Raúl Grijalva | |
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Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona's 7th district |
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Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 3, 2003 |
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Preceded by | New district |
Member of the Pima County Board of Supervisors | |
In office 1989–2002 |
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Personal details | |
Born | February 19, 1948 Tucson, Arizona |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Ramona F. Grijalva |
Children | Adelita Grijalva Raquel Grijalva Marisa Grijalva |
Residence | Tucson |
Alma mater | University of Arizona |
Occupation | College Administrator |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Raúl M. Grijalva (English: /rɑːˈuːl ɡrɪˈhælvə/; born February 19, 1948) is the U.S. Representative for Arizona's 7th congressional district, serving since 2003. He is a member of the Democratic Party.
The district includes half of metro Tucson, all of Yuma and Nogales, and some peripheral parts of metro Phoenix.
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Raúl M. Grijalva's father was a migrant worker from Mexico who entered the United States in 1945 through the Bracero Program and labored on southern Arizona ranches.[1] Grijalva was born in Tucson, Arizona, and graduated from Sunnyside High School in 1967. He is a 2004 inductee to the Sunnyside High School Alumni Hall of Fame. He attended the University of Arizona and earned a bachelor's degree in Sociology. While at the University, he was a member of Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlán (MEChA).
In 1974, he was elected to the Tucson Unified School District board and served as a school board member until 1986. Grijalva Elementary School in Tucson was named for him in 1987.[2] From 1975 to 1986, Grijalva was the director of the El Pueblo Neighborhood Center, and in 1987 he was Assistant Dean for Hispanic Student Affairs at the University of Arizona. Grijalva was a member of the Pima County Board of Supervisors from 1989 to 2002, and served as chairman from 2000 to 2002.[3]
Grijalva is a member of several dozen caucuses. A full list is available at his Web site.[4]
Grijalva co-chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus with Keith Ellison of Minnesota[5] and in 2008 was among 12 members rated by National Journal as tied for most liberal overall.[6] Liberal and progressive activist groups routinely give him high marks for his voting record. For the first session of the 111th Congress, Grijalva received a 100 percent score from Americans for Democratic Action, Peace Action, the League of Conservation Voters, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and several other notable groups.[7]
Grijalva is an advocate of mining law reform[8] and many other environmental causes. From his position on the House Committee on Natural Resources -- where he has been the top Democrat on the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public Lands since 2007—he has led Democratic efforts to strengthen federal offshore oil drilling oversight since before the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill[9] and introduced a successful bill to create a permanent National Landscape Conservation System at the Bureau of Land Management.[10] He was a leading candidate for Secretary of the Interior when President Obama was elected, but the job eventually went to Ken Salazar[11] -- according to the Washington Post, President Obama made the decision in part because of Grijalva's stated preference for more environmental analysis before approving offshore drilling projects.[12]
He has been a vocal opponent of Arizona's SB 1070 law that mandates police checks of citizenship documentation for anyone subjected to a legitimate law enforcement stop, detention or arrest as long as the officer does not consider race, color or national origin during the stop, detention or arrest.[13] Shortly after the measure was signed by Arizona Governor Jan Brewer, Grijalva called on legal, political, activist and business groups not to hold their conventions or conferences in the state, a position that he said quickly became misconstrued as a call for a general boycott of the state economy.[14] He criticized the 2010 deployment of 1,200 National Guard units to the U.S.-Mexico border as "political symbolism" that he believed would not adequately address the issues of immigration and border security.[15]
Grijalva has frequently called for a withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan and Iraq, and supports the wider implementation of the National Solidarity Program as a way to improve Afghans' economic and educational infrastructure.[16] The group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave him an "A" rating for the 2007-2008 Congressional session.
