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Wikipedia

Carolyn Maloney

Carolyn Jane Maloney (née Bosher, February 19, 1946) is an American politician who served as the U.S. representative for New York's 12th congressional district from 2013 to 2023, and for New York's 14th congressional district from 1993 to 2013. The district includes most of Manhattan's East Side, Astoria and Long Island City in Queens, Greenpoint, Brooklyn, as well as Roosevelt Island. A member of the Democratic Party, Maloney ran for reelection in 2022 but lost the primary to 10th district incumbent Jerry Nadler after redistricting drew them both into the 12th district.[1]

Carolyn Maloney
Chair of the House Oversight Committee
In office
November 20, 2019 – January 3, 2023
Acting: October 17, 2019 – November 20, 2019
Preceded byElijah Cummings
Succeeded byJames Comer
Vice Chair of the Joint Economic Committee
In office
January 3, 2019 – January 16, 2020
Preceded byMike Lee
Succeeded byDon Beyer
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from New York
In office
January 3, 1993 – January 3, 2023
Preceded byBill Green (Redistricting)
Succeeded byJerry Nadler (Redistricting)
Constituency14th district (1993–2013)
12th district (2013–2023)
Member of the New York City Council
In office
January 1, 1983 – January 3, 1993
Preceded byRobert Rodriguez
Succeeded byAndrew Sidamon-Eristoff
Constituency8th district (1983–1991)
4th district (1992–1993)
Personal details
Born
Carolyn Jane Bosher

(1946-02-19) February 19, 1946 (age 77)
Greensboro, North Carolina, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
(m. 1976; died 2009)
Children2
EducationGreensboro College (BA)

Maloney was the first woman to represent New York City's 7th Council district (where she was the first woman to give birth while in office).[2] Maloney was also the first woman to chair the Joint Economic Committee. On October 17, 2019, she became the first woman to chair the House Committee on Oversight and Reform following the death of Elijah Cummings.[3][4][5][6] On November 20, 2019, Maloney was formally chosen to succeed Cummings.[7]

Early life, education, and career edit

Carolyn Jane Bosher was born in Greensboro, North Carolina, on February 19, 1946.[8] She attended Greensboro College. After graduating, she visited New York City in 1970, and decided to stay.[9]

For several years, she worked as a teacher and an administrator for the New York City Board of Education.[10] In 1977, she obtained a job working for the New York State Legislature, and held senior staff positions in both the State Assembly and the State Senate.[10] In 1976 she married Clifton Maloney, an investment banker.

New York City Council edit

Maloney was elected to the New York City Council in 1982, defeating incumbent Robert Rodriguez[11] in a heavily Spanish-speaking district based in East Harlem and parts of the South Bronx. She served as a council member for 10 years.[12] On the council, she served as the first chair of the Committee on Contracts, investigating contracts issued by New York City in sludge and other areas. She authored legislation creating the city's Vendex program, which established computerized systems tracking information on city contracts and vendors doing business with the city.[13] Maloney also introduced the first measure in New York to recognize domestic partnerships, including those of same-sex couples.[14] She was the first person to give birth while serving as a council member, and the first to offer a comprehensive package of legislation to make day care more available and affordable.[10]

U.S. House of Representatives edit

Elections edit

In 1992, Maloney ran for Congress in what was then the 14th district. The district had previously been the 15th, represented by 15-year incumbent Bill Green, a progressive Republican. She won with 51% of the vote.[15] The district, nicknamed the "silk stocking district", had been one of the few in the city in which Republicans usually did well; in fact, they held the seat for all but eight of the 56 years between 1937 and Maloney's victory. But it had been made significantly friendlier to Democrats by redistricting. The old 15th had been more or less coextensive with the Upper East Side, but the new 14th included Long Island City, portions of the Upper West Side, and a sliver of Brooklyn. Maloney also benefited from Bill Clinton's strong showing in the district.[16]

The core of Maloney's district was the Upper East Side, an area with a history of electing moderate Republicans. Their dominance waned throughout the 1990s, and by the early 2000s Democrats dominated every level of government.[17] This was exemplified in 1994 (the year of the Republican Revolution), when a serious challenger to Maloney, Republican City Councilman Charles Millard, lost badly. No Republican has gotten more than 30% of the vote in the district since.[18]

In 2004, Maloney faced a potential Democratic primary challenge from Robert Jereski, a former Green Party political candidate and unsuccessful candidate for delegate to the 2004 Democratic National Convention on the slate of Dennis Kucinich. Jereski opposed the Iraq War while Maloney had initially voted for the resolution to authorize force; she later renounced the war, including at a town hall meeting in her district with antiwar Congressman John Murtha, where her comments made headlines.[19] Jereski failed to qualify for the ballot because his petition was found to have invalid signatures, leaving him four short of the 1,250 required.

