Everything about Jose Serrano totally explained
José Enrique Serrano (born
October 24,
1943) is a
New York politician, currently representing the state's
16th congressional district (
map
) in the
United States House of Representatives. His son,
Jose M. Serrano is a member of the
New York State Senate.
Serrano's district is one of the smallest in the country geographically consisting of a few miles of the heavily urbanized and populated South Bronx in
New York City. His district is also one of the most densely populated and one of the few majority Hispanic districts in the country.
Yankee Stadium is in his district. Serrano is married and has five children.
Early years
Serrano was born in
Mayaguez, Puerto Rico. At the age of seven, Serrano was taken by his family to
The Bronx. Serrano went to high school and then
Lehman College for his undergraduate degree. He served in the
United States Army medical corps from
1964 to
1966.
Serrano was elected to the New York state Assembly in
1974 as a
Democrat, where he served as chairman of the Consumer Affairs Committee and, subsequently, the Education Committee.
House of Representatives
In
1990, Serrano won a special election for a
House of Representatives seat vacated by resigning Congressman
Robert García and has thereafter been reelected, usually by over 90 percent of the vote, in what is considered one of the safest seats in Congress.
Political positions
Serrano is an advocate of ending the trade embargo on Cuba and for 'English Plus', which would encourage Americans to become
bilingual. He has consistently supported initiatives to resolve Puerto Rico's political status problem, including the 1998 Young bill, which he coauthored, and the Dec. 22, 2005 report of the President's Task Force on Puerto Rico's Political Status, which recommends that Congress provide an opportunity for residents in Puerto Rico to vote for or against its current status, which the report describes as an unincorporated U.S. territory and Serrano describes as a U.S. colony. Serrano has filed a bill, HR 900, with Puerto Rico Resident Commissioner
Luis Fortuño, which has been cosponsored by 110 other Democratic and Republican members of Congress to authorize such a referendum by 2009.
A member of the
Progressive Caucus, he's widely regarded as one of the most liberal members of Congress. He has been questioned about his
pork barrel spending by some fiscal conservative members of Congress.
Arizona Congressman
Jeff Flake once said of Serrano's $150,000
earmark to fix plumbing in
Italian restaurants, "I would argue this is one
cannoli the taxpayer doesn’t want to take a bite of." Serrano replied to Flake: "The more you get up on these, Sir, the more I realize that you don't know what you're talking about. I make no excuses about the fact that I earmark dollars to go in the poorest congressional district in the nation, which is situated in the richest city on earth."
In
2005, Serrano introduced a joint resolution proposing an amendment to the
Constitution of the United States to repeal the
22nd Amendment, thereby removing the limitation on the number of terms an individual may serve as president. It was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Serrano has paid attention to local environmental issues in New York, with a particular focus on cleaning up the Bronx River, which runs through his district. Recently a beaver was discovered swimming in the river for the first time in 200 years, something seen as a testament to his efforts.
Actions and committees
Congressman Serrano has been a critic of the Bush administration's approach to handling President
Hugo Chávez of Venezuela. In 2005, while the Venezuelan President was in New York City speaking before the United Nations, the congressman invited him to his district to speak to his constituency.
Serrano is one of three New York-area congressmen on the
House Appropriations Committee, the others being
Nita Lowey of the
18th District and
Steve Rothman of
New Jersey's 9th congressional district (which abuts New York City). He is the chairman of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services. As chairman, he successfully engineered the inclusion of language in the 2007 omnibus spending bill that guarantees the extension of the
50 State Quarters program to include the minting of 6 additional quarters to honor the District of Columbia and the 5 United States territories, including Serrano's native Puerto Rico.
Serrano has also been an advocate for
Puerto Ricans under FBI prosecution
. In May of 2000 he brokered an agreement with then FBI Director
Louis Freeh, then
Puerto Rican Independence Party senator
Manuel Rodríguez Orellana and then Puerto Rico Senate Federal Affairs Committee chairman
Kenneth McClintock, the islands' current Senate President, that has resulted in the release of nearly 100,000 pages of previously secret FBI files on Puerto Rican political activists.
Assignments
- Appropriations Committee
- Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development
- Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government (Chairman)
- Subcommittee on Homeland Security
- Senior Whip
Further Information
Get more info on 'Jose Serrano'.
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