Person who has entered politics after traveling to space as an astronaut
An astronaut-politician is a person who has entered politics after traveling to space as an astronaut. Even with the increasing number of individuals who have flown in space, astronauts still maintain a wide degree of public recognition, and those interested in pursuing a career in politics have been able to take advantage of their renown to enter politics at higher levels of elected office.
Canadian astronaut Julie Payette flew on STS-96 in 1999 and STS-127 in 2009 as a mission specialist. In 2017 she became the 29th Governor General of Canada, the viceregal representative of the King in Canada and a nonpartisan position within Canadian governance.
Claudie Haigneré, a French spationaute, has been junior minister for Research and New Technologies, and junior minister for European Affairs, in a government led by Jean-Pierre Raffarin, but has never held elected office.
Astronaut and veteran of two space missions Pedro Duque has been named Minister of Science, Innovation and Universities of Spain in May 2018.[5] He earned a degree in aeronautical engineering from the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM) in 1986.
In Russia, cosmonaut Yuri Baturin, described by Space.com in 2000 as "Russia's only cosmonaut / politician", became a senior aide to President Boris Yeltsin and served as one of that nation's leading space policy advisors.[7]
All four female Russian cosmonauts have gone on to serve in the State Duma. Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space, entered politics in the days of the Soviet Union, serving in parliament and as a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party.[8]Svetlana Savitskaya, the second woman in space, was elected to the State Duma in 1996 and currently serves as Deputy Chair of the Committee on Defense, in addition to being a member of the Commission on Safety, Defense, and the Fight Against Crime in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Union of Belarus and Russia.[9]Yelena Kondakova served in the Duma as a member of Fatherland – All Russia and later United Russia. She left United Russia in 2011 as a result of her dissatisfaction with results of internal party elections.[10] Most recently, Yelena Serova, the first female Russian cosmonaut to visit the International Space Station, was elected to serve in the Duma in 2016.[11]
United States
In the United States, some major political leaders have attempted to draw astronauts into the political sphere.[12]
John Glenn, one of the Mercury Seven selected in 1959 by NASA who became the first American astronaut to orbit the Earth when he flew the Mercury-Atlas 6 named Friendship 7 for three Earth orbits on February 20, 1962, was the first astronaut elected to Congress when he won a Senate seat in 1974. He is the longest-serving American astronaut-politician to date, serving 25 years in the Senate.
Glenn left the human spaceflight program in 1964 and announced that he would challenge incumbent U.S. SenatorStephen M. Young in the Democratic primary at the end of Young's first term in office. Criticism of "astronaut turned politician" Glenn immediately followed his announcement, with Republicans and Young supporters disagreeing with the "undesirable precedent in astronauts' capitalizing on their fame to enter political roles", and some grumbling that Glenn did not follow the standard "step-by-step progression up the political ladder" by "aspiring immediately for the Senate".[13]
Many in Congress believed that Attorney GeneralRobert F. Kennedy had promoted Glenn's electoral bid to increase Democrats' chances in Ohio in the 1964 United States presidential election. Kennedy stated that he had had "a number of conversations with John Glenn over his future". At the same time, the Democratic Party of Oklahoma reportedly discussed fellow Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper as a candidate for the Senate.[13] In an editorial shortly after the announcement, The Blade stated that Glenn "presumes too much on his popularity as a spaceman".[14] A slip and fall in a bathtub in March 1964 ultimately led to Glenn's withdrawal from the race.[15] Glenn ran again in 1970, losing the Ohio Senate primary to Howard Metzenbaum. In 1974, Glenn won election to the Senate in a special election to fill the seat of William B. Saxbe.[16] In 1984, Glenn sought the Democratic nomination for President of the United States. He withdrew from the race in March 1984, after winning only two delegates and finishing in sixth place.[17] Glenn returned to space on October 29, 1998, aboard Space Shuttle Discovery (STS-95) while still a sitting Senator. The next year he retired from Congress.
NASA's Shuttle program has also produced several politicians. In 1985, Senator Jake Garn went into space aboard the STS-51-D flight as a payload specialist and in 1986 Rep. Bill Nelson of Florida became the second sitting member of Congress to travel into space aboard Space Shuttle Columbia's STS-61-C mission, also as a payload specialist. In 2012, shuttle astronaut José M. Hernández ran for Congress in California's 10th District, he won the Democratic nomination, but lost to incumbent Jeff Denham.[23]
On February 12, 2019, four-time shuttle astronaut Mark Kelly announced that he was running in the 2020 Senate special election in Arizona to fill the seat left open by the death of John McCain in 2018.[24] In the Democratic primary, he faced only nominal opposition, winning the nomination with 99.93% of the vote. Kelly faced off against incumbent Senator Martha McSally (appointed by Governor Doug Ducey) on Election Day, winning with a margin of about 2 points.[25] He was sworn in on December 2, 2020.[26] Kelly was reelected in the 2022 Senate election, securing a full six-year term.
In 2024, after President Joe Biden declined to seek re-election, there was heavy speculation that presumptive-nominee Kamala Harris was considering Kelly as her running mate.[27]
Various conventions, treaties, agreements, memorandums, charters or declarations establishing and governing intergovernmental organisations or inter-agency bodies dealing with space affairs