Jack Kemp was a pro football player, congressman, cabinet secretary and vice-presidential candidate.
Kemp served in Congress for nine terms (1971-1989). He was elected the incoming Republican freshman class president, and 10 years later was chosen Chairman of the Republican Conference (third ranking in House Republican leadership). Kemp served as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development from 1989-1993, where he championed affordable housing, tenant management, and a housing voucher program for homeless veterans and their families. Upon leaving office in 1993, he joined forces with William Bennett and Jeane Kirkpatrick to found Empower America. He also served as chairman of the National Commission on Economic Growth and Tax Reform, which promoted major reform and simplification of the U.S. tax code.
Jack Kemp died on May 2, 2009. President Obama posthumously awarded Jack Kemp the Presidential Medal of Freedom in August, 2009.
Read more:
Adonis Hoffman, ‘Can a new Jack Kemp step up to help with tax reform?’, The Hill, 24 April 2017
David Frum, ‘Why Jack Kemp’s Legacy Is More Relevant Than Ever’, The Atlantic Post, 15 October 2015
Suzy Khimm, ‘What Paul Ryan learned from Jack Kemp’, The Washington Post, 31 August 2012
Lanny Davis, ‘Kemp: True Purple Nation Leader’, The Hill, 11 May 2009