Geraldine Ferraro, who in 1984 became the first woman to run for vice-president on a major party ticket, only to lose in a landslide, died Saturday. She was 75.
Ms. Ferraro died at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she was being treated for blood cancer. She died just before 10 a.m., said Amanda Fuchs Miller, a family friend who worked for Ms. Ferraro in her 1998 Senate bid and was acting as a spokeswoman for the family.
Ms. Ferraro catapulted to national prominence at the 1984 Democratic convention when she was chosen by presidential nominee Walter Mondale to join his ticket against incumbents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.
Delegates in San Francisco erupted in cheers at the first line of her speech accepting the vice-presidential nomination.
“My name is Geraldine Ferraro,” she declared. “I stand before you to proclaim tonight: America is the land where dreams can come true for all of us.”
Her acceptance speech launched eight minutes of cheers, foot-stamping and tears.
Ms. Ferraro sometimes overshadowed Mr. Mondale on the campaign trail, often drawing larger crowds and more media attention than the presidential candidate.
“No one asks anymore if women can raise the money, if women can take the heat, if women have the stamina for the toughest political campaigns in this country,” Judy Goldsmith, then-president of the National Organization for Women told People Magazine in December, 1984. “Geraldine Ferraro did them all.”
But controversy accompanied her acclaim. Frequent, vociferous protests of her favourable view of abortion rights marked the campaign.
Ms. Ferraro's run also was beset by ethical questions, first about her campaign finances and tax returns, then about the business dealings of her husband, John Zaccaro. Ms. Ferraro attributed much of the controversy to bias against Italian-Americans.
Mr. Mondale said he selected Ms. Ferraro as a bold stroke to counter his poor showing in polls against Mr. Reagan and because he felt America lagged far behind other democracies in elevating women to top leadership roles.
“The time had come to eliminate the barriers to women of America and to reap the benefits of drawing talents from all Americans, including women,” Mr. Mondale said.
In the end, Mr. Reagan won 49 of the 50 states, the largest landslide since Franklin D. Roosevelt's first re-election, in 1936 over Alf Landon.
In the years after the race, Ms. Ferraro told interviewers that she would have not have accepted the nomination had she known how it would focus criticism on her family.
“You don't deliberately submit people you love to something like that,” she told presidential historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. in an interview in Ladies Home Journal. “I don't think I'd run again for vice-president,” she said, then paused, laughed and said, “Next time I'd run for president.”
Mr. Zaccaro pleaded guilty in 1985 to a misdemeanor charge of scheming to defraud in connection with obtaining financing for the purchase of five apartment buildings. Two years later he was acquitted of trying to extort a bribe from a cable television company.
Ms. Ferraro's son, John Zaccaro Jr., was convicted in 1988 of selling cocaine to an undercover Vermont state trooper and served three months under house arrest.
Some observers said the legal troubles were a drag on Ms. Ferraro's later political ambitions, which included her unsuccessful bids for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in New York in 1992 and 1998.
Ms. Ferraro, a supporter of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, was back in the news in March 2008 when she stirred up a controversy by appearing to suggest that Barack Obama achieved his status in the presidential race only because he's black.
She later stepped down from an honorary post in the Clinton campaign, but insisted she meant no slight against Mr. Obama.
Ms. Ferraro received a law degree from Fordham University in 1960, the same year she married Mr. Zaccaro and became a full-time homemaker and mother. She said she kept her maiden name to honour her mother, a widow who had worked long hours as a seamstress.
After years in a private law practice, she took a job as an assistant Queens district attorney in 1974. She headed the office's special victims' bureau, which prosecuted sex crimes and the abuse of children and the elderly. In 1978, she won the first of three terms in Congress representing a blue-collar district of Queens.
After losing in 1984, she became a fellow of the Institute of Politics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University until an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate nomination in 1992.
She returned to the law after her 1992 Senate run, acting as an advocate for women raped during ethnic conflict in the former Yugoslavia.
Her advocacy work and support of president Bill Clinton won her the position of ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, where she served in 1994 and 1995.
She co-hosted CNN's “Crossfire,” in 1996 and 1997 but left to take on Chuck Schumer, then a little-known Brooklyn congressman, in the 1998 Democratic Senate primary. She placed a distant second, declaring her political career finished after she took 26 per cent of the vote to Mr. Schumer's 51 per cent.
