Summary
Current Position: US Representative for NY District 8 since 2013
Affiliation: Democrat
Former Position(s): State Delegate from 2007 – 2012
Other Position:
Chair, House Democratic Caucus
Featured Quote:
Treachery and sedition have no place in our Republic. ENOUGH.
Featured Video:
Hakeem Jeffries: ‘Republicans Have Adopted Voter Suppression As A Campaign Tactic’
News
Borgen Magazine, – September 16, 2021
ATLANTA, Georgia — Congressional leaders sponsored a bill in the Senate and House of Representatives called the Haiti Development, Accountability and Institutional Transparency Initiative Act on April 13, 2021. This legislation would evaluate the redevelopment efforts in Haiti and focus on mitigating corruption and human rights issues. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries [D-NY] and Rep. Mike Waltz [R-FL] introduced H.R. 2471, which has seven cosponsors composed of members from both parties. The bill went through the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which then passed it under “suspension of the rules.” The Haiti Development, Accountability and Institutional Transparency Initiative Act of 2021 officially passed the House on June 29, 2021. Sen. Ben Cardin [D-MD] and Sen. Marco Rubio [R-FL] introduced S. 1104, which is currently in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The Haiti Development bill could improve Haiti’s political and economic situation.
About
Source: Government page
Hakeem Jeffries represents the diverse Eighth Congressional District of New York, an area that encompasses large parts of Brooklyn and a section of Queens. Serving his fifth term in the United States Congress, Rep. Jeffries is a member of the House Judiciary Committee and House Budget Committee.
Rep. Jeffries is Chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, having been elected to that position by his colleagues in November 2018. In that capacity, he is the fifth highest-ranking Democrat in the House of Representatives. He is also the former Whip of the Congressional Black Caucus and previously co-chaired the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee where he helped develop the For The People agenda.
In Congress, Rep. Jeffries is a tireless advocate for social and economic justice. He has worked hard to help residents impacted by the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic, reform our criminal justice system, improve the economy for everyday Americans and protect our health care from right-wing attacks.
During the 116th Congress, Rep. Jeffries was one of the most effective legislators, passing multiple bills through the House of Representatives and into law with substantial bipartisan and stakeholder support. These measures touched on diverse subject matters and were drafted with the intention of making meaningful improvements to our federal laws and programs. They included bills to create a copyright small claims board allowing the creative middle class to protect their works (H.R. 2426, Public Law No. 116-260), to expand scholarship opportunities available to Pakistani women (H.R. 4508), to provide entrepreneurship counseling and training services to formerly incarcerated individuals (H.R. 5065), to ensure the attorney-client privilege is protected for incarcerated individuals corresponding electronically with their legal representatives (H.R. 5546) and to measure the progress of recovery and efforts to address corruption, rule of law and media freedoms in Haiti since the 2010 earthquake (H.R. 5586).
In January 2020, Rep. Jeffries was selected by Speaker Nancy Pelosi to serve as one of seven House Impeachment Managers in the Senate trial of President Donald Trump, becoming the first African American man to serve in that role. During the nearly three-week trial, Congressman Jeffries argued that President Trump should be removed from office for abusing his power by pressuring a foreign government, Ukraine, to target an American citizen as part of a corrupt scheme to interfere in the 2020 election. The House Impeachment Managers established with a mountain of evidence that crimes against the Constitution were committed. Nevertheless, the Senate failed to remove the President without hearing from a single witness during the trial.
On June 25, 2020, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 7120, the “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act.” Rep. Jeffries helped lead the charge with respect to passage of this historic police reform bill, which included legislation authored by the Congressman to criminalize the chokehold and other inherently dangerous tactics such as a knee to the neck. Rep. Jeffries remains dedicated to working with his colleagues to make transformational police reform a reality and breathe life into the principle of liberty and justice for all.
