Steve Kagen | |
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Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Wisconsin's 8th district |
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In office January 3, 2007 – January 3, 2011 |
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Preceded by | Mark Andrew Green |
Succeeded by | Reid Ribble |
Personal details | |
Born | Steven Leslie Kagen December 12, 1949 Appleton, Wisconsin |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Gayle Kagen |
Residence | Appleton, Wisconsin |
Alma mater | University of Wisconsin–Madison Northwestern University Medical College of Wisconsin |
Occupation | Physician, politician |
Religion | Judaism |
Steven Leslie "Steve" Kagen, M.D.[1] (born December 12, 1949) is a physician and was the U.S. Representative for Wisconsin's 8th congressional district, serving from 2007 to 2011. He is a member of the Democratic Party. He was defeated in his bid for re-election in 2010 by Reid Ribble, and officially succeeded by him on January 3, 2011.
The district is located in the northeastern part of the state and includes Green Bay and Appleton.
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Kagen was born on December, 12 1949 in Appleton, Wisconsin. His first job was with the Appleton Department of Parks and Recreation as a playground leader during the summer months of both his sophomore and junior years at Appleton High School. After graduating in the first class from the new Appleton East High School, Kagen worked as a Teamster in a dairy bagging sugar and whey for part of a summer. He later attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he earned a Degree in Molecular Biology, with Honors. Kagen then entered medical school, and later trained at both Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois and the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. He is triple Board Certified in Internal Medicine; Allergy, Asthma and Immunology; and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology.
Kagen's father, Marv, also a doctor, was an unsuccessful Democratic Congressional candidate in 1966. The younger Dr. Kagen performed extensive volunteer work for his father's campaign and cited his father's campaign as a major factor in his interest in politics.
Dr. Kagen went on to become an allergist, founding four clinics in Appleton, Green Bay, Fond du Lac, and Oshkosh.
Before his election, he also served as an Assistant Clinical Professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin. He is Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology. He is also credited with having discovered many new causes of allergy and asthma, and served for seven years as the exclusive Allergy Consultant to CNN, CNN Airport News, CNN Headline News, and CNN Interactive.[2]
Rep. Kagen supported and voted for the 911 Commission Recommendations Act, the Minimum Wage increase, the SCHIP Children's Health Bill, the "Pay As You Go" Bill, campaign and lobbying reforms, oversight of FISA warrants and terror surveillance. He is a cosponsor of the Pharmaceutical Market Access and Drug Safety Act (H.R.380). This legislation would allow the importation of drugs from Canada for personal use and from an importer registered by the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. Kagen is also a cosponsor of the Medicare Prescription Drug Price Negotiation Act of 2007 (H.R. 4) and voted in favor of its passage in the U.S. House of Representatives in January 2007. The U.S. Senate has yet to consider this measure. Kagen has voted for all military appropriations bills, and authored a bill, the Rural Veterans Mental Health Improvement Act (H.R. 4231), which would expand mental health coverage for veterans.
The predominant legislative issue Kagen stressed during his 2006 campaign was an initiative he called "No Patient Left Behind." This proposal provides for open disclosure of all health care-related prices, unitary pricing where every citizen pays the same amount for the same product or service, a single insurance risk pool to leverage down insurance and prescription drug prices, set deductibles at 3% of a household's federal taxable income, and provide coverage to all children and working adults.[4]
Kagen declined to participate in the Congressional health care plan until all Americans have access to affordable health care. In a post on the Daily Kos, Kagen said, "I did not run for this office to get health care benefits." [5]
On May 15, 2008, legislation sponsored by Kagen titled "To amend the Sherman Act to make oil-producing and exporting cartels illegal and for other purposes" (H.R.6074) was introduced before the House. On May 19, 2008, the House overwhelmingly decided in a 324-84 vote to approve this legislation, which allows the Justice Department to sue any foreign state that limits the production/distribution of oil or engages in price fixing.[6]
On September 12, 2006, Kagen, a first time candidate, won the Democratic Party nomination for Wisconsin's 8th District. The seat was left open by the four-term incumbent Republican, Mark Green, who unsuccessfully ran for Governor of Wisconsin. On November 7, Kagen defeated Wisconsin Assembly Speaker John Gard of Peshtigo in the most expensive Congressional race in Wisconsin history, a race dominated by attack ads, mainly created by third-party 527 issue ad groups, outside the control of the candidate or parties. Some of the issues where Kagen and Gard disagreed were President George W. Bush's direction in the Iraq War, stem-cell research, and tax policy.