Grijalva has a pro-choice voting record and voted against the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.[17] He was strongly critical of the Stupak-Pitts Amendment, which sought to place limits on taxpayer-funded abortions in the Affordable Health Care for America Act.[18]
On Feb. 24, 2010, Grijalva wrote a letter signed by 18 other Representatives calling for an investigation of the BP Atlantis offshore drilling platform due to whistleblower allegations that it was operating without approved safety documents.[19] He has called for Atlantis to be shut down.[20] Since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill on April 20, 2010, Grijalva has written letters to the Minerals Management Service and the Department of the Interior questioning current offshore drilling regulations and calling for stronger oversight of the oil industry.[21]
Grijalva has gained prominence as an outspoken critic of what he calls lax federal oversight of the oil drilling industry, and in late 2010 launched an investigation of the White House's handling of the Horizon spill and its aftermath. That investigation revealed that scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency and elsewhere in the federal government had voiced concerns about drafts of an official government report on the cause and scope of the spill, but were overruled because the report was meant as a "communications document".[22]
In 2010, he introduced H.R. 5355 to eliminate the cap on oil company liability for the cost of environmental cleanups of spills.[23]
Grijalva has sponsored numerous education bills during his time in Congress, including the Success in the Middle Act[24] and the Graduation for All Act.[25] Grijalva has long ties to the educational community from his time on the board of the Tucson Unified School District and his current position on the House Education and Labor Committee.
As a member and chairman of the Pima County Board of Supervisors, Grijalva was widely regarded as a central figure behind the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan,[26] an ambitious and highly regarded County program for planned land-use and biodiversity conservation.[27] He consistently supported endangered species and wilderness conservation on the Board of Supervisors and has continued to do so in Congress, introducing a bill in 2009 to make permanent the National Landscape Conservation System within the Bureau of Land Management. In 2008, Grijalva released a report called The Bush Administration's Assaults on Our National Parks, Forests and Public Lands,[28] which accused the Bush administration of mismanaging public land and reducing barriers to commercial access.[29]
Grijalva supports increasing restrictions on the purchase and possession of guns and increasing enforcement of existing restrictions on gun purchase and possession.[30] He was one of the 67 co-sponsors of the 2007 Assault Weapons Ban, HR 1022.[31] Grijalva has an F rating from the NRA.[32]
As co-chair of the Progressive Caucus, Grijalva was a prominent supporter of a public option throughout the debate over the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.[33] The House-approved Affordable Health Care for America Act included a public option—however, the Senate version did not include a similar provision, and it was ultimately not a part of the final reform package.
Grijalva has a long history in community health activism as an early supporter of Tucson's El Rio Community Health Center.[34] He supports single-payer health care, but voted in favor of the Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act because he felt it was a major improvement over the status quo.[35]
Grijalva supports the DREAM Act and the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America's Security and Prosperity Act (CIR ASAP) and has recently come to greater prominence because of his role in promoting immigration reform.[36][37] He has opposed the expansion of a border fence, citing cost effectiveness concerns and potential damage to sensitive wildlife habitats.[38] The CIR ASAP bill includes his Border Security and Responsibility Act of 2009, which prioritizes remote cameras and other border monitoring techniques with a relatively slight environmental impact. The Immigrant Justice Advocacy Campaign gave him a 100 percent score for the first session of the 111th Congress. In previous years he voted against H.R. 4437 and the Secure Fence Act, and opposed Arizona Proposition 200 in 2004.
Grijalva is a strong supporter of sovereignty and government-to-government relationships. In April 2010 he introduced the RESPECT Act, which mandates that federal agencies consult with Native tribes before taking a variety of major actions.[39] The bill would codify a Clinton-era executive order that has never had the force of law.
After the passage in April 2010 of Arizona's controversial SB 1070 law, which he saw as opening the door to racial profiling and granting traditionally federal immigration enforcement powers to local authorities,[40] Grijalva suggested that civic, religious, labor, Latino, and other like-minded organizations refrain from using Arizona as a convention site until the law was repealed.[41] His opposition to SB 1070 was widely viewed as the reason for multiple subsequent death threats against him and his staff, which led to several office closures in the spring of 2010.[42]
When Judge Susan Bolton of the Arizona District Court enjoined major parts of the law [43] in July 2010, Grijalva ended his call for economic sanctions. As he told the Arizona Daily Star, the largest paper in Tucson:
"After this ruling, everybody has some responsibility to pause, and that includes me," said Grijalva, a Tucson Democrat. "The issue of economic sanctions is a moot point now and I will encourage national organizations I'm in contact with to come and lend a hand - not just economically, but to help us begin to educate people about how we need to fix this broken system."[44]
He subsequently said that his economic strategy was not as effective as he hoped in changing other state lawmakers' minds, and that he would focus on legal remedies in the future.[45] The issue became a focal point in the 2010 election, in which Grijalva ultimately defeated Republican challenger Ruth McClung by less than 10,000 votes.