Rep. Jeffries has played a major role in shaping the Congressional response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He has fought hard to assist state and local governments whose budgets have been devastated by the virus, pushed for an extension of the emergency unemployment benefit and supported efforts to keep everyday Americans in their homes. Rep. Jeffries also worked across the aisle with Rep. Peter King (R-NY) to secure billions of dollars in funding for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority in the CARES Act (H.R. 748, Public Law No: 116-136), which became law in March 2020. At home, Rep. Jeffries partnered with Governor Andrew Cuomo to expand testing in hard-hit communities of color by establishing walk-in sites at houses of worship throughout New York City. He denounced discriminatory social distance policing that targeted communities of color and helped bring about a change in policy. In the community, Rep. Jeffries continues to personally distribute food, masks, gloves and hand sanitizer to residents in need.
In the 115th Congress, Rep. Jeffries worked across the aisle as the lead Democratic sponsor of the FIRST STEP Act (S. 756, Public Law No. 115-391), a strong, bipartisan criminal justice reform bill that the President signed into law in December 2018. Rep. Jeffries partnered with Congressman Doug Collins, a conservative Republican from rural Georgia, on the legislation, which is widely viewed as the most meaningful criminal justice reform effort in a generation.
The FIRST STEP Act provides retroactive relief for the shameful crack cocaine sentencing disparity that unfairly destroyed lives, families and communities. The law shortens sentences by ensuring inmates can earn the 54 days of good time credit per year Congress intended and applies the change retroactively, to the benefit of thousands of currently incarcerated mothers, fathers, daughters and sons. It provides $375 million over five years to expand re-entry programming, including education and vocational training, which is proven to dramatically reduce recidivism and help prepare for a successful transition back into society. In order to strengthen and preserve family relationships, the bill requires the Bureau of Prisons to house incarcerated individuals within 500 driving miles of their relatives and permits the transfer of lower-risk inmates to home confinement. In addition, the FIRST STEP Act bans the immoral practice of shackling women throughout the duration of their pregnancy, during childbirth and for three months post-partum.
Rep. Jeffries also played a key role in the House passage of the historic Music Modernization Act (MMA) (H.R. 5447, Public Law No. 115-264), which became law in 2018. Heralded as a sweeping update to our copyright laws, the MMA will improve the licensing process so that songwriters, artists and musicians can continue to share their creativity with the world. Because of the MMA, songwriters are more likely to get paid a fair price for their work, and digital music providers like Spotify and Pandora will be able to operate more efficiently. In an era of crisis and dysfunction in Washington, the power of music brought Democrats and Republicans in Congress together to collaborate on groundbreaking legislation, ushering our music copyright system into the 21st Century.
In April of 2018, the President signed the Rep. Jeffries-authored Keep America’s Refuges Operational Act (H.R. 3979, Public Law No. 115-1689) into law. Each year, 47 million Americans visit wildlife refuges, generating almost $2 billion in local economic activity. This law will keep America’s refuges operational by supporting the volunteers who dedicate thousands of hours to maintain our public lands. Passage of this bill was part of a bipartisan, bicameral effort to ensure Americans can visit, explore and study wildlife and experience our nation’s vast natural beauty for generations to come.
Several other pieces of Rep. Jeffries-authored legislation passed the House of Representatives in the 115th Congress, including bills to investigate the public health impact of synthetic drug use by teenagers (H.R. 449, Public Law No. 115-271) and updating federal regulations to remove racially offensive terminology from use (H.R. 995). Rep. Jeffries’ H.R. 3229 (Public Law No. 95-521), which helps protect judicial officers from threats, harm and harassment by those who would seek to compromise the integrity of our judicial branch, also passed the House in 2017, and was signed into law in March 2018. Additionally, Rep. Jeffries authored H.R. 3370 (Public Law No. 95-921), the Fry Scholarship Enhancement Act, which became law as part of the Harry W. Colmery Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2017. It will expand the availability of education benefits to the children and spouses of service members killed in the line of duty.
In the 114th Congress, Rep. Jeffries teamed up with Congressman Peter King to pass the Slain Officer Family Support Act of 2015 (H.R. 1508, Public Law No. 113-227), which President Obama signed into law. That law extended the tax deadline so that individuals making charitable donations to organizations supporting the families of assassinated New York Police Department (NYPD) Detectives Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, could apply such tax deductions to the prior year’s tax return.
