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		Orrin Hatch, the genteel Republican senator, is dead at 88
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		 [April 25, 2022] 
		By Will Dunham 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Orrin Hatch, the 
		gentlemanly long-serving Republican U.S. senator from Utah who 
		championed deep tax cuts, an anti-terrorism law and a children's health 
		program while fighting for conservative judicial nominees, died on 
		Saturday at age 88.
 
 His death was announced by the nonprofit Orrin G. Hatch Foundation, 
		which said he died surrounded by family in Salt Lake City.
 
 Outpourings from fellow lawmakers, some of whom had known Hatch for 
		decades, started flooding the internet late on Saturday as word of his 
		death spread.
 
 "This breaks my heart," Utah Governor Spencer Cox wrote on twitter. 
		"Utah mourns with the Hatch family."
 
 Longtime friend and fellow senator Jim Inhofe, a Republican from 
		Oklahoma, said on Twitter, "Orrin was the one who I would go to for 
		wisdom and we had the same love for Jesus and everything we hold dear."
 
 Utah Senator Mike Lee posted that Hatch was a "friend, a mentor and an 
		example" for him in his career. "His name and memory will forever be 
		enshrined in the history of the U.S. Senate and the State of Utah," Lee 
		wrote.
 
		
		 
		An enduring conservative voice in Congress, Hatch held a seat in the 
		Senate from 1977 to 2019 and served under eight presidents, starting in 
		the waning days of Gerald Ford's term and ending with Donald Trump's 
		first two years in office. He served in the Senate longer than any other 
		Republican ever.
 Trump awarded him the Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian honor, 
		in 2018.
 
 Hatch fiercely advocated for conservative Supreme Court nominees 
		including Robert Bork - nominated in 1987 by Reagan but rejected by the 
		Senate - as well as Clarence Thomas, nominated in 1991 by Republican 
		George W. Bush and narrowly confirmed by the Senate, and Brett Kavanaugh, 
		nominated by Republican Trump and also narrowly confirmed by the Senate 
		in 2018.
 
 Hatch, a lay minister in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day 
		Saints, a champion of religious liberty and an opponent of abortion 
		rights, represented the state that is home to the Mormon Church and was 
		one of the foremost Mormons in public life in American history.
 
 He was elected to seven six-year terms as Utah's longest-serving 
		senator. His first election victory was boosted by an endorsement from 
		future President Ronald Reagan. Hatch ran for his party's 2000 
		presidential nomination but dropped out early in the race.
 
 He was known for a courteous demeanor and liked writing poetry and 
		songs, but showed flashes of temper. He held powerful posts including 
		chairman of the influential Senate Judiciary and Finance Committees.
 
 Hatch was one the architects of the Patriot Act, passed in the aftermath 
		of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States by the militant 
		Islamist network al Qaeda. The law expanded the government's ability to 
		track potential terrorists by, among other steps, expanding its 
		surveillance powers.
 
 
		
		 
		The law's critics called it an infringement on individual liberties. 
		Hatch called it constitutional, legal and effective.
 
 Hatch was a driving force behind a Republican package of deep tax cuts 
		particularly benefiting corporations and the wealthy that Trump sought 
		and signed in 2017, despite vociferous Democratic opposition. The tax 
		cuts were forecast to greatly increase the federal deficit.
 
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			U.S. President Donald Trump awards the 2018 Presidential Medal of 
			Freedom to U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) in the East Room of the 
			White House in Washington, U.S. November 16, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan 
			Ernst/File Photo 
            
			 CHILDREN'S HEALTH
 Hatch was a staunch conservative but sometimes broke with fellow 
			conservatives. He was willing to work with Democrats to get certain 
			bipartisan bills passed, and often did so with close friend Edward 
			Kennedy, a lion of liberalism who died in 2009.
 
 The two senators partnered in 1997 to create the State Children's 
			Health Insurance Program, in which the federal government helps 
			states provide healthcare coverage for children in low-income 
			families. The program has given medical care to millions of children 
			whose families earn too much to qualify for the larger Medicaid 
			healthcare program for the poor but still cannot afford private 
			medical insurance.
 
 He advocated for the nutritional supplements industry, for which 
			Utah is a center. He authored a law allowing companies to make 
			health claims about products but sparing them from federal reviews 
			of safety or effectiveness. Hatch played a key role in Trump's 2017 
			action to scale back the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase national 
			monuments covering millions of acres in Utah, a move condemned by 
			conservationists.
 
 A former boxer, he took off the gloves when he fought for 
			conservative judicial nominees. He defended Thomas from a sexual 
			harassment accusation by reading aloud from the horror novel "The 
			Exorcist" during confirmation hearings, implying the nominee's 
			accuser had cribbed lurid details of her allegations from the book.
 
 Hatch defended Trump's nominee Kavanaugh after he was accused by a 
			woman of sexually assaulting her years earlier, telling anti-Kavanaugh 
			female protesters he would talk to them when they "grow up."
 
			
			 Hatch was born on March 22, 1934, in Pennsylvania and grew up in a 
			poor family in Pittsburgh during the Great Depression. He practiced 
			law after college and was a complete unknown when he decided to run 
			for the Senate in Utah in 1976.
 He vaulted out of obscurity when Reagan, a champion of the 
			conservative movement, endorsed him before the Republican primary. 
			Hatch then upset three-term incumbent Democratic Senator Frank Moss 
			in the general election. That election was a harbinger of the 
			conservative ascent nationally in 1980 and the decline of the 
			Democratic Party in many Western states.
 
 Early in his career, he called Democrats "the party of homosexuals." 
			In 1990, he told the New York Times, "That was a dumb thing for me 
			to say. I deserve to have fault found with me because I said it."
 
 In 1988, Hatch had a showdown on the Senate floor with conservative 
			North Carolina Republican Jesse Helms, who had offered an amendment 
			that would have scuttled Hatch's bipartisan AIDS-fighting 
			legislation by banning federal funds "to promote or encourage ... 
			homosexual activity."
 
 "I'm not sure I should stand here on the floor of the United States 
			Senate and pass judgment on anybody," Hatch told Helms.
 
 "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone," he added.
 
 He is survived by his wife Elaine and their six children.
 
 (Reporting by Will Dunham; Additional reporting by David Morgan and 
			Rich McKay; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and William Mallard)
 
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