Alfonse d - translation to french
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Alfonse d - translation to french

AMERICAN POLITICIAN
Senator Pothole; Alfonse M. D'Amato; Alphonse M. D'Amato; Alfonse D'Amato; Al d'Amato; Alfonse Martello D'Amato; Alfonse Marcello D'Amato; Alphonse D'Amato; Alfonslnne D'Amato; Alfonslnne M. D'Amato; Alfonslnne Marcello D'Amato; Al Damato; Alfonse M. DAmato; Senator D'Amato
  • D'Amato, [[Kay Bailey Hutchison]], and [[Pete Domenici]] announce an agreement on mass transit funding legislation in 1998
  • Mike Long]], and D'Amato in 2007.
  • President]] [[Ronald Reagan]] presenting Al D'Amato and other New York leaders with a check for Westway Project Funds, September 1981
  • President]] [[Ronald Reagan]] in 1986

Alfonse d'Amato      
Alfonse D"Amato (born 1937), Republican Senator from New York (USA)

Definition

eth
[??]
(also edh)
¦ noun an Old English letter, . or ?, representing the dental fricatives ? and ?, eventually superseded by the digraph th.
Origin
from Dan. edh, perh. representing the sound of the letter.

Wikipedia

Al D'Amato

Alfonse Marcello D'Amato (born in Brooklyn, New York, on August 1, 1937) is a former United States Senator who represented the state of New York for 18 years from 1981 to 1999. He subsequently founded a lobbying firm, Park Strategies.

In 1980—after 25 years of involvement in the politics and government of Long Island—D'Amato defeated the four-term liberal Republican Sen. Jacob Javits for the Republican nomination for Senator and then in the general election for that office. D'Amato was re-elected in 1986 and 1992 before losing his fourth U.S. Senate election campaign to nine-term New York Congressman Chuck Schumer in 1998.

During his term as US Senator, he was known for supporting President Ronald Reagan on non-economic issues such as abortion. He agreed with President Bill Clinton both in 1993, for opening service in the armed forces to non-heterosexuals, and in 1996 for the Defense of Marriage Act, which denied federal recognition to same-sex marriages.

As of 2023, D'Amato is the last Republican to have represented New York in the U.S. Senate.