In the 113th Congress, Rep. Jeffries successfully passed H.R. 5108 (Public Law No. 113-227), legislation that established the Law School Clinic Certification Program of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) into law. This program had been operating in a pilot capacity since 2008 and enabled students at participating law schools to gain experience in patent and trademark law while providing legal assistance to inventors, tech entrepreneurs and small businesses. The bipartisan bill, which was signed by President Obama, expanded the program by removing its “pilot” status, making it available to all accredited law schools in the country that meet the program’s eligibility requirements.
Rep. Jeffries has been actively involved in the passage of a number of other key pieces of legislation, including the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act of 2013 (H.R. 152), a bill that provides billions of dollars in Superstorm Sandy recovery to the Eighth District and other affected areas. The Congressman also sponsored — and passed as part of the National Defense Authorization package — the Prison Ship Martyrs’ Monument Preservation Act, which directs the U.S. Secretary of the Interior to study the feasibility of designating the Prison Ship Martyrs’ mausoleum in Brooklyn as a national monument. Consisting of a 100-foot-wide granite staircase and a central Doric column 149 feet in height, the monument in Fort Greene Park houses the remains of 11,500 Revolutionary War soldiers who were kept as prisoners of war by the British.
While he remains committed to working diligently in Washington on behalf of New York’s Eighth Congressional District, Rep. Jeffries also works tirelessly to keep in close contact with constituents. In January, the Congressman begins each year with a well-attended State of the District Address. During the spring and summer, he holds “Congress on Your Corner” outdoor office hours throughout the district. At each stop, the Congressman sets up a table in front of a local post office or on neighborhood corners where constituents are able to meet with him one-on-one. He also hosts regularly-scheduled telephone town hall meetings that provide an opportunity for constituents to speak directly with the Congressman about local and national issues.
Prior to his election to the Congress, Rep. Jeffries served for six years in the New York State Assembly. In that capacity, he authored laws to protect the civil liberties of law-abiding New Yorkers during police encounters, encourage the transformation of vacant luxury condominiums into affordable homes for working families and improve the quality of justice in the civil court system.
In 2010, Rep. Jeffries successfully led the first meaningful legislative reform of the NYPD’s aggressive and controversial stop-and-frisk program. His legislation prohibits the NYPD from maintaining an electronic database with the personal information of individuals who were stopped, questioned and frisked during a police encounter but not charged with a crime or violation.
In the same year, Rep. Jeffries sponsored and championed groundbreaking civil rights legislation to end prison-based gerrymandering in New York State. This archaic practice of counting incarcerated individuals at the location of their imprisonment, rather than their homes, undermined the fundamental democratic principle of one person, one vote. After passage of Jeffries’ legislation, New York became the second state to count incarcerated individuals in their home districts in census calculations.
Congressman Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in political science from the State University of New York at Binghamton, where he graduated with honors for outstanding academic achievement. He then received his master’s degree in public policy from Georgetown University. Thereafter, Rep. Jeffries attended New York University School of Law, where he graduated magna cum laude and served on Law Review.
After completing law school, Rep. Jeffries clerked for the Honorable Harold Baer Jr. of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. He then practiced law for several years at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, an internationally renowned law firm and served as counsel in the litigation department of Viacom Inc. and CBS. He also worked as of-counsel at Godosky & Gentile, a well-regarded litigation firm in New York City.
Rep. Jeffries was born in Brooklyn Hospital, raised in Crown Heights and is a product New York City’s public school system, having graduated from Midwood High School. He lives in Prospect Heights with his family.
