February 04, 2026
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Former Rep. Lee Hamilton, 9/11 Commission Vice Chair, Dies at 94

Former Indiana Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton, who spent more than three decades in Congress as a leading voice on foreign affairs and later served as vice chair of the 9/11 Commission, died Tuesday at his home in Bloomington, Indiana, at age 94, his son Doug said. Hamilton, first elected in 1964 from a rural southern Indiana district, chaired both the House Foreign Affairs and Intelligence Committees and co‑led the Iran‑Contra investigation into the Reagan administration’s secret arms‑for‑hostages and Contra‑funding scheme. He opposed the 1991 Gulf War and argued for economic sanctions over military action in Iraq, later urging that the United States be seen abroad as an 'optimistic and benign power' rather than just a military leader. As vice chair of the 9/11 Commission, he worked closely with GOP chair Thomas Kean to confront both Clinton and George W. Bush officials over missed warnings and intelligence failures, concluding that successive administrations 'just didn’t get' the al‑Qaida threat. Hamilton was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barack Obama in 2015 for his bipartisan approach, but some critics long argued he was too cautious in pursuing wrongdoing by Republican administrations, a debate that continues in assessments of congressional oversight today.

U.S. Congress and Oversight 9/11 Commission and National Security

📌 Key Facts

  • Lee Hamilton died at home in Bloomington, Indiana, on Tuesday at age 94, according to his son.
  • He served in the U.S. House from 1965 to 1999, chairing the House Foreign Affairs and Intelligence Committees.
  • Hamilton co‑chaired the Iran‑Contra investigation and later was vice chair of the 9/11 Commission, which faulted both Clinton and Bush administrations for failing to grasp the al‑Qaida threat.
  • President Barack Obama awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015, praising his honesty, wisdom and bipartisanship.

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