2006 Senate campaign , Senate Minority Leader
Harry Reid, Senator
Chuck Schumer, and former Senator
Bob Kerrey campaign for Jim Webb's bid for U.S. Senate , former Governors
Doug Wilder,
Mark Warner, and then-Governor
Tim Kaine campaign for Jim Webb In late 2005, a campaign to
draft Webb to run for the
Senate in 2006 began on the internet, promoted by
netroots activists such as those at the blog
Raising Kaine. On February 7, 2006, he announced that he would seek the
Democratic nomination for the 2006 Senate race against incumbent
Virginia Senator
George Allen. In the Democratic primary on June 13, 2006, Webb faced longtime businessman and lobbyist Harris Miller. Webb won with 53.5% of the vote, in a race with low turnout. On August 11, 2006, an incident occurred in which Allen used the word
macaca to refer to Webb campaign associate
S.R. Sidarth, who was filming an event as a "tracker" for the Webb campaign. A poll the following week showed Webb gaining 10 percentage points. The race, which at one point looked like a sure win for Allen, became one of the most watched and closest races of the 2006 elections. Webb's entry into the race and primary victory changed the political landscape. Political analyst
Larry Sabato said in May that "Jim Webb is George Allen's worst nightmare: a war hero and a Reagan appointee who holds moderate positions.... Allen tries to project a Reagan aura, but Webb already has it." On September 7, 2006, Webb released his first television advertisement, which included footage of a 1985 speech by
Ronald Reagan that praised Webb's service as a Marine. The next day, the Chief of Staff for the
Reagan Library wrote to Webb's campaign on behalf of former first lady
Nancy Reagan, urging them not to air the advertisement saying it was neither fair nor respectful because it gave the impression of an endorsement. The Webb campaign disagreed, saying, "What Reagan said about Jim Webb, that belongs to Jim Webb, frankly." In October 2006, the Allen campaign issued a press release quoting several passages from Webb's novels with sexual content, including graphic references to female anatomy and purported pedophilia, homosexuality and incest, citing a passage in which a Southeast Asian father ritually places the penis of his young son in his mouth. The press release said that the passages showed a "continued pattern of demeaning women". Allen's campaign refused to tell a local radio news station,
WTOP-FM, whether it in fact had issued a news release on the matter. In response, Jim Webb explained to
The Washington Post, "I actually saw this happen in a slum in Bangkok when I was there as a journalist." According to an article on Raw Story, the conservative website
CNS News cited a case in Nevada in which a Cambodian mother was arrested for a similar act. According to the CNS article, an office manager for the Cambodian Association of America confirmed it is a cultural norm in Thailand and Cambodia. On November 9, 2006, after AP and
Reuters projected that Webb had won the seat, Allen conceded the election. Although the margin was narrow – less than half of 1% of the total vote and therefore small enough under Virginia law to allow demanding a recount – Allen stated that he would not challenge the result.
Senator-elect On November 15, 2006, Senate majority-leader-in-waiting
Harry Reid assigned Webb to three committees: the committees on
Foreign Relations,
Veterans' Affairs, and
Armed Services. "That same day, an op-ed authored by Webb appeared in the pages of
The Wall Street Journal. Titled 'Class Struggle: American workers have a chance to be heard'. The piece addressed the harmful economic inequality in the U.S., with the elites on one side and American workers on the other side. The article cites the "age of globalization and outsourcing, and with a vast underground labor pool from illegal immigration", as well as extravagant executive compensation, the detrimental effects of free trade and globalization, iniquitous tax cuts, speedily rising health care costs, and stagnation in income as the reasons for the increasing disparity between the elites and American workers.
Exchange with President George W. Bush On November 28, 2006, at a White House reception for those newly elected to Congress, Webb did not choose to wait in the line to have his picture taken with the president, whom Webb often criticized during the campaign. The president approached Webb later and asked him, "How's your boy?", referring to Webb's son, a Marine serving in Iraq. Webb replied "I'd like to get them out of Iraq, Mr. President." Bush responded, "That's not what I asked you. How's your boy?", Webb responded, "That's between me and my boy, Mr. President."
The Hill cited an anonymous source who claimed that Webb was so angered by the exchange that he confessed he was tempted to "slug" the president. Webb later remarked in an interview, "I'm not particularly interested in having a picture of me and George W. Bush on my wall." In response to the incident, some conservatives criticized Webb, including
George Will, who called Webb a "boor" and wrote, "[Webb] already has become what Washington did not need another of, a subtraction from the city's civility and clear speaking." Others, such as conservative columnist and former Reagan speechwriter
Peggy Noonan, reserved their criticism for Bush, writing: "I thought it had the sound of the rattling little aggressions of our day, but not on Mr. Webb's side." Webb was asked about the exchange in a January 4, 2007 appearance on
Hardball with Chris Matthews. He told
Matthews: After his son returned from Iraq, Webb "buried the hatchet" with the president by setting up a private chat with his son, the president, and himself in the Oval Office.
Tenure as Senator celebration held at the
U.S. Navy Memorial On January 3, 2007, Webb was sworn into the
110th U.S. Senate, accompanied by Sen.
John Warner, R-Va., a fellow former
Secretary of the Navy; and former Virginia Democratic Governor.
