(right) meets backstage with from left: Political Director
Patrick Gaspard, Wisconsin Governor
Jim Doyle and Senator Herb Kohl at U.S. Cellular Arena in 2010. Kohl has been described as having been a populist-leaning
liberal. Kohl supported President
Barack Obama's health reform legislation; he voted for the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in December 2009, and he voted for the
Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010.
Fiscal policy Kohl voted in favor of most lawsuit reform measures as well as for rules tightening
personal bankruptcy. He long supported amending the
U.S. Constitution to require a
balanced budget. He was one of the few Democrats to vote for the
tax cut passed in 2001, and he also supported the elimination of the "
marriage penalty". Despite these views, he was seen as generally supportive of
progressive taxation. Like many moderate Democrats, he voted in favor of the
welfare reform measures in the mid-1990s. He was also not opposed to the creation of individual, private savings accounts to supplement
Social Security. He favored
affirmative action and supported setting aside funds for women and minorities. Kohl rejected the proposal to amend the U.S. Constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman and supported measures that ban
discrimination based on
sexual orientation. Kohl consistently voted against the
Flag Desecration Amendment. In 2005, Kohl secured a victory for one of his main causes: requiring handguns to be sold with
child safety locks. The amendment was attached to the
Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, with every Democrat and many Republicans voting in favor of the amendment. Earlier in his career, he helped push the
Gun-Free Schools Act which the
U.S. Supreme Court overturned in 1995 and submitted many amendments to that effect. He was a strong supporter of public education and rejected
school vouchers. Kohl voted in favor of allowing for the establishment of educational savings accounts. and the
Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) and voted against the
Freedom to Farm Act in 1996. He supported fast-tracked trade normalization with the
People's Republic of China and free trade with some of the
developing world. Kohl voted against authorizing the
Gulf War in 1990. He voted in 2002 to authorize military force in
Iraq. Kohl voted on a number of occasions with more liberal Democrats to reduce military spending, voting against 1996 defense appropriations increases and supporting a veto of funding new military projects. Even though he was among 98 U.S. senators to have voted for the
PATRIOT Act, Kohl subsequently opposed this legislation and voted to require warrants for
wiretapping or the detention of prisoners. ==Personal life and death==