Former Senator Warren B. Rudman, who co-sponsored the landmark budget legislation known as the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act, has died. He was 82 years old.
“Warren was the embodiment of Yankee sensibility and New England independence. As an early advocate for fiscal responsibility, he worked with Republicans and Democrats alike to call attention to our nation’s growing deficit,” President Obama said in a statement issued Tuesday. “As we work together to address the fiscal challenges of our time, leaders on both sides of the aisle would be well served to follow Warren’s example of common-sense bipartisanship.”
The decorated war veteran and two-term senator from New Hampshire passed away Monday in Washington, D.C., after complications from lymphoma, the Washington Post reported.
The Republican was first elected in 1980 and demonstrated a fierce independent streak, crossing the aisle, if necessary, to do what he considered the right thing.









