Satveer Chaudhary

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Satveer Chaudhury
Minnesota Senate
In office
2001 – Incumbent
Born June 12, 1969
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Residence Fridley, Minnesota
Minnesota House of Representatives
In office
1997 – 2001
Political party DFL
Occupation Attorney, Business consultant
Religion Hinduism
Spouse Dee Chaudhury
Children 4
Website: http://www.chaudhary.org

Satveer Chaudhary (सतवीर चौधरी) (b. June 12, 1969) is an American politician in the Minnesota State Senate. He is currently a member of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party.[1] He was the first Asian American to hold an elected office in Minnesota and also the youngest senator in the history of that state.[2]

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[edit] Early life and career

Chaudhary was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1969 to parents from Haryana[3], a state in northern India. He grew up in Fridley, where in 1987 he graduated from Columbia Heights High School. He received his B.A. from St. Olaf College, and continued his studies in law at the University of Minnesota Law School where he received his J.D. He then proceeded to Oxford University where he studied British and American foreign policy.[1]

Two weeks after graduating from law school in the late 1990s, he threw his name into the hat for the State Representative election. He earned third place in the tally.[2]

[edit] Work

He was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 1996, defeating Republican candidate Dan Coughlin and netting 53% of the vote. While in the House, he became one of the leading voices for affordable medicine for the populace. He also worked on environmental legislation and financial reform of the Minnesota State Lottery system. He was a member of the Police Officers Alliance of Minnesota and the Minnesota Conservation Federation.[4]

When he joined the Senate in 2000 at age 31, he was the youngest senator in Minnesota History.[2] He has been the vice-chair for the Game and Fish Committee, Chief author of the LCMR 2005 (Legislative Commission on Minnesota Resources) reform bill, and co-authored bills on clean air and water legislation.[5][6] In 2006, he was appointed by Senate majority leader Dean Johnson to serve on the newly created Legislative and Citizen’s Commission on Minnesota Resources.[7]

[edit] On Indian-American ties

While in the senate, Chaudhary worked to boost ties between Minnesota and Haryana, which included his visit to Rohtak. The visit was made to emphasize economic and political ties between India and the United States, and described by Chaudhury as a "tryst with destiny"[8].

He also helped the Hindu community of Minnesota when the Maple Grove Hindu temple was vandalized. Chaudhury assisted the Hindu community in their efforts for justice.[9]

[edit] Election results

House of Representatives
  • In 1996, he won the Democratic primary for the Minnesota House of Representatives with 66% and won the general election with 53%.
  • He was re-elected in 1998 to the House by a large margin[2].
Senate
  • In 2000, he was elected to the state Senate
  • Reelected in 2004
  • Reelected in 2004
  • Reelected in 2006

[edit] Controversy

After he was re-elected in 2006 to the Senate, his opponent, Rae Hart Anderson, sent him a concession email that said

The race of your life is more important than this one--and it is my sincere wish that you'll get to know Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.[10].

The message was deemed very inappropriate by the populace, as Chaudhury is known to be a practicing Hindu.[10]


In 2002, a complaint was filed with the Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board of Minnesota against the organization "Friends of Satveer Chaudhary Committee". It alleged that

Committee failed to report some contributions and expenditures on the Senate Committee’s Report of Receipts and Expenditures for calendar year 2000. Specifically, the Complainant alleged that the Senate Committee failed to report expenditures for mailings in 2000.

The charges against him were dismissed by the State Board of Minnesota, and he was found to have engaged in no wrongdoing.[11]

[edit] Personal life

He lives in Fridley, Minnesota with his wife Dee and their four children. He is an avid sportsman and environmentalist. He is an attorney and a business consultant.

[edit] References

[edit] External link

Political offices
Preceded by
Unknown
Minnesota House of Representatives
1997-2001
Succeeded by
unknown
Preceded by
Unknown
50th senatorial district of Minnesota
2001
Incumbent