Kagen's campaign presented his national and international reputation for groundbreaking research while discovering new causes of asthma. His advertising reported the fact that Wisconsin doctors voted him one of the "best doctors in America." He promised to fight to ensure that every American could get affordable health care.
Before Kagen's congressional campaign, his allergy clinic sponsored pollen count and allergy reports on several local television stations which aired after their weather reports during the last few years.
Kagen won the 2006 election 51-49% against Gard and again defeated Gard in Brown County, home to Green Bay, in 2008. Kagen narrowly lost Gard's home county of Marinette.[7] Kagen is the third Democrat to represent the 8th District since World War II.
Democratic Primary results
Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
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Steven L. Kagen (D) | 25,523 | 48% |
Jamie Wall (D) | 15,427 | 29% |
Nancy Nusbaum (D) | 12,731 | 23% |
General Election results
Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
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Steven L. Kagen (D) | 141,598 | 51% |
John Gard (R) | 134,990 | 49% |
Kagen was again challenged by Republican former State Assembly Speaker and self-proclaimed farmer John Gard in 2008. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Leans Democratic'.[8] Kagen won reelection, defeating Gard with 54% of the vote. Kagen is only the second Democrat ever to win reelection in the 8th District.
Kagen was defeated by Republican nominee Reid Ribble on November 2, 2010.
Kagen received a letter from the FDA regarding a compliance issue with one of his allergy formulas. News reports stated Kagen was accused of "selling allergy shots without a valid license." [9] The formulation was registered with the FDA during manufacture and distribution, but was re-classified under a new regulation and required a new application.[10] The FDA accepted the allergy clinic's decision to no longer offer that particular formulation and the FDA ended its license question.
After attending a campaign event on the Oneida reservation, and then in Green Bay, Wisconsin on 20 October 2006, Kagen commented, in part:
Appreciate getting here almost on time. Our excuse in Oneida was, well, we're on Injun time. They don't tell time by the clock. Our excuse here is that I am a doctor and that we're never on time.[11]
Kagen later apologized.[12] The apology was accepted by the Oneida and other state tribes within two days.[13]
Kagen came under fire for a rumored comment at a November 13, 2006 White House function, after Appleton-area newspapers picked up on a story printed in an alternative paper, The Scene. According to the paper, Congressman-elect Kagen met presidential adviser Karl Rove in a bathroom and told him : "You recognize me? My name's Dr. Multimillionaire and I kicked your ass." The term "Dr. Multimillionaire" refers to the name "Dr. Millionaire" the Republican campaign used to refer to Kagen during the 2006 campaign. The Scene also said that the Congressman-elect thanked Vice President Cheney and President Bush for campaigning in Wisconsin for his opponent, telling them, "'I couldn't have won without your help.'" It's reported that he then referred to the First Lady Laura Bush as Barbara saying "He learned on the campaign trail that the biggest insult you could do to another man is to call his wife by another name."[14]
The White House officially denied the conversation took place, calling the story "ridiculous."[9] Kagen talked to constituents about the reported verbal insults he delivered to the President and Mrs. Bush six days after the November election,[15][16]
United States House of Representatives | ||
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Preceded by Mark Andrew Green |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Wisconsin's 8th congressional district 2007–2011 |
Succeeded by Reid Ribble |
110th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | P. Ryan | G. Moore | S. Kagen |
111th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | P. Ryan | G. Moore | S. Kagen |