In June 1999, she announced that she was joining a Washington, D.C., area public relations firm to head a group advising clients on women's issues.
Ms. Ferraro revealed two years later that she had been diagnosed with blood cancer. She discussed blood cancer research before a Senate panel that month and said she hoped to live long enough “to attend the inauguration of the first woman president of the United States.”
Delegates in San Francisco erupted in cheers at the first line of her speech accepting the vice-presidential nomination.
“My name is Geraldine Ferraro,” she declared. “I stand before you to proclaim tonight: America is the land where dreams can come true for all of us.”
Her acceptance speech launched eight minutes of cheers, foot-stamping and tears.
Ms. Ferraro sometimes overshadowed Mr. Mondale on the campaign trail, often drawing larger crowds and more media attention than the presidential candidate.
“No one asks anymore if women can raise the money, if women can take the heat, if women have the stamina for the toughest political campaigns in this country,” Judy Goldsmith, then-president of the National Organization for Women told People Magazine in December, 1984. “Geraldine Ferraro did them all.”
But controversy accompanied her acclaim. Frequent, vociferous protests of her favourable view of abortion rights marked the campaign.
Ms. Ferraro's run also was beset by ethical questions, first about her campaign finances and tax returns, then about the business dealings of her husband, John Zaccaro. Ms. Ferraro attributed much of the controversy to bias against Italian-Americans.
Mr. Mondale said he selected Ms. Ferraro as a bold stroke to counter his poor showing in polls against Mr. Reagan and because he felt America lagged far behind other democracies in elevating women to top leadership roles.
“The time had come to eliminate the barriers to women of America and to reap the benefits of drawing talents from all Americans, including women,” Mr. Mondale said.
In the end, Mr. Reagan won 49 of the 50 states, the largest landslide since Franklin D. Roosevelt's first re-election, in 1936 over Alf Landon.
In the years after the race, Ms. Ferraro told interviewers that she would have not have accepted the nomination had she known how it would focus criticism on her family.
“You don't deliberately submit people you love to something like that,” she told presidential historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. in an interview in Ladies Home Journal. “I don't think I'd run again for vice-president,” she said, then paused, laughed and said, “Next time I'd run for president.”
Mr. Zaccaro pleaded guilty in 1985 to a misdemeanor charge of scheming to defraud in connection with obtaining financing for the purchase of five apartment buildings. Two years later he was acquitted of trying to extort a bribe from a cable television company.
Ms. Ferraro's son, John Zaccaro Jr., was convicted in 1988 of selling cocaine to an undercover Vermont state trooper and served three months under house arrest.
Some observers said the legal troubles were a drag on Ms. Ferraro's later political ambitions, which included her unsuccessful bids for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in New York in 1992 and 1998.
Ms. Ferraro, a supporter of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, was back in the news in March 2008 when she stirred up a controversy by appearing to suggest that Barack Obama achieved his status in the presidential race only because he's black.
She later stepped down from an honorary post in the Clinton campaign, but insisted she meant no slight against Mr. Obama.
Ms. Ferraro received a law degree from Fordham University in 1960, the same year she married Mr. Zaccaro and became a full-time homemaker and mother. She said she kept her maiden name to honour her mother, a widow who had worked long hours as a seamstress.
After years in a private law practice, she took a job as an assistant Queens district attorney in 1974. She headed the office's special victims' bureau, which prosecuted sex crimes and the abuse of children and the elderly. In 1978, she won the first of three terms in Congress representing a blue-collar district of Queens.
After losing in 1984, she became a fellow of the Institute of Politics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University until an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate nomination in 1992.
She returned to the law after her 1992 Senate run, acting as an advocate for women raped during ethnic conflict in the former Yugoslavia.
Her advocacy work and support of president Bill Clinton won her the position of ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, where she served in 1994 and 1995.
She co-hosted CNN's “Crossfire,” in 1996 and 1997 but left to take on Chuck Schumer, then a little-known Brooklyn congressman, in the 1998 Democratic Senate primary. She placed a distant second, declaring her political career finished after she took 26 per cent of the vote to Mr. Schumer's 51 per cent.
In June 1999, she announced that she was joining a Washington, D.C., area public relations firm to head a group advising clients on women's issues.
Ms. Ferraro revealed two years later that she had been diagnosed with blood cancer. She discussed blood cancer research before a Senate panel that month and said she hoped to live long enough “to attend the inauguration of the first woman president of the United States.”