Tribe recalls that Raskin and his wife, Sarah, met in his class on the constitution. ![]() Raskin graduated from Georgetown day school in 1979 then studied at Harvard and its law school, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review and his teachers included Professor Laurence Tribe. His mother, Barbara Bellman, was a journalist and novelist. His father, Marcus Raskin, was a young aide in John F Kennedy’s White House, a fierce activist against the Vietnam war and co-founder of the progressive thinktank the Institute for Policy Studies. “Maybe that has helped him to cope with the loss but I think the concern for those of us that are friends with Jamie is that, when this is all over, there could be a pretty hard fall back to grief and he’s going to need a lot of support.” Jared Huffman, a co-founder with Raskin of the Congressional Freethought Caucus, said: “Who knew that almost immediately after that tragic day he would get this assignment and pretty quickly begin working full time on something of such historic importance? In a trial focused on the excesses of a would-be strongman, Raskin’s very human displays of vulnerability have the quality of redemption. “They thought they were going to die,” he said, his voice cracking as he recalled apologising to Tabitha, 23, for putting her in danger. Raskin, 58, also told how his daughter Tabitha and son-in-law Hank accompanied him to the Capitol that day – and had to hide under a desk. Tommy was buried on 5 January – the day before a violent mob mounted a deadly insurrection at the US Capitol. They were doubly awed when he wove together the political and the personal to share unfathomable grief: his 25-year-old son, Tommy, killed himself on New Year’s Eve after years of struggle with depression. Senators, pundits and millions of TV viewers have heard his deceptively soothing tones eviscerate the former president. Just four years later, the proud progressive finds himself lead prosecutor in the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump. ![]() He had only taken office himself in January 2017, representing Maryland’s eighth congressional district. “Straight white men are already a minority in the Democratic caucus but when the big blue wave hits, we’re going to be moving much closer to parity in terms of women and men, at least on the House side,” he said, a prediction that came true a month later in the midterm elections.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |