Trent Lott | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Senate Majority Leader | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| In office January 20, 2001 – June 6, 2001 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Deputy | Don Nickles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Preceded by | Tom Daschle | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Succeeded by | Tom Daschle | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| In office June 12, 1996 – January 3, 2001 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Preceded by | Bob Dole | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Succeeded by | Tom Daschle | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| United States Senator fromMississippi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| In office January 3, 1989 – December 18, 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Preceded by | John C. Stennis | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Succeeded by | Roger Wicker | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| House Minority Whip | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| In office January 3, 1981 – January 3, 1989 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Leader | Robert H. Michel | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Preceded by | Robert H. Michel | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Succeeded by | Dick Cheney | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromMississippi's5th district | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| In office January 3, 1973 – January 3, 1989 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Preceded by | William M. Colmer | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Succeeded by | Larkin I. Smith | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Personal details | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Born | Chester Trent Lott Sr. (1941-10-09)October 9, 1941 (age 84) Grenada,Mississippi, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Political party | Democratic (before 1972) Republican (1972–present) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Spouse | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Children | 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Education | University of Mississippi (BA,JD) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Signature | ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chester Trent Lott Sr. (born October 9, 1941) is an American lobbyist, lawyer, author, and politician who representedMississippi in theUnited States House of Representatives from 1973 to 1989 and in theUnited States Senate from 1989 to 2007. Lott served in numerous leadership positions in both chambers of Congress as one of the first of a wave ofRepublicans winning seats in Southern states that had beensolidly Democratic. Later in his career, he served twice asSenate Majority Leader, and also, alternately,Senate Minority Leader. In 2003, he stepped down from the position after controversy due to his praising of SenatorStrom Thurmond's1948segregationistDixiecrat presidential bid.
From 1968 to 1972, Lott was an administrative assistant to RepresentativeWilliam M. Colmer of Mississippi, who was also the chairman of theHouse Rules Committee. Upon Colmer's retirement, Lott won Colmer's former seat in the House of Representatives. In 1988, Lott ran successfully for the U.S. Senate to replace another retiree,John C. Stennis. After Republicans took the majority in the Senate, Lott becameSenate Majority Whip in 1995 and then Senate Majority Leader in 1996, upon the resignation of presidential nomineeBob Dole of Kansas. Following GOP losses in the 2000 Senate races that resulted in a 50–50 split, Lott briefly became Senate Minority Leader, as DemocratAl Gore was stillVice President and President of the Senate[a] at the beginning of the new term on January 3, 2001. Seventeen days later, Lott was restored as Senate Majority Leader after Republicans regained control of the chamber upon the inauguration of the new vice president,Dick Cheney, on January 20. Lott was Senate Majority Leader until June 6, 2001, when Vermont SenatorJim Jeffords changed his party affiliation from Republican toIndependent, and caucused with the Senate Democrats for the remainder of his term. Thereafter, Lott again served as Senate Minority Leader.
FollowingRepublican gains in the2002 midterm elections, Lott was slated to again become Majority Leader when the next Senate session began in January 2003. However, on December 20, 2002, after significant controversy following comments he made regardingStrom Thurmond's presidential candidacy, Lott resigned as Senate Minority Leader.