Voting Record
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Wikipedia Entry
Hakeem Sekou Jeffries (/ˌhɑːˈkiːm/; born August 4, 1970)[1] is an American politician and attorney who has served as the U.S. representative for New York’s 8th congressional district since 2013. A member of the Democratic Party, he represents a district that covers parts of eastern Brooklyn and southwestern Queens in New York City. A corporate lawyer by occupation, he worked for Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, then Viacom and CBS, before running for and serving in the New York State Assembly from 2007 to 2012, representing the 57th Assembly district.[2][3] Jeffries has chaired the House Democratic Caucus since 2019.[4][5]
Early life and career
Jeffries was born in Brooklyn, New York, at Brooklyn Hospital Center to Laneda Jeffries, a social worker, and Marland Jeffries, a state substance-abuse counselor.[6][7] He grew up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
In 1988, Jeffries graduated from Midwood High School.[8] In 1992, he earned a Bachelor of Arts with honors in political science from Binghamton University. During his time at Binghamton he became a member of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. In 1994, he earned a Master of Public Policy from Georgetown University‘s McCourt School of Public Policy. In 1997, Jeffries earned a Juris Doctor from New York University School of Law.[9]
Jeffries served as a clerk for Judge Harold Baer Jr. of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, then worked in the litigation department of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison before becoming assistant litigator for Viacom and CBS, where he worked on litigation stemming from the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy.[10][11] During Jeffries’s time at Paul, Weiss he also served as director of intergovernmental affairs for the New York State Chapter of the National Association of Minority Contractors and as the president of Black Attorneys for Progress.[12][13]
New York State Assembly
Elections
In 2000, Jeffries challenged incumbent Assemblyman Roger Green in the Democratic primary, criticizing Green for inattentiveness to his constituents’ needs and preoccupation with pursuing higher office (Green had run for New York City Public Advocate in 1997 and had spoken of his plans to run for Congress upon the retirement of Edolphus Towns).[14] A contentious debate between the two candidates, moderated by Dominic Carter on NY1, ended prematurely after Jeffries began his closing statement by saying “the issue in this race is not age—yes, the assemblyman is older, I’m younger. It’s not religion—yes, the assemblyman is a practicing Muslim and I grew up in the Cornerstone Baptist Church.” Green interrupted Jeffries to protest, “practicing Muslim? Where’d that come from? I’m absolutely offended, are you trying to polarize our community?”, before walking out of the studio, later accusing Jeffries of playing “the religion card.” Jeffries contended that his point was that voters should focus on the issues rather than the age or religion of the candidates.[15] Jeffries lost the Democratic primary 59%–41%,[16][17] but remained on the Independence Party line in the general election, receiving 7% of the vote to Green’s 90%.[18]
During post-census redistricting, Jeffries’s home was drawn one block outside of Green’s Assembly district. Jeffries was still legally permitted to run in the district for the 2002 cycle, as state law requires only that a candidate to live in the same county as a district they seek in the first election after a redistricting, but this complicated his path.[19] He called the redrawing of the district a “desperate act by a career politician trying to save his government job”. Green responded that the lines had actually been redrawn to remove parts of Jeffries’s affluent Prospect Heights neighborhood in favor of public housing, and insisted that he did not even know where Jeffries lived.[17][20][21]
Tensions continued to be high throughout the rematch, with Jeffries at one point criticizing Green for accepting $3,700 in support from the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of the City of New York, using a press release to link the union to the torture of Abner Louima.[22] Jeffries was later forced to admit that a political club he had founded, Brooklyn Freedom Democratic Association, had been behind three anonymous mail pieces sent during the last week of the election, two of which attacked Green for inaction as a legislator, and a third of which falsely implied that presumptive Democratic gubernatorial nominee Carl McCall supported Jeffries when he had in fact endorsed Green.[23] Jeffries lost the primary, 52%–38%.[24][25]
After the July 23, 2003, murder of Jeffries’s close friend and political ally, James Davis, Jeffries was considered a potential successor to Davis on the New York City Council. Davis had named Jeffries as a preferred replacement should he be elected to higher office. After the Democratic nomination went to Davis’s surviving brother Geoffrey, who was mired in a domestic violence scandal, Jeffries was considered for the Working Families Party nomination, but he did not put his name forward for consideration. Tish James was ultimately nominated by the WFP and elected.[26][27][28][29]
The lasting effects of the 2002 redistricting left Jeffries notably unable to challenge Green in the 2004 Democratic primary, which took place just months after Green had been forced to resign his seat by Sheldon Silver and Democratic leadership after pleading guilty to billing the state for false travel expenses. Green was ultimately renominated unopposed.[19][30]
In 2006 Green decided to retire from the Assembly to run for the U.S. House from New York’s 10th congressional district against incumbent Democratic U.S. Representative Ed Towns. Jeffries ran for the 57th district again and won the Democratic primary, defeating Bill Batson and Freddie Hamilton with 64% of the vote.[31][32][33] In the general election, he handily defeated Republican nominee Henry Weinstein.[34]
Jeffries was reelected in 2008, defeating Republican nominee Charles Brickhouse with 98% of the vote.[35] In 2010 he was reelected to a third term, easily defeating Republican nominee Frank Voyticky.[36]
Tenure
During his six years in the state legislature Jeffries introduced over 70 bills.[37] In response to a series of toy recalls, he introduced bill A02589, which would penalize retailers and wholesalers who knowingly sell hazardous or dangerous toys that have been the subject of a recall. In 2010, Governor David Paterson signed the Stop-and-Frisk database bill that banned police from compiling names and addresses of those stopped but not arrested during street searches. Jeffries wrote and sponsored that law.[38][39] He also sponsored and passed house bill A.9834-A (now law), the Inmate-base gerrymandering law that ended counting prison populations of upstate districts as part of the public population, becoming the second state to end this practice.
