John Forbes Kerry (born December 11, 1943) is the senior
United States Senator from
Massachusetts, and is chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
[1] As the Presidential nominee of the
Democratic Party, he was defeated by 34 electoral votes in the
2004 presidential election by incumbent
President George W. Bush. Senator Kerry is a
Vietnam veteran, and was a spokesman for
Vietnam Veterans Against the War when he returned home from service. Before entering the Senate, he served as an
Assistant District Attorney[2] and
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts under
Michael Dukakis, who was nominated for President by the Democrats in
1988.
Kerry is the second child of Richard John Kerry, a Foreign Service Officer and an attorney for the Bureau of United Nations Affairs, and Rosemary Forbes Kerry, a World War II nurse and member of the wealthy Scottish-American Forbes family.[3] He has three siblings two sisters, Diana (born in 1947) and Margerie (aka Peggy; born in 1941) and a brother, Cameron (born in 1950), Cameron Kerry was picked to be Barack Obama's general counsel of the Commerce Department.[4]
His immediate family members were reportedly observant Roman Catholics. As a child, Kerry served as an altar boy. Although the extended family enjoyed a great fortune, Kerry's parents themselves were upper-middle class; a wealthy great aunt paid for Kerry to attend elite schools in Europe and New England. Kerry spent his summers at the Forbes family estate in Brittany, and there, he enjoyed a more opulent lifestyle than he had previously known in Massachusetts. While living in the U.S., Kerry spent several summers at the Forbes family's estates on Naushon Island off Cape Cod.[citation needed]
Through his maternal grandmother, Margaret Tyndal Winthrop, John Kerry is distantly related to four U.S. Presidents, including George W. Bush,[5] to the first American female writer Anne Bradstreet, to Massachusetts Bay Colony founder and first Governor John Winthrop, and to various royals and nobles in Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Africa.[6]