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Kirsten Gillibrand

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Kirsten Gillibrand
File:Kirsten Gillibrand, official photo, 116th Congress.jpg
United States Senator
from New York
Assumed office
January 26, 2009
Serving with Chuck Schumer
Preceded by Hillary Clinton
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 20th district
In office
January 3, 2007 – January 26, 2009
Preceded by John E. Sweeney
Succeeded by Scott Murphy
Personal details
Born Kirsten Elizabeth Rutnik
(1966-12-09) December 9, 1966 (age 57)
Albany, New York, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Jonathan Gillibrand (m. 2001)
Children 2
Education Dartmouth College (BA)
University of California, Los Angeles (JD)
Signature
Website Senate website

Template:Kirsten Gillibrand series Kirsten Elizabeth Gillibrand (née Rutnik[1]; Listeni/ˈkɪərstən ˈɪlbrænd/ KEER-stən-_-jil-I-brand; born December 9, 1966) is a Jewish-American lawyer and politician who has served as the junior United States Senator from New York since 2009. A member of the Democratic Party, she was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 2007 to 2009.

Born and raised in upstate New York, Gillibrand graduated from Dartmouth College and from the UCLA School of Law. After holding positions in government and private practice and working on Hillary Clinton's 2000 U.S. Senate campaign, Gillibrand was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 2006. She represented New York's 20th congressional district, a conservative district in upstate New York, and was re-elected in 2008. During her House tenure, Gillibrand was a Blue Dog Democrat noted for voting against the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (commonly known as the bank bailout) and for supporting Medicare-for-all.

Following Senator Clinton's appointment as Secretary of State in 2009, Governor David Paterson selected Gillibrand to fill the Senate seat that had been vacated by Clinton. Gillibrand won a special election in 2010 to keep the seat, and was re-elected to full terms in 2012 and 2018. During her Senate tenure, Gillibrand has shifted to the left. She has been outspoken on sexual assault in the military and sexual harassment, having criticized President Bill Clinton and Senator Al Franken, both fellow Democrats, for sexual misconduct. She supports paid family leave, a federal jobs guarantee, and the abolition and replacement of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Gillibrand was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States in 2020, following an official campaign announcement on March 17, 2019. After failing to make the third debate, Gillibrand withdrew from the race on August 28, 2019.[2]

Early life and education

Kirsten Elizabeth Rutnik was born on December 9, 1966, in Albany, New York, the daughter of Polly Edwina (Noonan) and Douglas Paul Rutnik.[1] Both her parents are attorneys, and her father has also worked as a lobbyist.[3] Her parents divorced in the late 1980s.[4] Douglas Paul Rutnik is an associate of former U.S. Senator Al D'Amato.[5] Gillibrand has an older brother, Douglas Rutnik, and a younger sister, Erin Rutnik Tschantret.[6][7] Her maternal grandparents were businessman Peter Noonan and Dorothea "Polly" Noonan,[8] a founder of the Albany Democratic Women's Club and a leader of the city's Democratic political machine.[9][10][3][6] Gillibrand has English, Austrian, Scottish, German, and Irish ancestry.[11]

Polly Noonan was a longtime confidant of Erastus Corning 2nd, the longtime Mayor of Albany, New York.[9][10][3][6] In Off the Sidelines, her 2014 memoir, Gillibrand said that Corning "was simply part of our family... He appeared at every family birthday party with the most fantastic present". Gillibrand wrote that she did not know that the ambiguous relationship between her married grandmother and the married Corning "was strange" until she grew up, and added that Corning "may have been in love with my grandmother", but that he also loved her grandmother's entire family.[12] According to The New York Times, Corning, "in effect, disinherited his wife and children" and "left the Noonan family his insurance business".[5][Note 1]

During her childhood and college years, Gillibrand used the nickname "Tina"[13] and began using her birth name a few years after law school.[6] In 1984, she graduated from Emma Willard School, an all-women's private school located in Troy, New York,[14] and then enrolled at Dartmouth College.[6] Gillibrand majored in Asian Studies, studying in both Beijing and Taiwan. While in Beijing, she studied and lived with actress Connie Britton at Beijing Normal University.[15][16][17] Gillibrand graduated magna cum laude in 1988.[18] While at Dartmouth, she was a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.[18] During college, Gillibrand interned at Republican U.S. Senator Alfonse D'Amato's Albany office.[19] Gillibrand received her J.D. from UCLA School of Law and passed the bar exam in 1991.[20]