Committee assignments
- State House Committee on Banks
- State House Committee on Codes
- State House Committee on Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions
- State House Committee on Correction
- State House Committee on Housing
- State House Committee on Judiciary
- State House Subcommittee on Banking in Underserved Communities
- State House Subcommittee on Mitchell-Lama
- State House Subcommittee on Transitional Services
- State House Subcommittee on Trust and Estates[40]
U.S. House of Representatives
Elections
Jeffries announced in January 2012 that he would give up his Assembly seat to run for the U.S. House from New York’s 8th congressional district. The district, which includes the Brooklyn communities of Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, Bed-Stuy, Brownsville, East New York, Canarsie, Mill Basin and Coney Island along with South Ozone Park and Howard Beach in Queens, had previously been the 10th, represented by 30-year incumbent Democrat Edolphus Towns. On the steps of Brooklyn’s Borough Hall, Jeffries said: “Washington is broken. Congress is dysfunctional. People are suffering. We deserve more.”[41]
Jeffries expected to give Towns a strong challenge in the Democratic primary—the real contest in this heavily Democratic, black-majority district. But with Jeffries assembling “a broad coalition of support”[42] and having more cash than the incumbent, Towns announced his retirement on April 16, leaving Jeffries to face city councilman Charles Barron in the Democratic primary.[43][44][45][46]
Touted as the “Barack Obama of Brooklyn”[47] during the campaign, Jeffries has said he doesn’t see the Obama comparison: “Other than the fact that we were both born on August 4, it’s not clear to me that there’s much of a professional resemblance.”
On June 11, 2012, former Mayor Ed Koch, Congressman Jerrold Nadler, Councilman David Greenfield, and Assemblyman Dov Hikind gathered with several other elected officials to support Jeffries and denounce Barron. The officials called Barron antisemitic and denounced his allegedly antisemitic statements, while also denouncing his support of Zimbabwe ruler Robert Mugabe and former Libya ruler Muammar Gaddafi.[48] Barron responded that such attacks were a distraction from bread-and-butter issues.[49]
Green Party candidate Colin Beavan called on Jeffries to “get the money out of politics”, noting that as of his March 2012 filing, “he had received about $180,000, or 35 percent of his funds, from Wall Street bankers and their lawyers”. Beavan added that Jeffries gets many campaign donations from charter school backers and hedge fund managers.[50] After primary night, when asked about his two most important concerns, Jeffries replied eliminating the “crushing burden” of private religious school education costs.[51]
After outraising him by hundreds of thousands of dollars,[2][52] Jeffries defeated Barron in the June 26 primary election on, 72%–28%. A New York Daily News post-election editorial noted that Barron had been “repudiated” in all parts of the district, including among neighbors on Barron’s own block in East New York, where he lost 57–50.[53] The Daily News also analyzed Jeffries’s donations in the last weeks of the campaign and found almost 50% came from out of state.[54] He defeated Beavan and Republican Alan Bellone in the November general election with 71% of the vote,[2][55] but not before declining to attend a pre-primary debate with third-party candidates, saying that the presence of the Green Party and Republican candidates at the debate would “confuse” voters.[56]
On January 3, 2013, Jeffries was sworn in to the 113th Congress.
