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California District 51

Rep. Bob Filner (D)



Elected: 1992, 9th term.
Born: Sept. 4, 1942, Pittsburgh, PA .
Home: San Diego.
Education: Cornell U., B.A. 1963, Ph.D. 1973, U. of DE, M.A. 1969.
Religion: Jewish.
Family: Married (Jane Merrill); 2 children.
Elected office: San Diego Schl. Bd., 1979–83, Pres., 1982–83; San Diego City Cncl., 1987–92, Dpty. mayor, 1991.
Professional Career: Prof., San Diego St. U., 1970–92; Legis. asst., U.S. Sen. Hubert Humphrey, 1974; Legis. asst., U.S. Rep. Don Fraser, 1975; Spec. asst., U.S. Rep. Jim Bates, 1984.

 

The congressman from the 51st District is Bob Filner, a Democrat first elected in 1992. Filner grew up in New York City, and became politically active early in his adult life by joining the civil-rights movement. He was a fundraiser for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and in 1961 joined the Freedom Riders, which were groups of whites and blacks that traveled to the South to ride public transportation and use public facilities to challenge the lack of compliance with Supreme Court rulings outlawing segregation. The protests often sparked violent reactions from local citizens. Filner was arrested in Mississippi while trying to integrate a lunch counter, and was imprisoned for two months. He earned a Ph.D. at Cornell, taught history at San Diego State University, and directed the Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies. He worked on Democratic Sen. Hubert Humphrey’s staff in the 1970s, and was elected to the San Diego school board in 1979 and to the City Council in 1987. Redistricting in 1992 created a new Democratic seat in San Diego County, and Filner decided to run. He was strongly backed by local activists even though he had better-known rivals in the Democratic primary. Filner won with 26% of the vote, to 23% for Waddie Deddeh, a state senator and assemblyman; 20% for Jim Bates, a four-term congressman defeated in 1990 after being disciplined for sexual harassment; and 19% for Juan Carlos Vargas. Filner went on to win the general election easily in the Democratic district.

 
Election Results:
  2008 General
        Bob Filner (D) 148,281 (73%) ($927,615)
        David Joy (R) 49,345 (24%)
        Dan Litwin (Lib) 6,199 (3%)
  2008 Primary
        Bob Filner (D) 31,690 (76%)
        Daniel Ramirez (D) 10,182 (24%)

Prior Winning Percentages: 2006 (67%), 2004 (62%), 2002 (58%), 2000 (68%), 1998 (99%), 1996 (62%), 1994 (57%), 1992 (57%)

Filner is politically savvy, with some original ideas about policy, and he is aggressive in articulating his views. He is also one of the most liberal members of the House, and among the most confrontational. He once got into a heated argument with Republican Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina on C-SPAN, and once was reported by immigration officials at a detention facility after demanding a visit to a detainee. In August 2007, he made headlines when he was charged with assault and battery after an altercation with an airline employee at Dulles International Airport. He later paid a $100 fine, but did not plead guilty. He denied physically assaulting the employee, but conceded: “I overreacted, I behaved discourteously, and I shouldn’t have.” The Committee on Standards of Official Conduct looked into the matter and determined that Filner had shown “poor judgment.”

In 2007, Filner became chairman of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee following a contest with Rep. Mike Michaud, D-Maine, who criticized Filner for poor working relationships with Republicans and some of the veterans’ groups. Filner cited praise from major veterans’ organizations, and bolstered by support from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, with whom he sometimes had a testy relationship, he won the Democratic Caucus vote over Michaud, 112-69.

Filner has long been a vocal advocate of veterans’ rights and benefits, a popular cause in a district with many members of the military and military retirees. In 2008, he won enactment of a major overhaul of the GI Bill, which dates to 1944 and has boosted countless veterans to the middle class by paying for college and first homes. Filner’s legislation gives veterans the full cost of any public college, up from half the cost in current law, plus an average $1,100-a-month living stipend depending on the local housing market. It is expected to cost $62 billion over a decade. Outraged by the treatment of Filipino veterans, who in the past did not get full benefits, Filner in 2009 got included in the economic stimulus bill lump-sum bonus payments for Filipino veterans. In 2006, he won bipartisan support in the House to improve data security at the Veterans Affairs Department, following reports of a major computer security lapse.

Filner has survived several political challenges at home. In the 1996 primary, he was again opposed by Vargas, by then on the San Diego Council. Filner won, but by just 55%-45%. After redistricting placed heavily Latino parts of San Diego in his district in 2002, he faced Danny Ramirez, an Imperial County businessman. Filner won 70%-30%, despite losing 60%-40% in Imperial County. In 2006, Vargas challenged Filner a third time. The bitter primary contest featured negative campaigning on each side. Vargas, by then a California assemblyman, said that Filner had paid his wife more than $500,000 in campaign funds for her consulting services, which she operated from their condominium in Washington. Filner spotlighted questionable campaign payments by Vargas to his brother-in-law, who was a lobbyist for realtors. Filner benefited from his constituent work in Imperial County, where Vargas was not well known despite his Hispanic ties, and won 51%-43%. “People vote for the person who’s going to be the most effective for them, not by their last name,” Filner said. He had his usual easy re-election victories since then.


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Office Information

State Offices

Chula Vista, 619-422-5963; Imperial, 760-355-8800.

DC Office

2428 RHOB, 20515, 202-225-8045

Fax

202-225-9073

Web site

 http://www.house.gov/filner

Committees
House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee (8th of 45 D): Aviation; Highways & Transit; Railroads, Pipelines & Hazardous Materials; Water Resources & Environment.
House Veterans' Affairs Committee (1st of 18 D) (Chairman).

Group Ratings
  2007 2008
ADA 90 100
ACLU -- 100
AFS 100 100
LCV 90 92
ITIC -- 71
NTU 4 22
COC 45 47
ACU -- 12
CFG 6 22
FRC -- 5

NJ Ratings
  2009 Lib.-Con. 2008 Lib.-Con. 2007 Lib.-Con.
Economic - 63 - 36 82 -
Social - 58 - 41 92 -
Foreign - 85 - 8 86 - 11
Composite - 70.2 - 29.8 91.5 - 8.5
Complete Ratings For: 2008 | 2009

House Key Votes
Bail out financial markets N 2008
Repeal D.C. gun law N 2008
Overhaul FISA N 2008
Increase minimum wage Y 2007
Expand SCHIP Y 2007
Raise CAFE standards Y 2007
Share immigration data N 2007
Foreign aid abortion ban N 2007
Ban gay bias in workplace Y 2007
Withdraw troops 8/08 Y 2007
No operations in Iran Y 2007
Free trade with Peru N 2007
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