Law career

Private practice

In 1991, Gillibrand joined the Manhattan-based law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell as an associate.[4] In 1992, she took a leave from Davis Polk to serve as a law clerk to Judge Roger Miner on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Albany.[7][21]

Gillibrand's tenure at Davis Polk included serving as a defense attorney for tobacco company Philip Morris during major litigation, including both civil lawsuits and U.S. Justice Department criminal and civil racketeering and perjury probes.[22] As a junior associate in the mid-1990s, Gillibrand defended the company's executives against a criminal investigation into whether they had committed perjury in their testimony before Congress when they claimed that they had no knowledge of a connection between tobacco smoking and cancer. Gillibrand worked closely on the case and became a key part of the defense team.[22] As part of her work, she traveled to the company's laboratory in Germany, where she interviewed scientists about the company's alleged research into the connection. The inquiry was dropped and it was during this time that she became a senior associate.[23][22]

While working at Davis Polk, Gillibrand became involved in—and later the leader of—the Women's Leadership Forum, a program of the Democratic National Committee. Gillibrand states that a speech to the group by First Lady Hillary Clinton inspired her: "[Clinton] was trying to encourage us to become more active in politics and she said, 'If you leave all the decision-making to others, you might not like what they do, and you will have no one but yourself to blame.' It was such a challenge to the women in the room. And it really hit me: She's talking to me."[4]

In 2001, Gillibrand became a partner in the Manhattan office of Boies, Schiller & Flexner. In 2002 she informed Boies of her interest in running for office and was permitted to transfer to the firm's Albany office. She left Boies in 2005 to begin her 2006 campaign for Congress.[7][22]

Public interest and government service

Gillibrand has said her work at private law firms allowed her to take on pro bono cases defending abused women and their children and tenants seeking safe housing after lead paint and unsafe conditions were found in their homes.[7] Following her time at Davis Polk, Gillibrand served as Special Counsel to Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Andrew Cuomo during the last year of the Clinton administration.[14] Gillibrand worked on HUD's Labor Initiative and its New Markets Initiative, as well as on TAP's Young Leaders of the American Democracy, and strengthening Davis–Bacon Act enforcement.[24]

In 1999, Gillibrand began working on Hillary Clinton's 2000 U.S. Senate campaign, focusing on campaigning to young women and encouraging them to join the effort. Many of those women later worked on Gillibrand's campaigns.[3] Gillibrand and Clinton became close during the election, with Clinton becoming something of a mentor to the young attorney.[7] Gillibrand donated more than $12,000 to Clinton's Senate campaigns.[25]

U.S. House of Representatives

Elections

2006

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Gillibrand considered running for office in 2004, in New York's 20th congressional district, against the three-term Republican incumbent John E. Sweeney. However, Hillary Clinton believed circumstances would be more favorable in 2006 and advised her to wait until then.[7] Traditionally conservative, the district and its electoral offices had been in Republican hands for all but four years since 1913, and as of November 2006, 197,473 voters in the district were registered Republicans while 82,737 were registered Democrats.[26] Sweeney said in 2006 that "no Republican can ever lose" [the district].[27] Using New York's electoral fusion election laws, Gillibrand ran in 2006 on both the Democratic and Working Families lines; in addition to having the Republican nomination, Sweeney was endorsed by the Conservative and Independence parties.[28]

During the campaign, Gillibrand got support from other Democratic Party politicians. Mike McNulty, a Democratic Congressman from the neighboring 21st congressional district, campaigned for her, as did both Hillary and Bill Clinton; the former president appeared twice at campaign events.[29] Both parties poured millions of dollars into the respective campaigns.[30]

Many saw Gillibrand as moderate or conservative. The American Conservative stated after her eventual victory, "Gillibrand won her upstate New York district by running to the right: she campaigned against amnesty for illegal immigrants, promised to restore fiscal responsibility to Washington, and pledged to protect gun rights."[31]

