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Underscoring his instinct for middle ground, he voted in 1999 to acquit Clinton in his impeachment trial after citing the Scottish practice of allowing a verdict of "not proved." He said he didn't necessarily believe Clinton was innocent. Specter's relationship with President George W. Bush was especially unpredictable. He increasingly opposed Bush administration positions, such as a cap on medical malpractice suits and some parts of the Patriot Act passed in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. By 2005, Specter's independent streak was on full, fierce display. As the presumed next chairman of the Judiciary Committee, he warned the administration not to nominate judges who would vote to overturn Roe v. Wade. Conservative groups howled. His chairmanship threatened, Specter quickly announced he would respect the president's constitutional authority to nominate people to the bench. He also promised not to apply the litmus test of the abortion issue to nominees. He then had to earn back the support of the Judiciary Committee Republicans
-- which he did -- and took the chairman's gavel. As chairman, Specter presided over the confirmation hearings of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito. But bitterness crept into Specter's public statements. "In the United States Senate, it's heresy, I mean rank heresy, to say you ... ought to recognize your independence and vote your conscience," he said in a 2005 speech. Specter soon found himself facing off against the Bush White House, where politics and the most personal matters intersected. A brain cancer survivor, Specter was diagnosed in 2005 with Hodgkin's lymphoma just as Congress and the administration were locked in battle over Bush's restrictions on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. Specter had authored a bill to clear the way for more public funding of the research, which could provide cures for many diseases, including some cancers. Bush had promised to veto any such legislation because the research also destroyed fertilized eggs. The mere debate made Specter "mad as hell," he said at the time. So, undergoing chemotherapy, he appeared on television and at White House meetings as often as possible, his newly bald head and runny nose a powerful symbol, he reasoned, for both his bill and for the forbearance of cancer sufferers. The strategy never changed Bush's mind. But Specter never missed a session that year and even kept up his squash games. In 2006, he became Pennsylvania's longest-serving senator. Two years later, Specter suffered a recurrence and published a book, "Never Give In: Battling Cancer in the Senate." Under chemotherapy, the Ivy League-educated workhorse was candid about his survival strategy. "When I'm totally engaged, I'm fine," Specter said. "When I'm not, it's tough."
[Associated
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