Chuck Robb, who held the same seat before losing to Allen. On his first day in the Senate, Webb introduced the
Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act, to expand benefits for military families, which he had written. The act replaces key provisions of the Montgomery
G.I. Bill for recent veterans and "makes veterans benefits identical to those soldiers received following World War II". "With many of our military members serving two or three tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is past time to enact a new veterans' education program modeled on the World War II era G.I. bill. This is exactly what our legislation does", Webb said. It became law on June 30, 2008, as part of the
Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2008. In a January 4, 2007, appearance on
The Situation Room, Webb articulated his position on the
Iraq War: What we really need to do is to get into the arena where we can talk about a strategy, talk about the pluses and the minuses of the
Baker-Hamilton Commission and work toward a solution that, on the one hand, will allow us to remove our combat troops, but on the other, will increase the stability of the region, allow us to continue to fight against international terrorism and allow us, as a nation, to address our strategic interests around the world. And this is – this is one of the drawbacks that we've had with so many troops having been put into this constant rotational basis inside one country when we have a war against international terrorism that's global. Asked by
Wolf Blitzer if he would ever support the efforts of
Dennis Kucinich to cut funding for the war, Webb said, I – you know, I lived through Vietnam. I lived through it as a Marine and I know that those sorts of approaches, while they seem attractive on one level are really not that realistic. What we want to do – and I was talking with a number of senators today – is to try to get some of these so-called emergency legislation packages back into the committee process so that the committees can actually play. On January 23, 2007, Webb delivered the
Democratic response to the president's
State of the Union address, focusing on the economy and Iraq. Webb's speech drew positive reviews, and was regarded as one of the stronger State of the Union responses in recent memory. On March 5, 2007, Webb introduced his second piece of legislation, , intended to prohibit the use of funds for military operations in
Iran without the prior approval of Congress. In a statement on the floor of the Senate, Webb said, "The major function of this legislation is to prevent this Administration from commencing unprovoked military activities against Iran without the approval of the Congress. The legislation accomplishes this goal through the proper constitutional process of prohibiting all funding for such an endeavor." On March 26, 2007, a senatorial aide of Webb, Phillip Thompson, was arrested for carrying Webb's loaded pistol as he entered the Russell Senate Office Building and for carrying unregistered ammunition. The weapon was discovered when Thompson went through an X-ray machine with a briefcase that contained a loaded pistol and two additional loaded magazines. Charges against the aide were dismissed after prosecutors concluded it could not be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Thompson was aware that the gun and ammunition were in the briefcase. Webb responded to his aide's arrest by reiterating his support for gun-owners' rights:I'm a strong supporter of the Second Amendment; I have had a permit to carry a weapon in Virginia for a long time; I believe that it's important; it's important to me personally and to a lot of people in the situation that I'm in to be able to defend myself and my family.
2009 visit to Southeast Asia On August 14, 2009, Webb visited
Myanmar (Burma), seeing its junta's leader, Gen.
Than Shwe, and also the pro-democracy leader
Aung San Suu Kyi, who was under house arrest. During Webb's visit with Than Shwe, Webb negotiated the release and deportation of an imprisoned American,
John Yettaw. Upon his return to the U.S., Webb wrote an editorial titled "We Can't Afford to Ignore Myanmar" for
The New York Times, arguing for the easing of sanctions on the country. Webb stated that sanctions have isolated the country, thereby encouraging the ruling regime to turn to China and allowing "China to dramatically increase its economic and political influence in Myanmar, furthering a dangerous strategic imbalance in the region." Webb also noted that, unlike Myanmar, China does not allow opposition parties. Webb has stated that he started the pivot to Asia during the Bush Administration. Webb visited
Vietnam as part of a two-week trip to five Southeast Asian countries. Webb, who can speak Vietnamese, has had a continuous involvement in Asian and Pacific affairs that long predates his time in the Senate. In addition to his more recent visits as a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Webb has worked and traveled throughout this vast region, from
Micronesia to Burma, for nearly four decades, as a Marine Corps officer, a defense planner, a journalist, a novelist, a Department of Defense executive, and as a business consultant. He worked in the 1990s as a consultant for companies attempting to do business in Vietnam.
Criminal Justice Commission Act of 2009 and Senators
Ben Nelson and Jim Webb prior to a hearing On March 26, 2009, Webb filed the Criminal Justice Commission Act of 2009 (SB 714), which would create a blue ribbon commission to reevaluate the criminal justice system and drug policy and make recommendations for reform. Noting that the United States houses 25% of the world's inmates despite having only 5% of the world's population, Webb proposed a comparison between U.S. incarceration policies and those of other developed nations. At a
United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs hearing, Webb described the
criminal justice system as being in "... a profound, deeply corrosive crisis that we have largely been ignoring at our peril." He also criticized the lack of standards in prison administration and highlighted the justice system's negative impact on communities. The subcommittee chairman, Sen.
Arlen Specter (D-PA), expressed support for the bill at the hearing and indicated his intent to move the bill to the full
United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary. By the end of June 2010, the bill had 39 cosponsors. In the fall of 2009, an amendment to SB 714 was proposed by Sen.
Charles Grassley (R-IA) that would have prohibited the commission created by the bill from discussing or recommending the decriminalization or legalization of any substance prohibited under the
Controlled Substances Act. The proposed amendment drew criticism from some in the online community. Grassley later rescinded the amendment and claimed in a
Des Moines Register op-ed that he had proposed it to "start a debate on this important issue". SB 714 passed the Senate Judiciary Committee by a voice vote on January 21, 2010. but no further action was ever taken.
Retirement from the U.S. Senate On February 9, 2011, Webb announced that he would not run for re-election to his Senate seat in 2012.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Armed Services •
Subcommittee on Airland •
Subcommittee on Personnel (chairman) •
Subcommittee on SeaPower •
Committee on Foreign Relations •
Subcommittee on Western Hemisphere, Peace Corps and Narcotics Affairs •
Subcommittee on African Affairs •
Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs (chairman) •
Subcommittee on European Affairs •
Committee on Veterans' Affairs •
Joint Economic Committee ==2008 vice presidential speculation==