Gillibrand's legal representation of Philip Morris was an issue during the campaign. Her campaign finance records showed that she received $23,200 in contributions from the company's employees during her 2006 campaign for Congress.[32]

The probable turning point in the election was the November 1 release of a December 2005 police report detailing a 9-1-1 call by Sweeney's wife, in which she claimed Sweeney was "knocking her around the house." The Sweeney campaign claimed the police report was false and promised to have the official report released by State Police, but did not do so.[29] The Sweeney campaign did release an ad in which Sweeney's wife initially described Gillibrand's campaign as "a disgrace."[33] Several months later, Sweeney's wife said her "disgrace" statement was coerced, and that her husband was physically abusive.[34]

By November 5, a Siena poll showed Gillibrand ahead of Sweeney 46% to 43%.[35] She won with 53% of the vote.[28]

2008

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Following Gillibrand's win, Republicans quickly began speculating about possible 2008 candidates. Len Cutler, director of the Center for the Study of Government and Politics at Siena College, said that the seat would be difficult for Gillibrand to hold in 2008, noting Republicans substantially outnumbered Democrats in the district.[29]

Gillibrand won her bid for reelection in 2008 over former New York Secretary of State Sandy Treadwell by a 62% to 38% margin.[36] Treadwell lost by that margin despite significantly outspending Gillibrand and promising never to vote to raise taxes, not to accept a federal salary, and to limit himself to three terms in office.[37] Campaign expenditures were the second highest in the nation for a House race.[38] Democrats generally saw major successes during the 2008 congressional elections, credited in part to a coattail effect from Barack Obama's presidential campaign.[39]

Gillibrand's legal representation of Philip Morris was again an issue. Her campaign finance records showed that she received $18,200 from Philip Morris employees for her 2008 campaign, putting her among the top dozen Democrats in such contributions.[40] Questioned during the campaign about her work on behalf of Philip Morris, Gillibrand stated that she had voted in favor of all three anti-tobacco bills in that session of Congress. She said that she never hid her work for Philip Morris, and she added that as an associate at her law firm, she had had no control over which clients she worked for.[32] Davis Polk allowed associates to withdraw from representing clients about whom they had moral qualms.[40]

House tenure

Upon taking office, Gillibrand joined the Blue Dog Coalition, a group of moderate to conservative Democrats. She was noted for voting against the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008,[31] citing concerns regarding insufficient oversight and excessive earmarks.[41] She opposed a 2007 state-level proposal to issue driver's licenses to illegal immigrants and voted in favor of legislation that would withhold federal funds from immigrant sanctuary cities.[42][43] Gillibrand also voted for a bill that limited information-sharing between federal agencies about firearm purchasers and received a 100 percent rating from the National Rifle Association (NRA).[44] While Gillibrand expressed personal support for same-sex marriage, she advocated for civil unions for same-sex couples and stated that the same-sex marriage issue should be decided at the state level.[45]

After taking office, Gillibrand became the first member of Congress to publish her official schedule, listing everyone she met with on a given day. She also published earmark requests she received and her personal financial statement. This "Sunlight Report", as her office termed it, was praised by a New York Times editorial in December 2006 as being a "quiet touch of revolution" in a non-transparent system.[46][47] Regarding the earmarking process, Gillibrand stated that she wanted whatever was best for her district and would require every project to pass a "greatest-need, greatest-good" test.[48]

Committee assignments

While in the House of Representatives, Gillibrand served on the following committees:[49]

U.S. Senate

Appointment

On December 1, 2008, President-elect Barack Obama announced his choice of Hillary Clinton, the junior U.S. Senator from New York, as Secretary of State. Clinton was confirmed by a vote of 94-2 on January 21, 2009. Just hours before being sworn in as Secretary of State, Clinton resigned her senate seat, effective immediately. Obama's December announcement began a two-month search process to fill her vacant Senate seat.[50] Under New York law, the governor appoints a replacement. A special election would then be held in November 2010 for the remainder of the full term, which ended in January 2013.[51]

File:ScottMurphyCampaignStop.jpg
Gillibrand campaigning for her Democratic House successor Scott Murphy (2009)