Though no longer in leadership, Lott remained in the Senate until resigning in 2007. Fellow RepublicanRoger Wicker won the2008 special election to replace him. Lott became a lobbyist, co-founding the Breaux–Lott Leadership Group. The firm was later acquired by law and lobbying firmPatton Boggs. Lott serves as a Senior Fellow at theBipartisan Policy Center (BPC), where he focuses on issues related to energy, national security, transportation and congressional reforms. Lott is also a co-chair of BPC's Energy Project. In June 2020 Lott was fired from the Washington law and lobbying firmSquire Patton Boggs while negotiating to join another firm.[1] Days later on June 15, 2020, Lott joined Crossroads Strategies along with his longtime colleagueJohn Breaux.[2]
Lott was born inGrenada, Mississippi, and lived his early years in nearbyDuck Hill, where his father, Chester Paul Lott, sharecropped a stretch of cotton field. Lott's mother, the former Iona Watson, was a schoolteacher. Lott's father was a philanderer with a drinking problem, and Lott frequently acted as a mediator when his mother threatened his father with divorce.[3] When Lott was in the sixth grade, the family moved toPascagoula, where Lott's father worked at a shipyard.[4]
Lott attended college at theUniversity of Mississippi inOxford, where he obtained an undergraduate degree inpublic administration in 1963 and aJuris doctor degree in 1967. He served as a field representative for Ole Miss and was president of his fraternity,Sigma Nu. Lott was also an Ole Miss cheerleader, on the same team with future U.S. SenatorThad Cochran.[5] At the time that Lott was president, the Sigma Nu fraternity house was raided by the troops from the716th Battalion during the "Battle of Oxford". They discovered a sizeable weapon cache.[6]
Regarding his education, theCongressional Record from 1999 quotes Senator Lott declaring: "I am a product of public education from the first grade through the second, third, and fourth grades where I went to school at Duck Hill, Mississippi, and I had better teachers in the second, third, and fourth grades in Duck Hill, Mississippi, than I had the rest of my life."[7]
While an undergraduate at the University of Mississippi, Lott participated in the effort at the 1964 national convention of theSigma Nu fraternity to oppose acivil rights amendment proposed by theDartmouth College andDuke University chapters to end mandatory racial exclusion by the fraternity. Lott sided with thesegregationists who defeated the amendment. The Dartmouth chapter subsequently seceded from the fraternity, and Sigma Nu remained whites-only until later in the decade.[8][9]


Lott served as administrative assistant toHouse Rules Committee chairmanWilliam M. Colmer, also ofPascagoula, from 1968 to 1972.
In 1972, Colmer, one of the mostconservative Democrats in the House, announced his retirement after 40 years in Congress. He endorsed Lott as his successor in Mississippi's5th District, located in the state's southern tip, even though Lott ran as a Republican. Lott won handily, in large part due toRichard Nixon's landslide victory inthat year's presidential election. Nixon won the 5th district with an astonishing 87 percent of the vote; it was his strongest congressional district in the entire nation.[10]
Lott and his future Senate colleague,Thad Cochran (also elected to Congress that year), were only the second and third Republicans elected to Congress from Mississippi sinceReconstruction (Prentiss Walker was the first in 1964). Lott's strong showing in the polls landed him on the powerfulHouse Judiciary Committee as a freshman, where he voted against all three articles of impeachment drawn up against Nixon during the committee's debate. After Nixon released the infamous "smoking gun" transcripts (which proved Nixon's involvement in theWatergate cover-up), however, Lott announced that he would vote to impeach Nixon when the articles came up for debate before the full House (as did the other Republicans who voted against impeachment in committee).
Lott became very popular in his district, even though almost none of its living residents had been represented by a Republican before. As evidence, in November 1974, Lott won a second term in a blowout. Cochran was also reelected in a rout; he and Lott were the first Republicans to win a second term in Congress from the state since Reconstruction. They were among the few bright spots in a year that saw many Republicans turned out of office due to anger over Watergate. Lott was re-elected six more times without much difficulty, and even ran unopposed in 1978. However, conservative Democrats continued to hold most of the region's seats in the state legislature, as well as most local offices, well into the 2000s.
In1980, he served asRonald Reagan's Mississippi state chairman.[11] He served asHouse Minority Whip (the second-ranking Republican in the House) from 1981 to 1989; he was the first Southern Republican to hold such a high leadership position.


Lott ran for the U.S. Senate in1988, after 42-year incumbentJohn Stennis announced he would not run for another term. He defeated Democratic4th District CongressmanWayne Dowdy by almost eight points. Lott won by running up a 70 percent margin in his congressional district, and was also helped byGeorge H. W. Bush easily carrying the state in the presidential election. He never faced another contest nearly that close. He was re-elected in1994,2000, and2006 with no substantive Democratic opposition. He gave some thought to retirement for much of 2005, however, afterHurricane Katrina, he announced on January 17, 2006, that he would run for a fourth term.
In 1989, on the 25th anniversary of themurder of the civil rights activists James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, Lott and the rest of the Mississippi congressional delegation refused to vote for the non-binding resolution honoring the three men which nevertheless passed the Congress.[12]
He becameSenate Majority Whip when the Republicans took control of the Senate in 1995. In June 1996, he ran for the post ofSenate Majority Leader to succeed RepublicanBob Dole, who had resigned from the Senate to concentrate onhis presidential campaign. Lott faced his Mississippi colleagueThad Cochran, the then-Chairman of the Senate Republican Conference. Cochran cast himself as an "institutionalist" and who would help to rebuild public trust in Congress through compromise over conflict. Lott promised a "more aggressive" style of leadership and courted the younger Senate conservatives. Lott won by 44 votes to 8.[13] As majority leader, Lott had a major role in the Senate trial following theimpeachment of PresidentBill Clinton. After the House narrowly voted to impeach Clinton, Lott proceeded with the Senate trial in early 1999, despite criticisms that Republicans were far short of the two-thirds majority required under theConstitution to convict Clinton and remove him from office.
