Posted on 06/07/2004 7:22:17 AM PDT by areafiftyone
TERESA Heinz Kerry didn't exactly knock 'em dead with her keynote address at last Thursday's New York State Democratic Jefferson-Jackson dinner, Post City Hall bureau man Stefan C. Friedman reports. Most high-ranking officials had already taken off before Sen. John Kerry's wife began her speech nearly an hour late, and those who remained were treated to an often-rambling missive delivered just above a whisper.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Years ago when I was taking some night courses for college, I ended up in a class that dealt with aging/dying. One of the things that we learned and was supported by statistics, was that individuals who had lost a spouse and had had a good marriage with them, were prone to marry again not long after the loss of that beloved spouse. Those that had a sad or bad marriage were not as quick to remarry or ever remarry. Makes sense to me. I'm sure your description of Heinz-Kerry is on the money, and that she married Kerry because she was lonely and missed her first husband terribly. It's tough to have all that money and nobody to spend it on. I look at her relationship with him as that of mother and son. She dotes on him like a mother, buying him the toys he so desires but can't afford to buy himself.
And that is very sad.
Everything I've read about John Heinze's opinion of Kerry points to Kerry being one of Heinze's least favorite people. I think they had words once.
She seems to be medicated every time I see her.
She is Yoko, reincarnate!
Also, why is Kerry smiling so much on the Page Six photo while she's behind him and grabbing him by the shoulders? I guess all of her endowments are bigger than his, and he just has to grin and bear it...
Have you noticed how she flinches or pulls away when hanoi john tries to smooch/hug her in public?
That is a dumb name.
I have noted how he yanks her arm up in front of crowds and appears to cause her pain. Then there are those squishing hugs that cause her pain. I think Teresa got taken advantage of, is not terribly bright and probably leads a hellish life.
Not terribly bright? The woman speaks 5 languages fluently. That puts her solidly in the "terribly bright" column.
I think she considers the PDA's to be demeaning and smarmy.
Not that being terribly bright excludes her from being a leftwing whack job!
Have you or has anyone heard her "speak five languages fluently". She grew up knowing three. I think that while she may be intellectually bright, she is dumb emotionally and practically. This is a woman who has been married to a con man and is being used by him as his bank. She is dragged around, yanked by the arm, smothered with unwanted kisses, is perpetually dysphoric looking. I think she is dumb in that she doesn't seem to be able to extricate herself from this. She is being used.
Apparently one of her sons has endorsed Kerry. What about the others? And Kerry's stripper daughter is all for him even though he left her mother.
I'm fairly certain that if John Heinz were alive today, JF'nK would not be running for President.
Freepers involve your children in speech competitions. Get they used to speaking in public.
Sen. John Heinz (R-Pa.)
Copyright 1991 Newsday, Inc.
Newsday (New York)
April 5, 1991, Friday, CITY EDITION
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 38
LENGTH: 547 words
HEADLINE:
BYLINE: By Myron S. Waldman. WASHINGTON BUREAU
DATELINE: Washington
BODY:
He was one of the two richest members of the United States Senate and one of its most liberal Republicans.
They called him "John" or "Johnny," but his full name was Henry John Heinz III. His net worth has been estimated at $ 500 million, making him and Democrat Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia the wealthiest senators, and the mere threat of his millions had been enough to make his seat one of the safest in the Senate. It was a seat he held ever since 1976, moving up after a five-year career in the U.S. House, and spending $ 2.9 million of his own money for the promotion.
He fought for the environment, frequently working with his old prep school roommate, Sen. Tim Wirth (D-Colo.), but it was his stance as a protectionist in trade matters for which he was best known. "Buy America" was his battle cry, and he fought to the end of his life for U.S. products to be made available in foreign markets.
His was also a strong voice for the elderly - he had chaired the Senate Select Committee on Aging - and he always fought to protect the quality of medical care for those over 65 and to eliminate mandatory retirement on the basis of age.
He could be blunt in his outrage. When the Reagan administration cost-cutters proclaimed ketchup to be a vegetable, Heinz, who knew better than anyone else in Washington, got up on the Senate floor to declare it was merely a condiment.
In the Capitol yesterday, jammed with tourists but all but empty of lawmakers during the Easter recess, congressional assistants spoke in shock of his sudden death. "I sat next to him last week at a meeting with Secretary of Defense Cheney," recalled Rep. Peter Kostmayer (D-Pa.) in a telephone interview from Pennsylvania. It was a meeting, said Kostmayer, to fight to keep the Philadelphia Navy Yard open.
Heinz' plane crash came in the midst of a tour of the state, going from constituent meeting to constituent meeting. "He literally died in the midst of his duties," Kostmayer said. "He was an enormously popular senator in Pennsylvania. He was unbeatable."
Yet his influence and popularity were far greater in Pennsylvania than in Washington, D.C.
Pennsylvania politicians said that Heinz took over the state's Republican Party after the Republican governor, Dick Thornburgh, left and became the U.S. attorney general. "He was the peacemaker of the Republican Party," one state Democrat said. "Heinz was able to keep the conservatives at bay and the party in the mainstream." Now, the Democrat said, he expects the Pennsylvania Republicans to swing to the right.
Gov. Bob Casey, a Democrat, has 10 days to appoint a successor, who would have to run for election later this year, Democratic state operatives said. The victor of that election would have to run for a full term in 1994. But Casey wasn't talking about who he might name yesterday.
"The people of Pennsylvania have lost a great leader and the nation has lost a great senator," said President George Bush of the death of Heinz. He described Heinz as "a close friend of our family."
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) said of Heinz: "If he was given much, he gave more. We will miss his high spirits and great good humor and great heart."
Heinz was 52. He is survived by his wife* and three children.
*Now married to Senator John Kerry (D-Ma)
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