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Patrick Leahy on retiring from a divided Senate 07:20. He's one of the longest-serving senators in U.S. history, and after 48 years in office, Vermont's Patrick Leahy, 82, is retiring.
Patrick Leahy, 82, is the senior Democratic senator from Vermont and president pro tempore and chairman of the Appropriations Committee in the U.S. Senate. His memoir, “The Road Taken,” was ...
Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, the most senior and longest-serving member of the U.S. Senate, will retire at the end of this year. His new memoir, "The Road Taken," describes his political career ...
Retiring Vermont U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy delivered his farewell address today. Leahy is in the final days of a Senate career that began in 1975.
Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy has appeared in five Batman films since the 1990s, most famously in Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” in 2008 alongside Heath Ledger as the Joker.
In "The Road Taken" (published August 23 by Simon & Schuster, a division of Paramount Global, which includes CBS), Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy – who, as a young prosecutor, was elected in the ...
Former Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy may be retired but he remains busy. Our Dom Amato spoke with him about the president's decision to drop out of the race and how Vermont spent COVID cash.
Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport will receive $5.8 million as part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Here's ...
Sen. Patrick Leahy signs the omnibus appropriations bill in the Senate Appropriations Committee’s room in the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 28, 2022. File photo by John Shinkle/U.S. Senate Former Sen ...
Decades ago, as a Vermont fourth grader, I attended a classroom talk by a Jewish man who had survived a Nazi death camp. ... I was proud to learn that its name comes from our own Sen. Patrick Leahy.
Former Senator Patrick Leahy and Alan Gross, ... Patrick Leahy, then a senator from Vermont, had worked to obtain his freedom. On Dec. 17, 2014, Leahy, along with Sens. Jeff Flake ...
Congress’s proposed changes to Medicaid policies and a state insurer’s potential rate hikes would further stress a system in crisis, the Senator said in a Monday press conference.