Lott generally pursued a conservative position in politics and was a notedsocial conservative. For instance, in 1998, Lott caused some controversy in Congress when as a guest on theArmstrong Williams television show, he equatedhomosexuality withalcoholism,kleptomania andsex addiction. When Williams, a conservative talk show host, asked Lott whether homosexuality is asin, Lott simply replied, "Yes, it is."[14] Lott's stance against homosexuality was disconcerting toliberalDemocratic Party elected officials and theHuman Rights Campaign Fund, an advocacy group for gay rights.[15]
According to theAnti-Defamation League, Lott was a frequent speaker at thewhite supremacist groupCouncil of Conservative Citizens.[16] Although he denied knowing of the group's intentions,[17] it was later revealed members of his family had CCC membership.[18]
After the2000 elections produced a 50–50 partisan split in the Senate,Vice PresidentAl Gore's tie-breaking vote gave the Democrats the majority from January 3 to 20, 2001, whenGeorge W. Bush took office and Vice PresidentDick Cheney's tie-breaking vote gave the Republicans the majority once again. Later in 2001, he becameSenate Minority Leader again after Vermont senatorJim Jeffords became an independent and caucused with the Democrats, allowing them to regain the majority. He was due to become majority leader again in early 2003 after Republicangains in the November 2002 elections.
In 2003, Lott coined the term “nuclear option”.[19]
Lott spoke on December 5, 2002, at the 100th birthday party of SenatorStrom Thurmond of South Carolina, a retiring Republican senator who had switched parties from the Democrats decades earlier. Thurmond had run forPresident of the United States in 1948 on theDixiecrat (or States' Rights Democratic) ticket. Lott said: "When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We're proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years, either."[20]
As a senator and presidential candidate, Thurmond maintained an explicitStates' Rights platform that challenged theCivil Rights Movement and later, theCivil Rights Act as illegally overturning theseparation of powers under the United States Constitution and called for the preservation ofracial segregation.The Washington Post reported that Lott had made similar comments about Thurmond's candidacy in a 1980 rally.[20] Lott gave an interview toBET explaining himself and repudiating Thurmond's former views.[21]
In the wake of the controversy, Lott resigned as Senate Republican Leader on December 20, 2002, effective at the start of the next session, January 3, 2003.Bill Frist ofTennessee was later elected to the leadership position. In the bookFree Culture,Lawrence Lessig argues that Lott's resignation would not have occurred had it not been for the effect of internetblogs. He says that though the story "disappear[ed] from the mainstream press within forty-eight hours", "bloggers kept researching the story" until, "finally, the story broke back into the mainstream press."[22]The New York Times, however, attributed his resignation to "ruthless maneuvering" byKarl Rove and George W. Bush to depose Lott, "a threat to the president’s agenda", and replace him with Frist, who had "long been the president's choice."[23]

After losing the Majority Leader post, Lott was less visible on the national scene, although he did break with some standardconservative positions. He battled with Bush over military base closures in his home state. He showed support for passenger rail initiatives, notably his 2006 bipartisan introduction, with Sen.Frank Lautenberg ofNew Jersey, of legislation to provide 80 percent federal matching grants to intercity rail and guarantee adequate funding forAmtrak.[24] On July 18, 2006, Lott voted with 19 Republican senators for theStem Cell Research Enhancement Act to lift restrictions on federal funding for the research. On November 15, 2006, Lott regained a leadership position in the Senate, when he was named Minority Whip after defeatingLamar Alexander ofTennessee 25–24.[25]
SenatorJohn E. Sununu (R) ofNew Hampshire said, after Lott's election as Senate Minority Whip, "He understands the rules. He's a strong negotiator." FormerHouse SpeakerNewt Gingrich (R) said he's "the smartest legislative politician I've ever met."[26]
Lott faced no Republican opposition in his primary race. State representativeErik R. Fleming placed first of four candidates in the June Democratic primary, but did not receive the 50 percent of the vote required to earn the party's nomination. Fleming and the second-place finisher, business consultant Bill Bowlin, faced off in a runoff on June 27, which Fleming won with 65% of the vote. Fleming criticized Lott for not doing enough to alleviate poverty in "the poorest state in the nation." Fleming's bid was viewed as a longshot, and Lott handily defeated him with 64% of the vote in November.[27][28]
