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Alan Grayson

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Alan Grayson
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 8th district
Assumed office
January 3, 2009
Preceded byRic Keller
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic Party
SpouseLolita Grayson
ChildrenSkye, Star, Sage, Storm, Stone [1]
ResidenceOrlando, Florida
Alma materHarvard University (A.B.)

John F. Kennedy School of Government (Master of Public Policy)

Harvard Law School (J.D.)
ProfessionAttorney
WebsiteCongressman Alan Grayson

Alan Mark Grayson (born March 13, 1958) is an American attorney and businessman who is currently serving as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Florida's 8th congressional district. A progressive Democrat, Grayson defeated four-term incumbent Republican Ric Keller in the 2008 congressional election.

Grayson gained national attention when he summarized the Republican Party's health care plan as “don't get sick, and if you do get sick…die quickly.”[2]


Education and early career

Grayson was born in the Bronx, New York and grew up in the tenements. He graduated from Bronx High School of Science and worked his way through Harvard University, graduating in three years, summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. He then began graduate studies and simultaneously, in the next four years, earned a law degree with honors from Harvard Law School, a masters in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government and completed the course work and passed the general exams for a Ph.D in government.[3][4]

After writing his master's thesis on gerontology, he founded the Alliance for Aging Research, and served as an officer of the organization for more than 20 years.[1]

Grayson was employed as a law clerk at the Colorado Supreme Court in 1983, and at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals from 1984 to 1985, where he worked with such judges as Abner Mikva, Robert Bork, and two judges who later joined the U.S. Supreme Court: Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia. He was an associate at the Washington D.C. firm of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson for five years, where he specialized in contract law. In 1991 he founded the law firm Grayson, Kubli which concentrated on government contract law. He was a lecturer at the George Washington University government contracts program and a frequent speaker on the topic.[4]

Grayson also was the first President of IDT Corporation, a publicly traded billion-dollar telecommunications company.[1][5]

Whistleblower cases

[6][7][8][9]

In recent years, Grayson specialized in war profiteer and whistleblower cases aimed at Iraq war contractors that had overbilled the U.S. government by tens of millions of dollars. One such contractor, Custer Battles, billed the government $15 million for inspecting non-existent civilian flights at Baghdad Airport, and $10 million on a time and materials contract that had cost just 3.5 million, and received payment in newly printed cash direct from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.[4] Grayson was enabled to prosecute fraud through the False Claims Act and its qui tam provisions.[10]

While pursuing the whistleblower cases, Grayson worked from a home office in Orlando where he lived with his wife and five children. The Wall Street Journal described him as “waging a one-man war against contractor fraud in Iraq.″ Grayson was a “fierce critic of the war in Iraq″ whose car was “emblazoned” with bumper stickers such as “Bush lied, people died”. [10]

Electoral history

In 2006, Grayson made his first foray into electoral politics, and lost the 2006 Democratic primary for Florida's 8th Congressional District to Charlie Stuart, a prominent local businessman and center-right Democrat.[11] Stuart went on to lose the general election to incumbent Republican Congressman Ric Keller.[12]

In late 2007, Grayson announced that he would run again for the 8th District seat, and again faced Stuart in the primary. During the primary, his campaign retained the services of Bill Hillsman, an advertising executive whose previous political clients include the U.S. Senate campaigns of Democrats Paul Wellstone and Ned Lamont, the gubernatorial campaigns of Independents Jesse Ventura and Kinky Friedman, and the 2000 presidential campaign of Ralph Nader. Hillsman's first ad for Grayson, entitled “Case Closed”, focused on Grayson's fight against military contractor fraud, dramatizing the amounts of money involved with a suitcase containing $1 million in cash and an airplane hangar that could be filled with the $9 billion in taxpayer dollars allegedly stolen by contractor fraud in Iraq.[13] The ad spread over the Internet via various liberal blogs, including the widely read FireDogLake and The Huffington Post, and was deemed very successful. A second ad, “Empty”, also referenced contractor fraud, this time listing faulty products, such as empty fire extinguishers and defective parachutes, that were sold to the government.[14] This, too, was deemed a very successful ad. Other ads produced by Hillsman for the campaign included “Important Part”[15], in which Grayson blasted Keller for voting against an appropriation for prosthetic limbs for veterans; and “Taxpayer Robbery”[16], which likened the loosening of regulations on the financial industry and the resulting 2008 bank bailout to an armed robbery.

