![Photos: Bob Dole through the years](https://cbsnews2.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2021/12/05/509c51fc-390b-4dcd-8b6f-a7543df92f99/thumbnail/1200x630/48e0ba39e0200c272e6e6d3cf4a0db8f/ap18345670703164.jpg)
Photos: Bob Dole through the years
CBSN
Bob Dole, a World War II veteran, longtime senator representing Kansas and the GOP presidential nominee in 1996, died Sunday at the age of 98. The Elizabeth Dole Foundation said Dole died early Sunday morning in his sleep.
When Dole became the Republican presidential nominee in 1996, it was the high point of more than a half-century in the national spotlight as a congressman, senator, vice-presidential candidate, two-time presidential candidate, national chair of the Republican Party and longtime leader of Senate Republicans. Originally from Russell, Kansas, Dole grew up during the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression. He was a star athlete in high school who planned to become a doctor, and he enlisted in the Army while at the University of Kansas. Dole was so badly injured in World War II that he nearly died twice and lost a kidney to infection. The people of Russell, Kansas, collected money in cigar box for his recovery. The wounds left him unable to use one arm. After serving in the Kansas state legislature, Dole was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1960. Although a Republican, he voted for the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act in 1965. He won the Senate seat in 1968. Dole was a power broker in Washington, and President Richard Nixon named him the Republican National Committee chairman in 1971. Dole's first marriage ended in divorce in 1972. He married Elizaeth Hanford of Salisbury, North Carolina, in December 1975. She would go on to become a Reagan and Bush Cabinet member and eventually a senator herself. President Gerald Ford chose Dole to be his running mate in the 1976 race, and the campaign brought out another side of Dole, a political gutfighter who accused Democrats of being warmongers. In the vice presidential debate, Walter Mondale labeled him a "hatchet man," a phrase that would follow Dole the rest of his career. After Ford and Dole lost to Jimmy Carter in 1976, Dole returned to be a power broker in the Senate. He was the Republican author of the Food Stamp Act with Democrat Hubert Humphrey in 1977, and crafted bipartisan legislation with Democratic Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan to rescue Social Security. President Ronald Reagan's pick for the Supreme Court, Robert Bork, was blocked by Senate Democrats. The 12-day nomination hearings marked a turning point for how confirmation hearings were held. Dole took a second run at the Republican nomination for president in 1988. He won the Iowa caucus but dropped out after losing New Hampshire and several southern states to then-Vice President George H.W. Bush. At the debate in New Hampshire, he confronted Bush and called him a liar. While in the Senate, Dole had championed through the American with Disabilities Act, which was passed in 1996. Dole ran for the GOP nomination again in 1996, this time successfully. Dole, then 73, became the oldest first-time nominee for president at the time. After winning the GOP nomination, Dole had to fight off popular incumbent President Bill Clinton. Dole resigned from the Senate in the summer of 1996 to focus on campaigning full time. "My time to leave this office has come, and I will seek the presidency with nothing to fall back on but the judgment of the people, and nowhere to go but the White House or home," Dole said. Once a private citizen, Dole surprised even close friends by becoming a TV pitchman. He did a soft drink commercial with Britney Spears and, as a prostate cancer survivor, ads for Viagra as well. Dole didn't stay out of politics long. He helped his wife, Elizabeth, first in a bid for the White House, and then successfully in her run for the U.S. Senate from North Carolina. Dole was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1997, where he jokingly began to give what sounded like the oath of office for president. And in 2018, he was honored with a Congressional Gold Medal.
In this August 1, 2000, file photo, Bob Dole salutes after a speech at the Republican National Convention in the First Union Center in Philadelphia. An undated photo of Dole in the Army. He worried that he would wind up in a wheelchair selling pencils on the street, and as he later told "60 Minutes" correspondent Lesley Stahl, his life became a living nightmare. A January 5, 1971, file photo of Bob Dole. In this April 22, 1972, file photo, Dole speaks in Chicago. Dole posed with his bride-to-be on Saturday, December 6, 1975, at a wedding breakfast in Washington. Dole, center, his mother Bina Dole, left, and President Gerald Ford appear together on the final night of the Republican National Convention in Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Missouri, August 19, 1976. Dole became chairman of the Senate Finance Committee under President Ronald Reagan, where he helped push through Reagan's tax cuts. He was elected majority leader after the 1984 election. Republican senators escort embattled Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork and his wife Mary Ellen, center, as they leave the Capitol Building, October 7, 1987. In this Sunday, February 14, 1988, file photo, Republican presidential candidates, from left, Vice President George Bush, Pat Robertson, Representative Jack Kemp, Pierre "Pete" du Pont and Senator Bob Dole, pose before starting their last debate before the primary in Goffstown, New Hampshire. Dole told ABILITY Magazine that because of his own disability, he knew he "had to do something special" with his life. It "changes your whole life, not just your attitude," he said. "Prior to my injury I was a pretty good athlete, but afterwards I learned to apply myself more and made good grades for a change," he said. Dole advocated for Americans with disabilities in his maiden Senate speech on April 14, 1969 — the 24th anniversary of the day he was wounded in WWII — and continued to do so throughout his career. Dole announces his bid for the Republican nomination for president in Topeka, Kansas, April 10, 1995. In this photo, Republican presidential hopeful Bob Dole holds a gas nozzle and says "It's out of gas just like Bill Clinton," as he greets supporters while entering the Kentucky GOP State Convention in Louisville, Kentucky, on Saturday, May 11, 1996. Kentucky Representative Harold Rogers, at left, looks on. Dole and his wife Elizabeth wave from the podium on the floor of the Republican National Convention in San Diego, as confetti falls after Dole accepted the Republican presidential nomination. Dole attends the unveiling of his portrait at the U.S. Capitol, in Washington, July 25, 2006. And in 2016, Dole was the only former Republican nominee to back Donald Trump in the primaries. In this January 17, 2018 file photo, Dole smiles as he gets a kiss from his wife Elizabeth Dole.
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This story previously aired on Feb. 10, 2024. It was updated on Feb. 15, 2025. AMIE HARWICK (video): You can seek therapy to address an issue like depression, anxiety, a breakup. You can also seek therapy to be a better you! GARETH PURSEHOUSE (voicemail): I have so much I need to say. Please give me a chance to just say it. … Please (crying) please.
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Signaling a major shift in civil rights enforcement, the federal agency that enforces workplace anti-discrimination laws has moved to dismiss six of its own cases on behalf of workers alleging gender identity discrimination, arguing that the cases now conflict with President Donald Trump's recent executive order, court documents say.