Governor David Paterson's selection process began with a number of prominent names and high-profile New York Democrats, including Andrew Cuomo, Fran Drescher and Caroline Kennedy, vying for the spot. Gillibrand quietly campaigned for the position, meeting secretly with Paterson on at least one occasion. She said that she made an effort to underscore her successful House elections in a largely conservative district, adding that she could be a good complement to Chuck Schumer.[6] Gillibrand was presumed a likely choice in the days before the official announcement.[52] On January 23, 2009, Paterson held a press conference to announce Gillibrand as his choice.[53]

The response within New York to the appointment was mixed. The upstate New York media was generally optimistic about the appointment of an upstate Senator,[54] as one had not been elected since Charles Goodell left office in 1971.[55] Many downstaters were disappointed with the selection, with some media outlets stating that Paterson had ignored the electoral influence of populous New York City and downstate on state politics. One questioned whether Paterson's administration was aware of "[where] statewide elections are won and lost".[54] Gillibrand was relatively unknown statewide, and many voters found the choice surprising.[14] One source stated, "With every Democrat in New York ... angling for the appointment, there was a sense of bafflement, belittlement, and bruised egos when Paterson tapped the junior legislator unknown outside of Albany."[6]

Shortly before her appointment to the U.S. Senate was announced, Gillibrand reportedly contacted the Empire State Pride Agenda (an LGBT lobbying organization in New York) to express her full support for same-sex marriage, the repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act, the repeal of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy regarding gay and lesbian servicemembers, and the passage of legislation banning discrimination against transgender persons.[56][57] Gillibrand had supported civil unions for same-sex couples[57] and argued that the same-sex marriage issue should be left to states.[45] Paterson's office had advised her to reach out to Empire State Pride.[58][57]

Gillibrand was sworn in on January 26, 2009; at 42, she entered the chamber as the youngest senator in the 111th Congress.[6] In February she endorsed Scott Murphy, who had been chosen by the New York Democrats as their nominee for her now vacant seat in the House of Representatives.[59] In April, Murphy won the seat against Republican Jim Tedisco by 399 votes and succeeded Gillibrand in the House until 2011.[60]

Elections

2010

Gillibrand is sworn in for her second term by Vice President Biden (2011)

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Gillibrand had numerous potential challengers in the September 14, 2010, Democratic primary election. Some were obvious at the time of her appointment. Most notably, Long Island Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy was unhappy with Gillibrand's stance on gun control,[61][Note 2] but McCarthy decided not to run.[62] Harold Ford, Jr., a former Congressman from Tennessee, considered a run but ultimately decided against it in March 2009.[63] Congressman Steve Israel was also a potential contender but was talked out of it by President Obama.

Concerned about a possible schism in the party that could lead to a heated primary, split electorate, and weakened stance, high-ranking members of the party backed Gillibrand and requested major opponents not to run.[63] In the end, Gillibrand faced Gail Goode, a lawyer from New York City,[64] and won the primary with 76% of the vote.[65]

Despite what was expected to be a heated race, Gillibrand easily prevailed against former Republican congressman Joseph DioGuardi in her first statewide election.[66] By the end of October, a Quinnipiac University Polling Institute poll showed Gillibrand winning 57-34%.[67] Gillibrand won the November election 63–35%, carrying 54 of New York's 62 counties; the counties that supported DioGuardi did so by a margin no greater than 10%.[66]

2012

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Gillibrand's special election victory in 2010 gave her the right to serve the rest of Clinton's second term, which ended in January 2013. Gillibrand ran for a full six-year term in November 2012. In the general election, Gillibrand faced challenger Wendy E. Long, an attorney running on both the Republican Party and Conservative Party lines.[68][69] Gillibrand was endorsed by The New York Times[70] and the Democrat and Chronicle.[71] She won the election with 72.2% of the vote;[72] in so doing, she surpassed Schumer's 71.2% victory in 2004 and achieved the largest victory margin for a statewide candidate in New York history. She carried all counties except for two in western New York.[73]

2018

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In the November 2018 elections, Gillibrand was re-elected to a second term in the Senate, defeating Republican Chele Chiavacci Farley[74] with 67% of the vote.[75] During a campaign debate, she pledged that she would serve out a full six-year term if she were re-elected.[76] She was endorsed by the progressive groups Indivisible Action[77][better source needed] and Working Families.[78][better source needed]

