Syria and met with Assad. Specter wrote an op-ed in the
Philadelphia Inquirer that emphasized the importance of such visits and reaffirmed Nelson's position that it was part of his constitutional duty.
[8]
Electoral history
Footnotes
1. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~battle/senators/nelsonbil.htm
2. http://www.surveyusa.com/50State2006/100USSenator060221State.htm
3. http://web.archive.org/web/20050311175154/http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20050101-091244-8539r.htm
4. http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x11385.xml?ReleaseID=942
5. http://www.mason-dixon.com/news_text.cfm?news_id=237
6. http://strategicvision.biz/political/florida_poll_072606.htm
External links
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United States Senator Bill Nelson 'official Senate site'
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Federal Election Commission — Bill Nelson campaign finance reports and data
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NASA — Bill Nelson official astronaut biography
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New York Times — Bill Nelson News collected news and commentary
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On the Issues — Bill Nelson issue positions and quotes
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OpenSecrets.org — Bill Nelson campaign contributions
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Project Vote Smart — Senator Bill Nelson (FL) profile
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SourceWatch Congresspedia — Bill Nelson profile
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Washington Post — Congress Votes Database: Bill Nelson voting record
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Nelson for US Senate 'official campaign site'