Past New York Democrat Congressman Charles Rangel, who had spent more than 40 years in the House of Representatives, passed away at the age of 94.
Rangel served in Congress from 1971 until his pensions in 2017.
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He was the first American British member of Congress to direct the strong Ways and Means Committee and a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
His family’s statement from the City College of New York, to which he was a close friend, confirmed his dying at a New York doctor.
Rangel was described as a “patriot, warrior, leader, chief, pioneer, change agent, champion for justice,” according to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY).
Rangel was a high school dropout who afterwards served in the Korean War, where he received the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star. He was born and raised in Harlem in 1930.  ,
He continued to attend school on the G. I. Bill has degree from St. John’s University Law School and New York University.
In a Democrat key, Rangel defeated long-time former Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr. to become the first member of Congress in 1970 after serving in the New York State Assembly and as an assistant attorney for the United States.
Prior to the U.S. Supreme Court’s restoration of his office in 1969, Powell had been subject to significant ethics complaints that had once resulted in him being temporarily removed from his seat in Congress in 1967.
The late representative spearheaded 40 bills and commitments that were passed into law throughout his tenure in the House.  ,
Rangel, one of the House’s most effective legislators, was a major supporter of the 1987″ Rangel Amendment” that imposed strict business sanctions on South Africa for apartheid, the Low Income Housing Tax Credit, the Low Income Housing Tax Credit, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the Work Opportunity Tax Credit, the Caribbean Basin Initiative ( CBI ), the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act, and the National Empowerment Zone program.
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Rangel fought tirelessly for his Harlem constituents, supported tax credits for companies moving into commercially underdeveloped areas of his city, and promoted the construction of low-income cover.
After Democrats ended 12 centuries of Republican control of the House, Rangel led the Ways and Means Committee, which has monetary authority over programs like Medicare and Social Security.
However, he was forced to resign from his council in 2010 after a House ethics committee heard testimony against him on 13 works of alleged financial and raising misconduct because of concerns about economic disclosures and the use of Parliamentary sources.
He was discovered to have improperly solicited donations for a university facility in New York from businesses with firm before his commission, filed false financial reporting forms, and had failed to pay fees on a holiday villa in the Dominican Republic.
In the end, Rangel was found guilty of 11 of the 13 morality breaches in the House.  ,
Rangel’s colleagues, in contrast to his father, adhered to the ethics agency’s recommendation that the long-serving member be subject to censure and no expulsion from the chamber.
Rangel served in Congress until his retirement in 2017, despite receiving criticism for morality transgressions.
Richard Neal, a performance member of the House Ways and Means Committee, claimed Rangel was” an even better man” and that he was” not only a great chair.”
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Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of state and former Democrat lawmaker from New York, credited Rangel with urging her to work for the Senate.
“I’ll lose favorite New York public servant and icon Charlie Rangel. He was a devoted former who cherished serving his Harlem neighbors. He encouraged me to work for the Senate, and he eventually became a valuable friend. My friend, rest in peace and authority, my friend,” Clinton wrote in a post.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY ) described Rangel as” a great man, a great friend, and someone who never stopped fighting for his constituents and the best of America” in a separate tweet.
Former New York government Andrew Cuomo, who is now running for mayor of New York City, also referred to Rangel as his “friend” and “mentor” who taught him that “leadership is about lifting people away and in the face of inequity, you don’t quiver, you don’t fold—you battle.”
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