Senate tenure

A member of the Democratic Party's relatively conservative Blue Dog faction while in the House, Gillibrand has moved her political positions and ideology toward a liberal, progressive position since her appointment to the Senate.[79][80] In both cases, her views were significantly defined by the respective constituencies she served[81]—a conservative congressional district versus the generally liberal state of New York, especially as defined by New York City. For example, although she had been quiet on the U.S. military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy when she was in the House, during her first 18 months in the Senate, Gillibrand was an important part of the successful campaign to repeal it.[82]

On April 9, 2009, a combined Schumer–Gillibrand press release said that the two strongly supported a Latino being nominated to the Supreme Court at the time of the next vacancy. Their first choice was Sonia Sotomayor.[83] The two introduced her at Sotomayor's Senate confirmation hearing in July 2009.[84]

During the lame duck session of the 111th Congress, Gillibrand scored two substantial legislative victories: the passage of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010 and the passage of the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act. Both were issues she had advocated for during that session. In the aftermath of these victories, Gillibrand gained a more national profile.[85][86][87]

In March 2011, Gillibrand co-sponsored the PROTECT IP Act, which would restrict access to web sites judged to be infringing copyrights,[88] but ultimately announced she would not support the bill as-is due to wide critical public response.[89]

In 2012, Gillibrand authored a portion of the STOCK Act, which extended limitations on insider trading by members of Congress. A version of the bill, merged by Senator Joe Lieberman with content from another bill authored by Senator Scott Brown,[90] was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Obama in April.[91]

In 2013, Gillibrand proposed legislation that would remove sexual assault cases from the military chain of command; the bill was cosponsored by Republican senators Rand Paul and Ted Cruz.[92] Gillibrand's bill failed to gain enough votes to break a filibuster in March 2014; however, her efforts likely improved her standing as a lawmaker in the Senate.[93]

In December 2013, Gillibrand introduced the Family and Medical Insurance Leave Act, which would have provided paid family leave.[94]

By 2013, Gillibrand had "skillfully aligned herself with causes with visible, moving human characters who have helped amplified her policy goals."[95] For example, in campaigning for the repeal of the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, Gillibrand established a website with videos of gay and lesbian veterans telling their personal stories.[95] She has been less deferential to Senate seniority protocols and more uncompromising in her positions – such as combating sexual assault in the military – than most freshman senators, traits which have sometimes caused friction with her Democratic colleagues. Republican Charles Grassley of Iowa has contrasted her approach with other New Yorkers of both parties, saying she is distinguished by "her determination and knowledge and willingness to sit down one on one with senators and explain what she is up to". Her fund-raising ability – almost $30 million from 2009 through 2013 – helped her become a mentor for female candidates nationwide during that period.[95]

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Gillibrand speaking at a White House summit (2014)

In 2014, Gillibrand was included in the annual Time 100, Time magazine's list of the 100 most influential people in the world.[96]

In 2015, Gillibrand invited campus activist Emma Sulkowicz to attend the State of the Union Address. Her invitation was intended to promote the Campus Accountability and Safety Act, a bill Gillibrand co-sponsored.[97]

Gillibrand once supported legislation that would criminalize 'boycotts' by individuals or groups seeking to express a disapproval of the actions taken by the government of Israel.[98] Gillibrand's advocacy against protests and 'boycotts' included her co-sponsoring S.720, coined the "Israel Anti-Boycott Act." This legislation would have criminalized any political boycott intended to protest actions by the Israeli government, with a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.[98][99][100] The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) denounced S.720, claiming its provisions seeking to "punish U.S. persons based solely on their expressed political beliefs" are "inconsistent" with First Amendment constitutional protections.[101] In July 2017, Gillibrand stated that she no longer supported the bill in its then-current form, adding that she would advocate for changes to it. Gillibrand said that the bill did not "...have any relevance to individuals at all," and insisted she planned to "...urge them to rewrite it to make sure it says...'This is only applying to companies.'"[102]

In a February 2018 60 Minutes profile, Gillibrand stated that she was "'embarrassed and ashamed'" of the positions on immigration and guns that she held during her tenure in the House of Representatives.[103]

