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United States Senate Majority Leader - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (453 words) |
 | The Senate Majority Leader is a member of the United States Senate who is elected by the party conference which holds the majority in the Senate to serve as the chief Senate spokesman for his or her party and to manage and schedule the legislative and executive business of the Senate. |
 | The Majority leader customarily serves as the chief representative and "face" of his or her party in Senate, and sometimes even in all of Congress if the House of Representatives and thus office of Speaker of the House is controlled by the opposition party. |
 | Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas became the first Majority Leader in 1925. |
| Lott's strife: no longer a pillar of the party - theage.com.au (487 words) |
 | Senator Lott is the first Senate majority leader in the past century to have been forced out of office by his colleagues. |
 | Senator Lott, from Mississippi, had spent two weeks in the eye of a political storm after he said that if America had voted for a segregationist presidential candidate in 1948 then "we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years". |
 | Senator Lott, 61, had been speaking at a 100th birthday celebration for Strom Thurmond, the senator who had run for the White House that year under the banner of the racist States Rights Democratic Party, commonly known as the Dixiecrats. |