Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid – who announced on Friday that he’s ending his nearly three-decade-long congressional career – will likely be remembered by Democrats as a soft-spoken but sharp-tongued leader.
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Reid, 75, has acknowledged his brusque reputation, telling The New York Times Magazine in 2010, “I’d rather people were saying, ‘Oh that guy is a golden-tongued devil’” than worrying about how his remarks may be interpreted.
Maybe his time spent as an amateur boxer has something to do with his pugilistic rhetoric. Here’s a look at some of Reid’s most colorful quips, comebacks and –yes—insults.
“You son of a b—-. You tried to bribe me.” In 1978, when a man named Jack Gordon tried to bribe Reid with $12,000 to approve a gaming device in Nevada casinos, Reid alerted the FBI and they set up a sting operation with secret video to nab Gordon. At one point, Reid lost his cool. He got up from his chair, attempted to choke Gordon, and said, “You son of a b—-, you tried to bribe me!”
“This guy is a loser” In 2005, a high school student asked Reid what he thought about then-President Bush. “The man’s father is a wonderful human being. I think this guy is a loser,” the Democrat said. Coming under criticism, Reid later called the White House to apologize.
“That’s a clown question, bro” Reid, in June 2012, stole a line from Washington Nationals star Bryce Harper, who used this funny phrase when the then 19-year-old athlete was asked if he’d take advantage of the lower drinking age while in Canada. Reid responded the same way when asked by a reporter if he’d bring the Dream Act to the Senate floor as a way to get Republicans to talk on the record about immigration.
“His poor father must be so embarrassed” In July 2012, Reid took a jab at Mitt Romney via The Huffington Post for not releasing more tax returns, even though Romney’s father turned over a dozen years of tax returns when he ran for the nation’s highest office in 1968.