On November 26, 2007, Lott announced that he would resign his Senate seat by the end of 2007.[29] According toCNN, his resignation was at least partly due to theHonest Leadership and Open Government Act, which forbade lawmakers from lobbying for two years after leaving office. Those who left by the end of 2007 were covered by the previous law, which he cosponsored and which required a wait of only one year.[30] In an interview regarding his resignation, Lott said that the new law "didn't have a big role" in his decision to resign.[31]
Lott's resignation became effective at 11:30 p.m. on December 18, 2007.[32] On January 7, 2008, it was announced that Lott and former SenatorJohn Breaux ofLouisiana, a Democrat, opened their lobbying firm about a block from the White House.[33]

In January 2008, he co-founded the Breaux-Lott Leadership Group, a "strategic advice, consulting, and lobbying" firm together with former Louisiana SenatorJohn Breaux.[34][35] The firm was later acquired by law and lobbying firmPatton Boggs,[36] nowSquire Patton Boggs following the June 2014 merger withSquire Sanders. In September 2014, lobbyist filings revealed that Lott was contracted to advocate on behalf ofGazprombank, a Russian majority state-owned bank targeted with sanctions over the2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine.[37] Lott was fired by Squire Patton Boggs in June 2020; no explanation was initially provided for his departure.[38] The firm later said Lott was removed because of theanti-racism 2020 protests, though Lott was already in negotiations to leave the firm. Lott joined lobbying firm Crossroad Strategies; John Breaux joined shortly after leaving Squire Patton Boggs.[39] Lott also served on the EADS North America (now known asAirbus) board of directors.[40][41]
On February 14, 2009,The New York Times reported the indictment of JudgeBobby DeLaughter for taking bribes fromRichard Scruggs, Lott's brother-in-law. Scruggs represented Lott in litigation againstState Farm Insurance company after the insurer refused to pay claims for the loss of his Mississippi home inHurricane Katrina.[42] According toThe New York Times, federal prosecutors have said that Lott was induced by Scruggs to offer DeLaughter a federal judgeship in order to gain the judge's favor.[43] In 2012, Lott testified in federal court that he never told DeLaughter that he would be recommended for a federal judgeship.[44]
For the 2016 presidential election, Lott served as a national co-chair forJohn Kasich, before shifting his support toDonald Trump's campaign once he became the nominee.[45]
In 2018Sacha Baron Cohen's television programWho Is America? premiered showing Lott supporting the "kinderguardians program" which supported training toddlers with firearms. Lott appeared not to know it was a hoax.[46]
Lott has been named an Honorary Patron of theUniversity Philosophical Society,Trinity College, Dublin.[47] Lott is on the Board of Selectors ofJefferson Awards for Public Service.[48]
Lott's memoir, entitledHerding Cats: A Life in Politics, was published in 2005. In the book, Lott spoke about the remark he made at the Strom Thurmond birthday party, former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, and his feelings of betrayal toward the Tennessee senator, claiming "If Frist had not announced exactly when he did, as the fire was about to burn out, I would still be majority leader of the Senate today."[49] He also described former Democratic LeaderTom Daschle ofSouth Dakota as "trustworthy".[50] He also revealed that PresidentGeorge W. Bush, then–Secretary of StateColin Powell, and other GOP leaders played a major role in ending his career as Senate Republican Leader.[51]
Lott married Patricia Thompson on December 27, 1964. The couple has two children: Chester Trent "Chet" Lott Jr., and Tyler Lott.[citation needed]
Lott is aFreemason, and holds the Grand Cross in theSouthern Jurisdiction of the United States in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite.[52]
In April 2007, Lott reached a confidential settlement with the State Farm insurance company after suing State Farm for fraud. Lott lost his Mississippi home due to Hurricane Katrina, and State Farm declined to pay an insurance claim after ruling the home had water damage.[53]
Trent Lott Academy in thePascagoula School District is named after him.[54][55] Lott is also the namesake ofTrent Lott International Airport inMoss Point, Mississippi.[56] The character ofLott Dod, a Neimoidian senator of the Trade Federation from the filmStar Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, is named after him.[57]
The Trent Lott Leadership Institute is named after him, located at his alma mater, theUniversity of Mississippi.[58]
...Pascagoula Junior High, before it became Trent Lott Middle School. In fact, Curry taught the U.S. senator.
TRENT attended Pascagoula Junior High, which is now called Trent Lott Middle School.