26John Ashcroft

Senator John Ashcroft is the only Senator to lose re-election to a dead person. His opponent died in a plane crash 2 weeks before the vote and his name was unable to be taken off the ballot.
27. Draco was an Ancient Greek legislator who wrote the first code of law in Athens. Over time his laws were seen as increasingly harsh and punitive, which is why we say a law is “draconian” when the punishment is too extreme for the crime.
28. Edward Dickinson Baker was serving as a U.S. Senator when the U.S. Civil War broke out, so re-joined the Army as a colonel. He was killed in battle and he remains the only sitting U.S. senator ever to have been killed in a military engagement.
29. Lithuanian politician Artūras Zuokas won an IG Nobel prize in 2011, for “demonstrating that the problem of illegally parked luxury cars can be solved by running them over with a tank”. Zuokas had used an armored vehicle to run over an illegally parked car in a Vilnius bike lane.
30. An 11-year-old boy named Brian Zimmerman was elected as the mayor of Crabb, Texas on the platform that he would work to incorporate the town even though it meant he would lose his seat. He was quoted as saying that “the mayor isn’t there to sit and worry about keeping his job. He’s there to do what’s best for the people."
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15 Most Controversial & Costly Blunders in History
31Strom Thurmond

Senator Strom Thurmond holds the record for the longest Filibuster by a lone senator. He stayed on the Senate floor speaking for 24 hours and 18 minutes nonstop in opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.
32. Otto von Bismarck once challenged a rival politician to a duel but backed out after learning that his opponent chose to fight with two pork sausages, one infected with roundworm.
33. After Congressman John Rankin refused to sit next to Adam Clayton Powell Jr. because of the color of his skin, Powell found every opportunity possible to sit close to the Mississippi Congressman. On one occasion Powell followed him from seat to seat until Rankin had moved five times.
34. On July 10, 1947, Senator Glen Taylor said: “I almost wish that the flying saucers would turn out to be space ships from another planet because the possibility of hostility would unify the people of the earth as nothing else could.”
35. In 1995, a New Mexico state senator named Duncan Scott introduced an amendment that psychologists were required to wear a wizard's hat when they testify in court.
36Peter Gloystein

A German politician named Peter Gloystein was forced to resign after publicly pouring champagne over a homeless man's head.
37. Between 1952-54, Felisa Rincón de Gautier, the mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico had snow delivered by plane to the city so that the children who had never seen or played in the snow, would be able to do so.
38. Former Alabama state Senator Steve Windom didn't leave his chair during a 12-hour dispute, notably urinating in a jug, because he was afraid the Democrats would steal it.
39. Carty Finkbeiner, a former mayor of Toledo once suggested selling houses near the airport to deaf people.
40. The stolen body of U.S. politician John Scott Harrison was discovered at the Ohio Medical College by his son and nephew, who were there looking for the body of their cousin whose grave robbery had been discovered in the cemetery the day before... at John Scott Harrison's burial.
41Robert F. Broussard

A Louisiana senator named Robert F. Broussard proposed the "American Hippo Bill" which would have brought Hippos from Africa to get rid of an invasive species and solve a meat shortage in the United States. The bill nearly passed.
42. Senator Patrick Leahy is a huge fan of the Batman comics, and has appeared in all but one Batman movie since 'Batman Forever', as well as an episode of 'Batman: The Animated Series.'