Among the innovative practices Jeffries has carried over to Congress from his service in the State Assembly: Operation Preserve,[57] a legal housing clinic for displaced residents in the community; Summer at the Subway, now known as “Congress on Your Corner”; outdoor evening office hours from June through August near subway stations that allows him to connect and hear constituents’ concerns firsthand;[58] and his annual “State of the District” address, a community event in January that reviews milestones achieved in the past year and previews his goals for the year ahead.[59]
Political positions
Since 2006, Jeffries has been a cautious supporter of Bruce Ratner‘s controversial Atlantic Yards project.[32]
He has opposed the Keystone XL pipeline, but also voted against an amendment that would have restricted sales of oil transported on the pipeline to within the United States.[60]
He is pro-Israel, saying at a rally in July 2014, “Israel should not be made to apologize for its strength.” Citing his own childhood growing up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Jeffries added that he knew from experience that “the only thing that neighbors respect in a tough neighborhood is strength.”[61] In December 2016, Jeffries condemned the Obama Administration for not vetoing United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334 concerning Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories.[62]
Since taking federal office, Jeffries has been called “a rising star”.[63] He has been appointed to the House Judiciary Committee Task Force on Over Criminalization[64] as well as appointed the whip of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC)[65].[66] He also plays in the infield on the Congressional Baseball Team.[67]
As a member of Congress, he called for a Department of Justice investigation into the circumstances of Eric Garner’s death.[68] On a visit to the Staten Island site where Garner was killed, recorded by a CNN news crew in December 2014, Jeffries encountered Gwen Carr, Garner’s mother.[69] In April 2015, he stood with Carr to announce the introduction of the Excessive Use of Force Prevention Act of 2015[70] that would make the use of a chokehold illegal under federal law.[71]
As the Congress member with among the highest number of public housing residents, Jeffries focused on being attentive to their needs. He introduced P.J.’s Act[72] in response to the death of 6 year old P.J. Avitto of East New York, who was stabbed in an elevator inside the Boulevard Houses, a NYCHA apartment complex. The legislation would increase federal funding for enhanced security in public housing developments.[73]
Jeffries has also called on the New York City Police Department Commissioner to reform its marijuana arrest policy[74] after reports showed that low-level marijuana arrests, which had increased dramatically under Mayor Michael Bloomberg‘s administration’s application of stop-and-frisk, were still rising in New York City under Bloomberg’s successor, Bill de Blasio. Jeffries has become a high-profile critic of de Blasio and NYPD Commissioner William Bratton, questioning whether the reduction in stop-and-frisk has been a product of mayoral administration changes or the results of a movement that brought a successful federal lawsuit, and criticizing Garner’s chokehold death.[75]
In Congress, as the Congressional Black Caucus whip, he has been actively involved in maintaining the CBC’s historic role as “the conscience of the Congress”.[76] In his CBC role, he has hosted Special Orders on the House floor, including regarding voting rights (after the Supreme Court decision weakening the 1965 Voting Rights Act)[77] and in December 2014, leading CBC members in a “hands up, don’t shoot” protest to protest the killings of African-Americans by police.[78] After the shootings in Charleston in June 2015 by a white supremacist inspired by the Confederate flag, Jeffries led the effort to have the flag removed for sale or display on National Park Service land, an amendment eventually killed by the Republican House leadership after its initial support and inclusion on voice vote. During dramatic debate on the House floor, Jeffries stood next to the Confederate battle flag, said he “got chills” and lamented that the “Ghosts of the Confederacy have invaded the GOP”.[79]
With a high concentration of public housing and high unemployment in his district, Jeffries has also made an issue of HUD’s failure to adequately enforce Section 3 of its initial creating statute from 1968, which explicitly required that federally funded capital and rehabilitation projects in public housing developments had to employ residents of those developments. Jeffries said, “we can download the power of the federal government into neighborhoods that are struggling the most, without legislative action. The most promising area is Section 3.”[80]
Jeffries supports banning discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. In 2019, he voted in favor of the Equality Act and urged Congress members to do the same.[81][82]
Bills
