U.S. Senate tenure
Elections In
1992, Gregg decided to run for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by two-term Republican
Warren Rudman. He defeated Democrat John Rauh, and took his seat as a United States Senator in 1993. He was re-elected to a second term in
1998 after defeating George Condodemetraky. He ran for a third term in
2004 and defeated
campaign finance activist
Doris "Granny D" Haddock, the then 94-year-old
Democratic nominee, by 66% to 34%. After withdrawing from his nomination to become
United States Secretary of Commerce in the
presidential administration of
Democrat Barack Obama on February 12, 2009, Gregg said he would "probably not" seek
reelection in 2010, when his term of office was set to expire.
Leadership In January 2005, Gregg was elected to chair the
U.S. Senate Committee on Budget by the
Senate Republican Conference, and steadfastly supported lower spending. ''. On November 14, 2008 Gregg was appointed by United States Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell to serve on the five-member
Congressional Oversight Panel created to oversee the implementation of the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act. Gregg "stepped aside" on December 1, citing his Senate workload:
Platform Judd Gregg is a moderate Republican. He is fiscally conservative and socially moderate. The non-partisan
National Journal gave then-Senator Gregg a composite ideology rating of 65% conservative and 35% liberal.
Republicans for Environmental Protection issued Gregg an "environmental harm demerit" for sponsoring the 2006 S.C. Resolution 83, which according to REP "included only one revenue-raising instruction to Senate appropriations committees, an abuse of the congressional budget process in order to force
oil drilling in the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge", and "would perpetuate America's dangerous oil dependence and damage the most scenic, wildlife-rich reserve in the
circumpolar north." Nonetheless, the same organization praised Gregg, together with
John E. Sununu, for their work to pass the New England Wilderness act, which classified nearly of New Hampshire and Vermont as
wilderness. In 2006, Gregg received a score of 43% from the nonpartisan
League of Conservation Voters. The
University of New Hampshire renamed its Environmental Technology Building
Gregg Hall, because Gregg used earmarks to secure $266 million of federal funds for research and development projects for the university. The
Judd Gregg Meteorology Institute (JGMI), established in 2003, is the center of meteorological and atmospheric research at
Plymouth State University in
Plymouth, NH, which offers the only meteorology degree program in the state. The Senator was also instrumental in the establishing of the
New Hampshire Institute of Politics at
Saint Anselm College in 1999. In 2007, Gregg voted for the
Clean Energy Act of 2007 (H.R. 6) and the
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007 (S. 1639). In October 2009, Gregg said, "You talk about
systemic risk. The systemic risk today is the Congress of the United States ... we're creating these massive debts which we're passing on to our children ... (the figures) mean we're basically on the path to a
banana republic-type of financial situation in this country. " Gregg has a
moderate record on social issues. In June 2006, he joined six of his fellow Republicans in voting against the
Federal Marriage Amendment. In April 2007, he was among the breakaway Republicans to support the
Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act. However, his record on the issue of abortion is otherwise a solidly
anti-abortion one. Gregg has voted for some gun control measures and against others. He voted against the
Brady Bill, but in recent years has voted for trigger control locks on firearms and in favor of the ban on assault weapons. On December 17, 2009, Gregg voted to extend Chairman
Ben Bernanke's term.
Presidential politics During the
2004 Presidential Election, Gregg stood in for
John Kerry during practice sessions held by
George W. Bush in preparation for the
2004 United States Presidential Election Debates. Four years earlier he had played the part of
Al Gore for the same purpose. On October 29, 2007, Gregg endorsed
Mitt Romney, former Governor of
Massachusetts, to be the Republican nominee for President of the United States. Gregg had not foreclosed the possibility of running for President himself after he left the Senate but he did say it was "not likely":
The Spanish Justice System and Guantanamo Bay In April 2009, Senator Gregg was sent to accompany an American diplomat to speak with a Spanish diplomat
Luis Felipe Fernández de la Peña after a war crimes case was filed by Spanish
NGO Association for the Dignity of Spanish Prisoners at the
Audiencia Nacional of Spain accusing them of crimes in Iraq and
Guantanamo Bay. The case targeted six former US government officials for allegedly violating the
Geneva Convention, the
1984 Convention Against Torture, and the
1998 Rome Statute. The six accused were:
Alberto Gonzales,
David Addington,
William Haynes,
Douglas Feith,
Jay Bybee, and
John Yoo.
Controversies In the Senate, Gregg was the leading Republican negotiator and author of the
TARP program, which bailed out financial institutions, while he had a multimillion-dollar investment in
Bank of America. After leaving the Senate Gregg became an advisor to the investment bank Goldman Sachs. In February 2009, the
Associated Press reported that Gregg and his family had profited personally from federal
earmarks secured by the senator for the redevelopment of the
Pease Air Force Base in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire into an industrial park. According to Senate records, Gregg has collected from $240,017 to $651,801 from his investments in
Pease Air Force Base, while helping to arrange at least $66 million in federal aid for the former base. Gregg as a member of President Barack Obama's deficit commission defended cutting Social Security by quoting
Willie Sutton who, when asked why he robbed banks, replied, "because that's where the money is." ==Commerce Secretary nomination and withdrawal==