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Former Vice President Walter Mondale Dies At 93

(Photo by Mark Erickson/Getty Images)

Michael Ginsberg Congressional Correspondent
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Former Vice President Walter Mondale died at the age of 93 on Monday, a family spokesperson confirmed.

Mondale served as Vice President to Jimmy Carter from 1977 to 1981. He was also the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee in 1984 when he lost to incumbent President Ronald Reagan. (RELATED: Former Secretary of State George Shultz Dies At 100)

Mondale became the first vice president to maintain an office in the West Wing, according to Axios. President Joe Biden said at a 2015 George Washington University event that Mondale was the first person he called when he accepted the vice-presidential nomination from Barack Obama.

Law professor Joel Goldstein credited Mondale with making “the vice presidency into a robust and constructive institution,” according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Democratic Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith eulogized Mondale as “a giant.”

Before the vice presidency, Mondale served as Minnesota senator from 1964-1976. During Bill Clinton’s administration, he was Ambassador to Japan.