In addition to legislation mentioned above, on April 11, 2013, Jeffries introduced the Prison Ship Martyrs’ Monument Preservation Act (H.R. 1501; 113th Congress). The bill would direct the Secretary of the Interior to study the suitability and feasibility of designating the Prison Ship Martyrs’ Monument in Fort Greene Park in Brooklyn as a unit of the National Park System (NPS).[83] Jeffries said, “as one of America’s largest revolutionary war burial sites and in tribute to the patriots that lost their lives fighting for our nation’s independence, this monument deserves to be considered as a unit of the National Park Service.”[84] On April 28, 2014, the Prison Ship Martyrs’s Monument Preservation Act was passed by the House.[85]
On July 15, 2014, Jeffries, who in private practice addressed intellectual property issues, introduced the To establish the Law School Clinic Certification Program of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (H.R. 5108; 113th Congress), which would establish the Law School Clinic Certification Program of the United States Patent and Trademark Office(USPTO) to be available to accredited law schools for the ten-year period after enactment of the Act.[86]
In 2015, Jeffries led the effort to pass The Slain Officer Family Support Act,[87] which extended the tax deadline for people making donations to organizations supporting the families of deceased NYPD Detectives Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos. The families of the officers, who had been killed in their patrol car on December 20, 2014, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Jeffries’s district, had been the recipients of charitable fundraising.[88] Before the law’s enactment, people would have had to make those contributions by December 31, 2014, to qualify for a tax deduction in connection with taxes filed in 2015. With the change, contributions made until April 15, 2015, were deductible. President Obama signed the bill into law on April 1, 2015.[89]
Roles
Democratic Caucus Chair
On November 28, 2018, Jeffries defeated California Congresswoman Barbara Lee to become chair of the House Democratic Caucus.[4] His term began when the new Congress was sworn in on January 3, 2019.[90] In this role, he is the fifth-ranking member of the Democratic leadership.
First impeachment of President Donald Trump
On December 18, 2019, Jeffries voted for both articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.[91]
On January 15, 2020, Jeffries was selected as one of seven House managers presenting the impeachment case against Trump during his trial before the United States Senate.[92] On January 22, 2020, a protester in the Senate gallery interrupted Jeffries by yelling comments at the senators seated a floor below. Jeffries quickly responded with a scripture verse, Psalm 37:28—”For the Lord loves justice and will not abandon his faithful ones”—before continuing with his testimony.[93]
Committee assignments
Caucus memberships
Endorsements
In 2007, while still in his first term in the State Assembly, Jeffries endorsed and supported Barack Obama, and was among Obama’s earliest supporters in Hillary Clinton‘s home state. In one interview, he said, “When I first ran for office, some people suggested that someone with the name ‘Hakeem Jeffries’ could never get elected, and when I saw someone with the name ‘Barack Obama’ get elected to the U.S. Senate, it certainly inspired me.”[96]
While Obama did not openly support candidates in Democratic primaries, he and President Bill Clinton together took a photograph with Jeffries weeks before his 2012 Congressional primary against Charles Barron, which was effectively used in campaign literature.[97]
In a 2012 special election, Jeffries endorsed Walter T. Mosley, who won a special election run to succeed Jeffries in the State Assembly.[98]
The next year, Jeffries backed Laurie Cumbo[99] in the hotly contested race for Brooklyn’s 35th city council seat vacated by Tish James, who won the citywide race for Public Advocate, also with Jeffries’s endorsement.[100]
In 2013, Jeffries endorsed Kenneth Thompson in the race for Brooklyn District Attorney, the seat held since 1990 by Charles “Joe” Hynes, whose office was facing deep criticism for wrongful convictions and botched prosecutions.[101] Jeffries had met Thompson while interning at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District in the 1990s, when Thompson was a prosecutor.[102]
According to journalists, Jeffries’s endorsement of Thompson was critical, and was followed by endorsements of Thompson by Brooklyn’s three other Democratic members of Congress.[103][104] Thompson won the Democratic primary and defeated Hynes again in the general election when Hynes ran as a Republican.[105][106]
In the 2013 NYC mayoral race, Jeffries endorsed City Comptroller Bill Thompson, hailing his experience in city government. Jeffries also noted he was offended by Bill de Blasio’s ad featuring stop and frisk claiming himself as the only candidate who would address, modify or reform stop and frisk:
In some ways, I’m offended by the notion that one individual, in a city of eight million people, after years and years and years of many of us, in the state legislature and the City Council, activists, marches that took place, including one on Father’s Day, to get us to a point where all of the major mayoral candidates have said stop and frisk will be significantly reformed on their watch.