Concerned about allegations of voting irregularities purportedly leading to disenfranchisement, in 2004 Grijalva joined Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson and several other House Democrats in requesting that the United Nations observe and certify elections in the United States.[46]
After the General Election, Grijalva was one of 31 Representatives who voted in the House not to count the electoral votes from Ohio on grounds of unacceptable irregularities.[47]
After the 2000 United States Census, Arizona gained two Congressional districts. The 2nd District, which had long been represented by Democrat Mo Udall, was renumbered as the 7th District. Ed Pastor, a Phoenix Democrat who had succeeded Udall in 1991, had his home drawn into the newly created 4th District and opted to run for election there, making the 7th District an open seat. Grijalva won a crowded seven-way Democratic primary, which was tantamount to election in this heavily Democratic, majority-Hispanic district. Before the 2010 election, he was reelected three times with no substantial Republican opposition. In 2008, he defeated Republican challenger Joseph Sweeney.
During the 2008 presidential campaign, Grijalva endorsed Barack Obama for President; his district, however, was won by Hillary Rodham Clinton.
During the 2010 midterms, Grijalva faced his toughest re-election campaign before ultimately defeating his Republican opponent, Ruth McClung, 50%-44% -- his closest margin of victory since being elected, and the first close election in what is now the 7th since 1978, when Udall was held to only 52 percent of the vote.
Year | Democratic | Votes | Pct | Republican | Votes | Pct | 3rd Party | Party | Votes | Pct | 3rd Party | Party | Votes | Pct | |||||
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2002 | Raúl M. Grijalva | 61,256 | 59.00% | Ross Hieb | 38,474 | 37.06% | John L. Nemeth | Libertarian | 4,088 | 3.94% | |||||||||
2004 | Raúl M. Grijalva* | 108,868 | 62.06% | Joseph Sweeney | 59,066 | 33.67% | Dave Kaplan | Libertarian | 7,503 | 4.28% | |||||||||
2006 | Raúl M. Grijalva* | 80,354 | 61.09% | Ron Drake | 46,498 | 35.35% | Joe Michael Cobb | Libertarian | 4,673 | 3.55% | |||||||||
2008 | Raúl M. Grijalva* | 124,304 | 63.26% | Joseph Sweeney | 64,425 | 32.79% | Raymond Patrick Petrulsky | Libertarian | 7,755 | 3.95% | |||||||||
2010 | Raúl M. Grijalva* | 79,935 | 50.23% | Ruth McClung | 70,385 | 44.23% | Harley Meyer | Independent | 4,506 | 2.83% | George Keane | Libertarian | 4,318 | 2.71% |
Grijalva and his wife Ramona have three daughters.[49]
United States House of Representatives | ||
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New district | Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona's 7th congressional district 2003–present |
Incumbent |
United States order of precedence | ||
Preceded by Phil Gingrey R-Georgia |
United States Representatives by seniority 209th |
Succeeded by Jeb Hensarling R-Texas |
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108th | Senate: J. McCain | J. Kyl | House: J. Kolbe | E. Pastor | J. D. Hayworth | J. Shadegg | J. Flake | T. Franks | R. Grijalva | R. Renzi |
109th | Senate: J. McCain | J. Kyl | House: J. Kolbe | E. Pastor | J. D. Hayworth | J. Shadegg | J. Flake | T. Franks | R. Grijalva | R. Renzi |
110th | Senate: J. McCain | J. Kyl | House: E. Pastor | J. Shadegg | J. Flake | T. Franks | R. Grijalva | R. Renzi | G. Giffords | H. Mitchell |
111th | Senate: J. McCain | J. Kyl | House: E. Pastor | J. Shadegg | J. Flake | T. Franks | R. Grijalva | G. Giffords | H. Mitchell | A. Kirkpatrick |
112th | Senate: J. McCain | J. Kyl | House: E. Pastor | J. Flake | T. Franks | R. Grijalva | G. Giffords | P. Gosar | B. Quayle | D. Schweikert |
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