In the August 26, 2008 Democratic primary, Grayson prevailed by an unexpectedly large margin, receiving 48.5% of the vote. Stuart distantly trailed with 27.5%, with three other candidates splitting the remaining 24%.[17] During the general election campaign, Grayson maintained a consistent lead over Keller, who had barely eked out renomination in the Republican primary over attorney Todd Long after breaking a voluntary term limits pledge. This, combined with the erasure of the Republican Party's narrow advantage in voter registration in the district, helped propel Grayson to victory. On Election Day, he received 172,854 votes, or 52%, to Keller's 159,490 votes, or 48%.[18] Although Keller won three out of four counties in the district, Grayson won by a margin of 55% to 45% in Orange County, home to Orlando and by far the largest county in the district.[19]

Grayson is only the second Democrat to represent his district since its formation after the 1970 census (it was the 5th District from 1973 to 1993 and has been the 8th District since 1993). The only other Democrat to represent this district, Bill Gunter, gave it up after only one term to make an unsuccessful run for the Democratic Senate nomination in 1974.

Although the Florida 8th district was historically a Republican district, Grayson was elected as a progressive Democrat, and is a Vice Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.[20]


Congressional career

During his first term in office, Grayson gained attention for an exchange with Grayson questioned Federal Reserve System Vice Chairman Donald Kohn on the disposition of the $1.2 trillion that the Fed had lent as part of the 2008 bank bailout, during which Grayson said (to Kohn), “...Have people ever said we won't take your $150 billion because people might find out about it?″ and questioned the authority of the Fed in funds dispersal. After the exchange received attention from various national media outlets, Grayson was the subject of an interview by on the subject by Salon.com writer Glenn Greenwald. [21] A later hearing, during which Grayson had an exchange with Elizabeth A. Coleman about spending by the Federal Reserve, became widely reviewed on YouTube, receiving nearly 3,000,000 views in the first few months after posting.[22]

On March 23, 2009, fallowing the AIG bonus payments controversy, Grayson joined with fellow freshman Democrat Jim Himes of Connecticut to introduce the Grayson-Himes Pay for Performance Act, legislation to require that all bonuses paid by companies that had received funds under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 to be "based on performance".[23] The bill was co-sponsored by eight other members of the House. On March 26, the bill was approved by the House Financial Services Committee by a vote of 38-22. On April 1, the bill was passed by the full House of Representatives by a vote of 247-171.[24] The bill is viewed by some as giving Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner extraordinary power to determine the pay of thousands of employees of American companies.[25][26]

Grayson is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, consisting of 80 progressive House members in addition to independent Vermont Senator Bernard Sanders and Democratic New Mexico Senator Tom Udall.

Grayson was ranked as the 12th-wealthiest member of Congress based on financial disclosure forms with a minimum net worth of $31.12 million, according to Roll Call.[27]

Health care policy debate

On September 29, 2009, Grayson made a speech regarding health care proposals in the U.S. House. During it he said, “The Republican health care plan is this: ‘Don't get sick, and if you do get sick, die quickly.’”[2] His remarks drew immediate calls for an apology from Republicans and condemnation from media sources,[28] and, according to Grayson, resulted in positive emails from constituents which outweighed negative ones four to one and over five thousand supporting campaign contributions.[29] Grayson raised in excess of $100,000 for his reelection campaign fallowing the remarks.[30] Republican Congressman Jimmy Duncan called Grayson's speech “the most mean-spirited partisan statement that I've ever heard made on this floor”.[31] National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Andy Sere said, “This is an unstable man who has come unhinged. The depths to which Alan Grayson will sink to defend his indefensible comments know no bounds.”[32]

Grayson described these comments as “Republican hissy fits″,[29] and the next day gave a speech from the House Floor, saying “I would like to apologize: I apologize to the dead and their families that we haven't voted sooner to end this holocaust in America.”[33] He cited a September 2009 Harvard study [1] that found 44,000 Americans die each year due to being uninsured. Grayson, who is Jewish, apologized to the Anti-defamation league for those offended by his use of the word 'holocaust'. [34]

On October 8 Grayson gave a speech which confirmed that he would not apologize to the Republicans (“America doesn't care about [the Republican party's] feelings”), while accusing the Democratic party of narrowly focusing on procedure over policy (“We as a party have spent the last six months, the greatest minds in our party, dwelling on the question, the unbelievably consuming question of how to get Olympia Snowe to vote on health care reform”) and the Republican party for dogmatic opposition to the Democrats (“If Barack Obama has a BLT sandwich tomorrow for lunch, they will try to ban bacon″).[35][36]

