U.S. Senate (1993-2011)
Elections 1992 Feingold's U.S. Senate career began in 1992 with a victory over
Republican incumbent Senator
Bob Kasten. Feingold had little name recognition in the state and was campaigning in a primary against Congressman
Jim Moody and businessman Joe Checota, but adopted several proposals to gain the electorate's attention. He painted five promises on his garage door, calling it a
contract with Wisconsin voters. Among the promises was a pledge to rely on Wisconsin citizens for most of his contributions and a pledge to hold a "listening session" in each of
Wisconsin's 72 counties each year he was in office. Feingold released an advertisement featuring an
Elvis Presley impersonator endorsing his candidacy. Kasten responded to the ad with one of his own featuring another Elvis impersonator attacking Feingold's record. During the primary campaign, Feingold unveiled an 82-point plan that aimed to eliminate the
deficit by the end of his first term. The plan called for a raise in
taxes and cuts in the
defense budget, among other things, and was derided as "extremist" by
Republicans and "too liberal" by his Democratic opponents. Feingold also announced his support for strict
campaign finance reform and a
national health care system and voiced his opposition to
term limits and new
tax cuts. Feingold won by positioning himself as a quirky underdog who offered voters an alternative to what was seen by many as negative campaigning by opponents
Jim Moody and Joe Checota. After polling in the single digits for much of the campaign, Feingold won the primary with 70% of the vote. Feingold capped his own
fundraising, pledging not to raise or spend more than $3.8 million (one dollar for every citizen of Wisconsin) during the campaign, and turning away Democratic Party
soft money. He requested that several
lobby groups, including the
AFL–CIO and the
League of Conservation Voters, refrain from airing pro-Feingold "issue ads". Some Democrats were angry at Feingold for "putting his career at risk" with these self-imposed limits.
2004 In the 2004 Senate election, Feingold defeated the Republican nominee, businessman Tim Michels, by 11 percentage points (55%-44%), earning a third term. During the campaign, Feingold refrained from imposing spending caps on himself as he had in the past, and raised and spent almost $11 million. He spent nearly $3.7 million, or about 67%, more than his opponent.
PolitiFact.com rated Feingold's frequent assertion that he had been outspent by opponents in every U.S. Senate election "pants on fire." In late December 2004, Feingold was appointed to be one of four deputy
whips for the Senate Democrats.
2010 Feingold was defeated for reelection on November 2, 2010, by
Oshkosh businessman
Ron Johnson, 52% to 47%.
2016 On May 14, 2015, Feingold announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate against the incumbent, Republican
Ron Johnson. As of March 2016, Feingold had raised the most money among all U.S. Senate candidates challenging an incumbent. Nearly three-fourths of his individual contributions were from outside Wisconsin. Groups financially supporting Feingold's election bid included
Planned Parenthood, the
League of Conservation Voters,
American Bridge 21st Century, and the
National Abortion Rights Action League. In the November 8, 2016, general election, Feingold lost to Johnson with 47% of the vote to Johnson's 51%.
Committee assignments •
Committee on the Budget •
Committee on the Judiciary •
Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts •
Subcommittee on the Constitution (chairman) •
Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs •
Committee on Foreign Relations •
Subcommittee on Near Eastern and South and Central Asian Affairs •
Subcommittee on African Affairs (chairman) •
Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs •
Subcommittee on International Operations and Organizations, Democracy and Human Rights •
Select Committee on Intelligence Tenure , August 4, 2008. During his time in the U.S. Senate, Feingold gained a reputation as a political maverick. When he broke with his party, it was often because he was taking a more liberal or populist position than other Democrats. During the
impeachment trial of Bill Clinton, Feingold was the only Democratic senator to vote against a motion to dismiss Congress's impeachment case. Feingold ultimately voted against conviction on all charges. Feingold opposed
NAFTA and numerous other
free trade agreements. ,
Wisconsin, September 1, 2008. In 2001, Feingold was the only senator to vote against the
Patriot Act (H.R. 3162). Also in 2001, he voted to confirm
Attorney General John Ashcroft. In 2002, Feingold was one of nine senators to vote against creating the
Department of Homeland Security. On December 21, 2004, Feingold wrote an article for
Salon about a golfing trip to
Greenville, Alabama. In it, after noting how friendly the people there were and that Wisconsin had many similar places, he expressed his sorrow that such a poverty-stricken area was "the
reddest spot on the whole map" despite Republican policies that Feingold considered destructive to the well-being of the poor and middle class.
Alabama Governor Bob Riley and Greenville Mayor Dexter McLendon, both Republicans, were perturbed by Feingold's description of "check-cashing stores and abject
trailer parks, and some of the hardest-used cars for sale on a very rundown lot." McLendon invited Feingold back for a more complete tour of the city, and Feingold agreed. He visited the city on March 28, 2005, making amends and increasing speculation about his presidential plans for 2008. In May 2006, Feingold voted in favor of bill S.2611, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006, an
immigration reform bill designed to give most illegal immigrants a chance to become legal citizens. Feingold co-sponsored a number of failed bills calling for the abolition of the death penalty. In 2009, Feingold voted against confirmation of
Timothy Geithner to be
United States Secretary of the Treasury, citing Geithner's personal tax issues. Also in 2009, Feingold announced his intention to introduce a
constitutional amendment prohibiting
governors from making temporary Senate appointments instead of holding special elections. Feingold cosponsored the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act, which was signed into law in October 2009.