Gillibrand was named as part of the "Hell-No Caucus" by Politico in 2018, along with Senators Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders, given she voted "overwhelmingly to thwart his [Trump's] nominees for administration jobs", such as with Rex Tillerson, Betsy DeVos, and Mike Pompeo; all of the Senators were considered potential 2020 presidential contenders at this point in time.[104]

Committee assignments

While in the Senate, Gillibrand has served on the following committees:[105][106][107]

Caucus memberships

2020 presidential campaign

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Logo for Gillibrand's Presidential campaign

Gillibrand announced on January 15, 2019, that she was launching a presidential exploratory committee; in an interview with Stephen Colbert, she said, "I am going to run."[109] Gillibrand released a March 17, 2019, video officially announcing her 2020 presidential bid.[110] During a 2018 Senate campaign debate, she had promised to serve her entire six-year term if she were re-elected.[76]

Following a common trend that has arisen among Democratic politicians, Gillibrand pledged that she would not accept campaign donations from Political Action Committees, or PACs.[111] After failing to make the third debate, Gillibrand withdrew from the race on August 28, 2019.[112]

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Gillibrand campaigning for President in San Francisco, California

Political positions

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During her tenure in the House of Representatives, Gillibrand was known as a centrist Democrat.[113][114] While serving in the House, Gillibrand was a member of the Blue Dog Coalition, a caucus of fiscally conservative Democrats.[115] During her House tenure, Gillibrand voted against the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008,[31][41] spoke against the issuance of driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants and voted for a bill that would withhold federal funds from immigrant sanctuary cities.[42][43] Gillibrand also voted for a bill that limited information-sharing between federal agencies about firearm purchasers[44] and advocated for civil unions for same-sex couples.[45]

Since she became a Member of the U.S. Senate, Gillibrand's political positions have moved in a liberal direction.[116][45] In July 2018, Newsday stated that Gillibrand "formerly held more conservative views on guns and immigration, but, in her nine years as New York's junior senator, [has] swung steadily to the left on those and other issues".[117] After being appointed to the U.S. Senate, she expressed support for same-sex marriage.[118][58] Although a supporter of gun rights while in the House, Gillibrand has since moved in the direction of gun control.[119][113] Gillibrand has said that a conversation with a family who had lost a daughter to gun violence made her realize that she was "wrong" to oppose gun control measures; having once received an "A" rating from the NRA, she received an "F" rating as of 2018.[113][117] In June 2018, Gillibrand called U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, a "deportation force" and became the first sitting senator to support the call to abolish ICE. She said, "I believe you should get rid of it, start over, reimagine it and build something that actually works" and, "I think you should reimagine ICE under a new agency with a very different mission".[117][120][121][122] In May 2018, City & State reported that she had "moved sharply leftward on economic issues, embracing a number of proposals to expand the social safety net and bolster lower-income families".[123] In July 2018, The New York Times stated that Gillibrand had "spent recent months injecting her portfolio with a dose of the kind of economic populism that infused Senator Bernie Sanders's campaign in the 2016 presidential primary".[124] In a 2019 reversal of a past position, Gillibrand stated her support for driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants.[125]

On social issues, Gillibrand is generally liberal, supporting abortion rights[126] and helping lead the successful repeal effort of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell."[113] A supporter of Medicare-for-all since her first house run in 2006,[127] she co-sponsored a 2017 Medicare-for-all bill introduced by Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and said that health care should be a right.[128] Gillibrand also supports a federal jobs guarantee. Although she used to be one of the top recipients of corporate campaign donations, in 2018, Gillibrand supported rejecting corporate PAC funds and invested heavily in online fundraising. Ninety-seven percent of donations to her 2018 campaign totaled $100 or less.[127] She advocates government transparency, being one of a few members of Congress who release much personal and scheduling information.[129]

Gillibrand has gone against her party on a number of occasions on issues related to women's rights.[113] Declaring a "zero tolerance" doctrine regarding accusations of sexual misconduct by members of Congress, Gillibrand was the first in her caucus to call on Senator Al Franken (D-MN) to resign.[130] Franken left office before a Senate Ethics Committee investigation could review the accuracy of the allegations.[131][132] Seven Democratic current and former U.S. senators who had demanded Franken’s resignation in 2017 went on the record in 2019 to tell New Yorker reporter Jane Mayer they had been wrong to do so, though Gillibrand had not expressed any regrets for leading the demand for his resignation.[133]