Grayson raised a total of $347,000 for his reelection campaign during the third quarter, much of it attributed to his health care remarks and subsequent high profile appearances, which drastically altered fundraising figures for what had previously been "one of the weakest fundraising operations among vulnerable Democrats."[37]

Committee assignments

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Congressman Alan Grayson Biography, graysonhouse.gov, accessed 2009-10-04.
  2. ^ a b "Alan Grayson on the GOP Health Care Plan: "Don't Get Sick! And if You Do Get Sick, Die Quickly!"'". Alan Grayson. 2009-09-29.
  3. ^ About Alan Grayson, accessed 2009-09-30
  4. ^ a b c An Oversight Hearing on Waste, Fraud and Abuse in U.S. Government Contracting in Iraq - Witness Biographies, accessed 2009-09-30, U.S. Senate Democratic Policy Committee
  5. ^ SEC Info - Idt Corp - 10-Q/A - For 4/30/03 - EX-10.69, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 2000-10-10, accessed 2009-09-30
  6. ^ Alan Grayson (February 14, 2005). "Senate Democratic Policy Committee Hearing: "An Oversight Hearing on Waste, Fraud and Abuse in U.S. Government Contracting in Iraq"" (PDF). =United States House of Representatives.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  7. ^ "Halliburton unlawfully sent civilian truckers into combat in Iraq". Halliburton Watch. 19 Sept., 2006. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ David Phinney (December 23rd, 2004). "Iraq Contractor Claims Immunity From Fraud Laws". Corp Watch. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ David Rose (November 2007). "The People vs. the Profiteers". [[Vanity Fair (magazine)|]]. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ a b Dreazen, Yochi Attorney Pursues Iraq Contractor Fraud, Wall Street Journal, 2006-04-19, accessed 2009-10-03.
  11. ^ Florida Election Results, 2006-09-05
  12. ^ Florida Election Results, 2006-11-07
  13. ^ "Case Closed TV Ad", youtube.com, accessed 2009-10-04.
  14. ^ "Empty" Campaign Ad "Empty"
  15. ^ Campaign Ad "Important Part"
  16. ^ Campaign Ad: "Taxpayer Robbery"
  17. ^ Race Detail, ourcampaigns.com
  18. ^ 2008 Election Results
  19. ^ Race Detail
  20. ^ Member List, Website of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, accessed 2009-10-03
  21. ^ Salon Radio: Rep. Alan Grayson on bailout transparency
  22. ^ Is Anyone Minding the Store at the Federal Reserve?: Rep. Alan Grayson asks the Federal Reserve Inspector General about the trillions of dollars lent or spent by the Federal Reserve
  23. ^ A better Way For Wall Street, grayson.house.gov, 2009-03
  24. ^ Grayson gets his bill through the House, Orlando Sentinel
  25. ^ Outrageous federal power grab, American Thinker Blog, 2009-03
  26. ^ Grayson Pay Performance Act, themiddleclass.org[dead link]
  27. ^ Who is Alan Grayson Anyway, Wall Street Journal blogs, 2009-10-01
  28. ^ Jonathan Allen Grayson: GOP wants 'you to die', Politico.com, 2009-09-29, accessed 2009-09-30
  29. ^ a b Alan Grayson (2009-10-02). "Rep Alan Grayson on Hardball: We can't run this country based on Republican hissy fits". MSNBC.
  30. ^ "GOP looks to cash in on Grayson's comments". USA Today. 2009-10-01.
  31. ^ Is Alan Grayson the Democrats' Joe Wilson?, Yahoo newsroom blog, 2009-10-01
  32. ^ Jonathan Alter Grayson likens health crisis, holocaust, Politico.com, 2009-09-30, accessed 2009-10-01
  33. ^ Alan Grayson (2009-10-02). Rep. Alan Grayson: "I apologize to the dead and their families".
  34. ^ http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/10/06/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry5366672.shtml
  35. ^ "Rep. Alan Grayson: I Will Not Apologize- America Doesn't Care About Your Feelings". 2009-10-09.
  36. ^ Alan Grayson (2009-10-08). "Alan Grayson: "If the President has a BLT tomorrow, the Republicans will try to ban bacon."". "He sends a message to Democrats: No one elected Olympia Snowe President of the United States. And he sends a message to Republicans: No one cares about your feelings."
  37. ^ http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1009/28395.html
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 8th congressional district

2009–present
Incumbent