Jump to content

Vincent DeMarco

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rathfelder (talk | contribs) at 17:55, 31 December 2020 (removed Category:People from Campania; added Category:Italian emigrants to the United States using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Vincent DeMarco, President of the Maryland Citizens' Health Initiative, is an advocate for public health causes and subject of a 2010 book by Michael Pertschuk entitled The DeMarco Factor: Transforming Public Will Into Political Power.[1]

Early life

Vincent DeMarco was born in 1957 in Trevico, Italy to Rosa and Antonio DeMarco. In 1961, they immigrated to New Jersey.[2] He has a brother Nicola and sisters Brunella and Marlana. He graduated from high school in Hazlet, NJ in 1973.[3] Attending Johns Hopkins University for undergraduate and graduate work in American History, he was on the college debate team, volunteered in support of a labor boycott, and successfully lobbied for banning "walking around" money in Maryland political campaigns.[4]

In 1982, he worked with Young Democrats for nuclear freeze.[5] In 1986, he campaigned for Steve Sachs for Governor of Maryland.[6] After earning his law degree, he worked for Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend.[7] In 1987 he married Molly Mitchell in a Quaker service. They have two sons, Tony and Jamie.[8]

Handgun initiatives

In 1988, DeMarco opposed a voter referendum by the National Rifle Association.[9] In 1988, The Saturday Night Special Ban law that he had drafted was passed by referendum in Maryland. The Baltimore Sun editorialized him as Marylander of the Year on 12/31/1988.[10] Working from 1994–1996, DeMarco campaigned for the One Handgun Per Month Law, which passed in 1996.[11] In 1997, DeMarco worked with Handgun Control, Inc. in Washington, DC, which was later renamed The Brady Campaign.[12]

Tobacco initiatives

In 1997, he joined the Smoke Free Maryland campaign[13] and unveiled the Maryland Children's Initiative.[14] Leading up to the state elections on November 3, 1998, they collected pledges of support from candidates,[15] and on March 26, 1999, a $1.00-per-pack tax increase passed the Maryland House.[16] On April 10, 1999, the Senate passed this bill, with the increase scaled back to 30 cents per pack.[17] A year later, on August 26, 2000, the Baltimore Sun reported that 60 million fewer packs had sold that year.[18]

Health initiatives

At the end of 1999, DeMarco helped organize the Maryland Citizens' Health Initiative, later renamed to Maryland Health Care for All![19] IN 2001, this group held town meetings and 2002 allied in support of a further cigarette tax increase to support health care.[20] Rallying through the 2002 defeat of Kathleen Kennedy Townsend by Republican Robert Ehrlich,[21] the group saw their efforts reach fruition in the January 2006 veto override of the Fair Share Bill, which forced WalMart and other employers to increase health care for its workers.[22] In 2005, DeMarco was praised by the Baltimore Sun's C. Fraser Smith,[23] and the Washington Post's Matthew Mosk and John Wagner.[24]

On November 19, 2007, Maryland committed $280 million to the expansion of the state's health care system.[25]

Federal tobacco efforts

In 2001, DeMarco consulted to the Tobacco-Free Kids organization[26] and formed Faith United Against Tobacco to support efforts to grant the Food and Drug Administration authority over tobacco.[27] On June 22, 2009, President Obama signed the FDA omnibus bill granting them responsibility for the regulation of tobacco.[28]

References

  1. ^ Health Care for All website, visited 9/12/2020.
  2. ^ Michael Pertschuk, The DeMarco Factor: Transforming Public Will Into Political Power (2010, Vanderbilt University Press, Nashville), page 16.
  3. ^ Pertschuk, page 18.
  4. ^ Pertschuk, page 19.
  5. ^ Pertschuk, page 22.
  6. ^ Pertschuk, page 23.
  7. ^ Pertschuk, page 24.
  8. ^ Pertschuk, page 21-23.
  9. ^ Pertschuk, page 22.
  10. ^ Pertschuk, page 12.
  11. ^ Pertschuk, page 13.
  12. ^ Pertschuk, page 13, 28.
  13. ^ Pertschuk, page 29.
  14. ^ Pertschuk, page 50.
  15. ^ Pertschuk, page 65, 69.
  16. ^ Pertschuk, page 78.
  17. ^ Pertschuk, page 83.
  18. ^ Pertschuk, page 87.
  19. ^ Pertschuk, page 98, 99.
  20. ^ Pertschuk, page 107, 110.
  21. ^ Pertschuk, page 113.
  22. ^ Pertschuk, page 126.
  23. ^ Pertschuk, page 6,125.
  24. ^ Pertschuk, page 125.
  25. ^ Pertschuk, page 131.
  26. ^ Pertschuk, page 143.
  27. ^ Pertschuk, page 138.
  28. ^ Pertschuk, page 161.