In November 2017, amid the MeToo movement, Gillibrand became the first high-profile Democrat to say that Bill Clinton should have resigned when his affair with Monica Lewinsky was revealed.[113][134] In 2018, Clinton expressed disagreement with Gillibrand's opinion.[135]

Gillibrand was also criticized for retaining a male staffer despite multiple sexual harassment complaints by a former female aide. This was contrasted with her "unyielding stand against sexual misconduct" by other men such as Franken. The male staffer was fired immediately after Politico published the allegations.[136]

Personal life

Gillibrand with her husband and sons on Halloween, 2009
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Gillibrand is joined by her husband and her son Henry during a presidential campaign appearance at the Iowa State Fair

Gillibrand met her husband, Jonathan Gillibrand, a venture capitalist and British national, on a blind date. Jonathan planned to be in the United States for only a year while studying for his Master of Business Administration at Columbia University, but he stayed in the country because of their developing relationship. The couple married in a Catholic church in Manhattan in 2001.[4][6]

The Gillibrands had their first son, Theodore, in 2003,[7] and their second son, Henry, in 2008. She continued to work until the day of Henry's delivery, for which she received a standing ovation from her colleagues in the House the next day.[7]

Gillibrand made national headlines in July 2009 for stating that she and her husband kept two guns under their bed.[137][138][139] Her staff later indicated that Gillibrand no longer stored guns under her bed.[140]

Gillibrand lives in the town of Brunswick with her husband and their two sons. Because of the requirements of her office, the family spends most of its time in Washington, D.C.[7] In 2011, the Gillibrands sold their house in Hudson and purchased their home in Brunswick to be closer to Kirsten's family in Albany.[141]

Published works

In 2014, Gillibrand published her first book, Off the Sidelines: Raise Your Voice, Change the World.[142] The candid memoir was notable in the media upon release due to whisperings of a future presidential run[143] as well as Gllibrand's claims of sexism in the Senate,[144] including specific comments made to her by other members of Congress about her weight and appearance.[145] Off the Sidelines debuted at number 8 on The New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover nonfiction.[146]

Electoral history

New York 20th congressional district election, 2006[28]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Kirsten Gillibrand 116,416
Working Families Kirsten Gillibrand 3,839
Total Kirsten Gillibrand 125,168 53.10
Republican John Sweeney 94,093
Conservative John Sweeney 9,869
Independence John Sweeney 6,592
Total John Sweeney 110,554 46.90
Majority 14,614
Turnout 235,722
Democratic gain from Republican Swing