Campaign finance reform Feingold is perhaps best known for his work with Senator
John McCain on the
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, better known as the McCain–Feingold Act. The legislation, which took seven years to pass, became defunct in the wake of several U.S. Supreme Court decisions.
Wall Street reform On May 20, 2010, Feingold was one of two Democratic senators to vote against the
Dodd–Frank Wall Street reform bill, citing his belief that the measures did not go far enough. On July 15, 2010, he became the only Democratic senator to vote against the bill when it was brought up again; it passed by a 60–39 vote.
Patriot Act , October 25, 2001. Feingold was the only senator to vote against the
Patriot Act when it was introduced in 2001, saying that its provisions infringed upon citizens'
civil liberties. When the bill was up for renewal in late December 2005, Feingold led a bipartisan coalition of senators—including
Lisa Murkowski,
Ken Salazar,
Larry Craig,
Dick Durbin, and
John Sununu—to remove some of the act's more controversial provisions. Feingold led a
filibuster against renewal of the act. In February 2006, the Senate voted 96–3 to break the filibuster and extend the Patriot Act. In 2009, when the act was again up for reauthorization, Feingold introduced the
JUSTICE Act (S. 1686) "To place reasonable safeguards on the use of surveillance and other authorities under the USA PATRIOT Act." Senator
Patrick Leahy then introduced an alternative bill, of which Feingold later said, "while narrower than the JUSTICE Act that Senator Durbin and I have championed, [it] did contain several important and necessary protections for the privacy of innocent Americans." After what Feingold saw as the further watering down of civil liberty protections in the bill, it passed out of the
Senate Judiciary Committee on October 8 by a vote of 11 to 8 with Feingold voting against it.
War in Iraq Feingold was one of 23 senators to vote against
H.J. Resolution 114, which authorized President
George W. Bush to use force against
Iraq in 2002. On August 17, 2005, he became the first senator to call for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq and urge that a timetable for that withdrawal be set. He called other Democrats "timid" for refusing to take action sooner, and suggested December 31, 2006, as the date for total withdrawal of troops. Of Bush's claim that a deadline would be helpful to Iraqi
insurgents, Feingold said, "I think he's wrong. I think not talking about endgames is playing into our enemies' hand."
Call for a vote of censure against President Bush On March 14, 2006, Feingold introduced a resolution in the Senate to
censure President Bush. This was a result of allegations of
illegal wiretapping under the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (FISA), which mandates use of a
surveillance court for approval of
wiretaps on Americans. Feingold made a 25-minute speech on the Senate floor, declaring that Congress must "hold the president accountable for his actions". It received support from Senators
Tom Harkin and
Barbara Boxer, but most Democratic senators avoided expressing an opinion on it. Senators
John Kerry and
Patrick Leahy expressed support for the bill, but Feingold found only three co-sponsors. Feingold again called for Bush's censure in July 2007 for his management of the Iraq war, accusing him of mounting an "assault" against the
United States Constitution.
Health care policy Feingold supports the creation of a system of
universal health care in America. During his first run for the Senate, he endorsed the
single-payer model, in which the government pays for all healthcare costs. On July 24, 2006, at a
press conference at the Martin Luther King Heritage Health Center in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Feingold announced that he had authored the State-Based Health Care Reform Act, a bill to create a
pilot program for a system of universal healthcare under which each
U.S. state would create a program to provide its citizenry with universal health insurance and the
federal government would provide the funding. The bill would create a
nonpartisan "Health Care Reform Task Force", which would provide five-year
federal grants to two or three states. The program was expected to cost $32 billion over 10 years. Feingold voted for the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that passed the Senate on December 24, 2009.
Gun policy Feingold has voted in favor of certain gun-control legislation while also voting to expand certain gun rights. He signed the congressional amicus brief in
District of Columbia v. Heller, the U.S. Supreme Court case that overturned a handgun ban in Washington, D.C. Feingold has voted in favor of bills to require
background checks for handgun buyers, to require background checks for firearms purchases at
gun shows, and to require that handguns be sold with
trigger locks.
Social issues Feingold supports abortion rights. In 1996, Feingold was in a minority of legislators who voted against the
Defense of Marriage Act, which President Bill Clinton signed into law. On May 18, 2006, Feingold walked out of a meeting of the
Senate Judiciary Committee shortly before a vote on a
constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage. He objected to both the amendment and Chairman
Arlen Specter's decision to move the meeting to an area of the
Capitol Building not open to the public. Later that day, the committee voted to send the amendment to the full Senate. ==2008 possible presidential bid==