His support of Thompson over de Blasio came in spite of Jeffries’s own support of two policing bills, for independent inspector general for the police department and to allow for bias suits in state court, which de Blasio backed but Thompson did not. Jeffries said it made sense for Thompson, because he was running to be the city’s top executive, not to support them.[107]
In 2014, he supported Rubain Dorancy as Democratic candidate for state senate, who lost to Jesse Hamilton[108] by a wide margin.[109]
In that race, as in several others since 2012, Jeffries has endorsed opponents of candidates endorsed by current Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, which has created the perception of a rivalry between them. Both Jeffries and Adams have dismissed these perceptions, noting their shared history (they had together served as prime co-sponsors of the 2010 stop-frisk database bill in the state legislature), with Jeffries adding: “Over the years, we’ve often disagreed about the best candidate for our community. But when the election is over, we should all work together to get things done.”[110]
In 2015, calls were been made among prominent African-American pastors for Jeffries to step into the 2017 Democratic primary for mayor against de Blasio. Jeffries said he had “no interest” and wished to remain an effective member of Congress.[111]
In the 2016 election cycle, Jeffries endorsed Hillary Clinton for president, in spite of previously “bucking the New York establishment”.[112] After Clinton lost the electoral college, he claimed her loss was due to her lack of “clear, decisive economic message” in using “Stronger Together” as a campaign slogan and her failure to relate to white working-class voters’ anxieties.[113]
In the 2020 election cycle, after Tara Reade came forward with sexual assault allegations against then-presumptive nominee Joe Biden, Jeffries called for the need for the allegation “to be investigated seriously” because the allegations were “raised by a serious individual”.[114] As the fifth highest-ranking House Democrat, he also recommended the Biden campaign take either California Representative Karen Bass or Florida Representative Val Demings as his running mate.[115]
In June 2020, after 31-year incumbent Representative Eliot Engel faced backlash for “an inartful statement”, Jeffries threw his full support behind Engel 10 days before the 2020 New York Democratic primaries.[116] Engel lost in the primaries to Jamaal Bowman.[117] The same month, Jeffries endorsed New Jersey Representative Josh Gottheimer for reelection,[118] as well as Mimi Rocah for Westchester District Attorney.[119]
Personal life
Jeffries is married to Kennisandra Arciniegas-Jeffries, a social worker with 1199 SEIU‘s Benefit Fund. They have two sons[9][51] and live in Prospect Heights.
Jeffries’s younger brother, Hasan Kwame Jeffries, is an associate professor of history at the Ohio State University.[120] He is the author of Bloody Lowndes: Civil Rights and Black Power in Alabama’s Black Belt.[121] Jeffries is the nephew of Leonard Jeffries, a former professor at City College of New York.[51]
See also
References
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- ^ https://history.osu.edu/directory/Jeffries57 Archived August 1, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Hasan Kwame Jeffries
- ^ Jeffries, Hasan Kwame (July 2009). Bloody Lowndes Civil Rights and Black Power in Alabama’s Black Belt. ISBN 9780814743065.
External links
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffries official U.S. House website
- Hakeem Jeffries for Congress official campaign website
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Hakeem Jeffries at Curlie
- Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Profile at Vote Smart
- Financial information (federal office) at the Federal Election Commission
- Legislation sponsored at the Library of Congress
Issues
Source: Government page
Committees
- State House Committee on Banks
- State House Committee on Codes
- State House Committee on Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions
- State House Committee on Correction
- State House Committee on Housing
- State House Committee on Judiciary
- State House Subcommittee on Banking in Underserved Communities
- State House Subcommittee on Mitchell-Lama
- State House Subcommittee on Transitional Services
- State House Subcommittee on Trust and Estates