New York 20th congressional district election, 2008[147]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Kirsten Gillibrand 178,996
Working Families Kirsten Gillibrand 14,655
Total Kirsten Gillibrand 193,651 62.13
Republican Sandy Treadwell 99,930
Conservative Sandy Treadwell 10,077
Independence Sandy Treadwell 8,024
Total Sandy Treadwell 118,031 37.87
Majority 75,620
Turnout 311,682
Democratic hold Swing
2010 U.S. Senate Democratic primary in New York[148]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kirsten Gillibrand (Incumbent) 464,512 76.1%
Democratic Gail Goode 145,491 23.9%
Total votes 610,003 100.00%
2010 U.S. Senate election in New York[149]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Kirsten Gillibrand (Incumbent) 2,479,310
Working Families Kirsten Gillibrand 182,648
Independence Kirsten Gillibrand 175,631
Total Kirsten Gillibrand (Incumbent) 2,837,589 62.95%
Republican Joe DioGuardi 1,338,239
Conservative Joe DioGuardi 244,364
Total Joe DioGuardi 1,582,603 35.11%
Green Cecile A. Lawrence 35,487 0.79%
Libertarian John Clifton 18,414 0.41%
Rent Is Too Damn High Joseph Huff 17,018 0.38%
Anti-Prohibition Vivia Morgan 11,785 0.26%
Tax Revolt Bruce Blakeman 4,516 0.10%
Majority 1,254,986
Turnout 4,507,412
Democratic hold Swing
2012 U.S. Senate election in New York[150]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Kirsten Gillibrand 4,432,525 66.38% +11.38%
Working Families Kirsten Gillibrand 251,292 3.76% -0.29%
Independence Kirsten Gillibrand 138,513 2.07% -1.83%
Total Kirsten Gillibrand (incumbent) 4,822,330 72.21% +9.26%
Republican Wendy Long 1,517,578 22.73% -6.96%
Conservative Wendy Long 241,124 3.61% -1.81%
Total Wendy Long 1,758,702 26.34% -8.77%
Green Colia Clark 42,591 0.64% -0.15%
Libertarian Chris Edes 32,002 0.48% +0.07%
Independent John Mangelli 22,041 0.33% N/A
Total votes 6,677,666 100.0% N/A
Democratic hold
2018 U.S. Senate election in New York[151]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Kirsten Gillibrand 3,755,489 62.02% -4.36%
Working Families Kirsten Gillibrand 160,128 2.64% -1.12%
Independence Kirsten Gillibrand 99,325 1.64% -0.43%
Women's Equality Kirsten Gillibrand 41,989 0.69% N/A
Total Kirsten Gillibrand (incumbent) 4,056,931 67.00% -5.21%
Republican Chele Chiavacci Farley 1,730,439 28.58% +5.86%
Conservative Chele Chiavacci Farley 246,171 4.07% +0.46%
style="background-color: Template:Reform Party of New York State/meta/color; width: 5px;" | [[Reform Party of New York State|Template:Reform Party of New York State/meta/shortname]] Chele Chiavacci Farley 21,610 0.35% N/A
Total Chele Chiavacci Farley 1,998,220 33.00% +6.66%
Total votes 6,055,151 100% N/A
Democratic hold

See also

References

Informational notes

  1. For more information on the Corning-Noonan relationship, see: Grondahl, Paul. Mayor Erastus Corning: Albany Icon, Albany Enigma. Albany: State University of New York Press; 2007. ISBN 978-0-7914-7294-1.
  2. McCarthy has been a supporter of strict gun control since her husband was murdered in a 1993 commuter train shooting spree.[61]

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand ends once-promising presidential bid Yahoo! News, August 28, 2019]
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  38. Gillibrand, Treadwell spending millions, The Daily Gazette (Schenectady, NY) October 28, 2006. Quote: "The amount Kirsten Gillibrand and Sandy Treadwell are spending on their campaign for the 20th Congressional District seat so far this year is the second highest in the nation for a House race, according to both the Federal Election Commission and a campaign watchdog Web site."
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  40. 40.0 40.1 Raymond Hernandez and David Kocieniewski, "As New Lawyer, Senator Was Active in Tobacco's Defense", The New York Times, March 26, 2009
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  75. https://www.elections.ny.gov/NYSBOE/elections/2018/general/2018USSenate.pdf
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  82. "What 'Don't Ask Don't Tell' did for Kirsten Gillibrand" Archived March 19, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Capital New York, Steve Kornacki, December 20, 2010
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  88. Bill Summary & Status 112th Congress (2011–2012), "S.968 Cosponsors", Bill Summary & Status Archived September 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
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  130. Goldmacher, Shane, and Flegenheimer, Matt, Kirsten Gillibrand, Long a Champion of Women, Finds the Nation Joining Her, The New York Times, December 16, 2017
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  150. https://www.elections.ny.gov/NYSBOE/elections/2012/General/USSenator_07292013.pdf
  151. https://www.elections.ny.gov/NYSBOE/elections/2018/general/2018USSenate.pdf

Further reading

External links

United States House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 20th congressional district

2007–2009
Succeeded by
Scott Murphy
United States Senate
Preceded by United States Senator (Class 1) from New York
2009–present
Served alongside: Chuck Schumer
Incumbent
Honorary titles
Preceded by Baby of the Senate
2009
Succeeded by
George LeMieux
New office Honorary Chair of the College Democrats of America
2011–present
Incumbent
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from New York
(Class 1)

2010, 2012, 2018
Most recent
United States order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded by United States Senators by seniority
42nd
Succeeded by
Joe Manchin