
Carol Elizabeth Moseley Braun is an American politician and lawyer who represented
Illinois in the
United States Senate from 1993 to 1999. She was the 1st and only
African-American woman elected to the United States Senate, the 1st African-American U.S. Senator for the Democratic Party, the 1st woman to defeat an incumbent U.S. Senator in an election, and the 1st and only
female Senator from Illinois. From 1999 until 2001, she was the
United States Ambassador to New Zealand. She was a candidate for the Democratic nomination during the
2004 U.S. presidential election. Following the public announcement by
Richard M. Daley that he would not seek re-election, in November 2010, Braun began her
campaign for Mayor of Chicago.
Moseley was born in
Chicago, Illinois. She attended Ruggles School for elementary school, and she attended Parker High School (now the site of
Paul Robeson High School) in Chicago.
She majored in political science at the
University of Illinois at Chicago, graduating in 1969 and earned a
Juris Doctor degree from the
University of Chicago Law School in 1972. Moseley Braun was a
prosecutor in the
United States Attorney's office in Chicago from 1973 to 1977. Braun was first elected to public office in 1978, as a member of the
Illinois House of Representatives. There, she rose to the post of assistant
majority leader. As a State Representative, she became recognized as a champion for liberal social causes.
She currently runs a private law firm, Carol Moseley Braun LLC in Chicago. Moseley Braun has launched a line of
organic food products called
Ambassador Organics.





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