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Bruce Faulkner Caputo : ウィキペディア英語版
Bruce F. Caputo

Bruce F. Caputo (born August 7, 1943) is an American lawyer and politician from New York.
==Life==
Born in New York City, he graduated from Deerfield Academy in 1961, Harvard University in 1965, Harvard Business School in 1967 and Georgetown Law School in 1971. He was elected to the New York State Assembly in 1972, representing a district in lower Westchester County. He was re-elected in 1974, and sat in the 180th and 181st New York State Legislatures. In 1976, liberal Republican Congressman Peter A. Peyser gave up his seat to challenge conservative U.S. Senator James L. Buckley for the Republican nomination. Caputo ran for the congressional seat and won, narrowly defeating Democratic Assemblyman J. Edward Meyer, a former Republican who became a Democrat in 1973. Caputo's district included lower Westchester and a tiny portion of the Bronx. Caputo served only one term in Congress. In 1978, Perry Duryea, the Republican nominee for governor, picked Caputo, as his running mate for lieutenant governor. Governor Hugh L. Carey, a Democrat who was elected in 1974, narrowly won re-election. Peyser, who became a Democrat, won his old seat back the same year.
In 1980, Caputo attempted to run against liberal Republican U.S. Senator Jacob Javits, but withdrew from the Republican primary after his main rival on the right, Alfonse D'Amato, secured the crucial nominations of the Conservative and Right to Life parties.〔(New York Magazine, May 25, 1981, "Caputo Copies D'Amato Act" in PDF through Google Books )〕 D'Amato defeated Javits in the Republican primary and won the general election in the fall. In his autobiography, "Power, Politics, and Pasta: The World According to Senator Al D'Amato" (1995), D'Amato bitterly criticized Caputo.
In 1981, Caputo announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate against incumbent Democrat Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who was seeking his second term in the 1982 mid-term election. Considered a young rising star in the Republican Party and in the conservative movement, Caputo raised money for his race around the country. Caputo withdrew from the race in March 1982.〔(New York Times, March 9, 1982, "Caputo Quitting Race For Senate Over Inaccuracy" )〕 Tim Russert, who worked for Senator Moynihan as a campaign aide at the time and later became the host of NBC's Meet the Press, discovered that Caputo had falsely claimed to have been drafted into the Army during the Vietnam War.〔(New Yorker, June 23, 2008, "Postscript: Tim Russert )〕〔(U.S. News &World Report, June 13, 2008, "Tim Russert, 1950-2008: Gone Much Too Soon" )〕 During a campaign appearance, Caputo had described himself as "a draftee" during the Vietnam-era, and his entry in "Who's Who in American Politics" stated that he was a second lieutenant in the Army.〔(New York Times, February 21, 1982, "Headliners: Caputo's Army )〕 Although Caputo never said that he served in Vietnam, the way he had described his status gave many people that impression. In fact, Caputo worked as a civilian analyst at the Pentagon to avoid being drafted.〔(New York Times, February 21, 1982, "Headliners: Caputo's Army )〕 Republican Party bosses forced Caputo to withdraw from the race, and the disclosure destroyed his political career. That year, Assemblywoman Florence M. Sullivan of Brooklyn won the Republican primary to win the nomination, but she was defeated in a landslide by Moynihan.
Since leaving politics, Caputo has worked as a lawyer. Caputo received attention in June 2008 after the death of NBC News Washington bureau chief (and ''Meet the Press'' moderator) Tim Russert. A number of articles noted Russert's role in exposing Caputo in the 1982 Senate race. In May 2010, Caputo was compared to Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal who falsely claimed to have served in Vietnam.〔(Hartford Courant, May 19, 2010, "Analysis: Blumenthal's Image Damaged, But Perhaps Not Fatally" )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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