In December 2008, Maloney hired a public-relations firm to help bolster her efforts to be named by Governor David Paterson as Hillary Clinton's successor in the U.S. Senate. She toured parts of the state, but was overshadowed by Caroline Kennedy's promotional tour for the same seat. Maloney interviewed with Paterson for 55 minutes. Public opinion polls placed Maloney's support for the Senate seat in the single digits, trailing the front-runner, then-State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, although her bid was endorsed by the National Organization for Women Political Action Committee, the Feminist Majority Political Action Committee,[20] New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof,[21] and other columnists[22] and editorial boards.[23]

On January 23, 2009, Paterson chose Representative Kirsten Gillibrand.[24] Since Gillibrand is from upstate, many in NYC's political circles urged Maloney to primary Gillibrand in 2010.[25] Despite leading Gillibrand in the polls,[26][27] she instead ran to retain her congressional seat.[28] A decade later, Maloney was the sole member of Congress to endorse Gillibrand's 2020 presidential campaign.

In the Democratic primary for Congress on September 14, 2010, Maloney defeated a well-funded opponent, Reshma Saujani, a 34-year-old Indian-American hedge fund lawyer, by 62 percentage points.[29] That night, Saujani said, "I'm definitely running again",[30] but three months later announced publicly that she would not challenge Maloney again.[31]

In 2012 Maloney's Republican challenger was Christopher Wright, who took a leave of absence from J. P. Morgan to campaign. Maloney won with 80.9% of the vote, a margin of over 120,000 votes.[32]

In 2014, Maloney defeated Republican nominee Nicholas Di Iorio, a financial contractor with Pfizer,[33] with 80% of the vote.[34]

In the 2016 Democratic primary, Maloney defeated Pete Lindner with 90.1% of the vote. She defeated Republican Robert Ardini in the general election with 83.2% of the vote.[35]

In the 2018 Democratic primary, Maloney defeated progressive candidate Suraj Patel with 59.6% of the vote. In the general election she defeated Republican nominee Eliot Rabin with 86.4% of the vote.[36]

In the 2020 Democratic primary, Patel challenged Maloney again, as did progressive Democrat Lauren Ashcraft[37] and housing activist Peter Harrison. Erica Vladimer, a co-founder of New York State's Sexual Harassment Working Group, withdrew from the race before the primary.[38][39] By July 29, 2020, it was revealed that Maloney led Patel by about 4% and 3,700 votes.[40][41] On August 4, 2020, local election officials declared Maloney the winner of the primary.[42][43]

The redistricting process of 2022 consolidated parts of the 12th and 10th Congressional districts. Maloney chose to face fellow incumbent Jerry Nadler in the Democratic primary race for the newly combined seat, and in August of that year lost the primary to Nadler by thirty points.[1]

Tenure edit

 
Maloney with President Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, and Jack Kingston in 1999

In 2009, the National Journal's annual ranking placed Maloney as the 114th-most liberal (or 314th-most conservative) member of Congress, with more liberal scores on foreign policy than on economic and social policy. Her score of 75.5 ranked her as modestly more liberal than the New York Congressional delegation as a whole.[44]

In 2011, a Daily News survey found that Maloney ranked first among New York's 28 representatives for activity with 36 proposed bills, resolutions, and amendments.[45] In the 2013 legislative session, Govtrack.us scored her third among House Democrats for "Leadership," third among all representatives for "Powerful Co-sponsors," third-highest in the New York delegation for "Working with the Senate," and fifth-highest among all representatives for "Bills Sponsored."[46] During the 2014 election cycle, the New York Daily News ran a story that said, "Maloney has proposed more legislation than any other House member, according to records", and called her "James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, giving compensation to Ground Zero workers who have fallen ill, as big a bill for the New York area as any in the last decade."[47]

For the 2015 legislative session, Govtrack.us scored Maloney first for "Leadership" among House Democrats, based on sponsoring the most bills. It scored her second among all representatives for having the most co-sponsors, second for "Working with the Senate" and fourth among House Democrats for having powerful cosponsors. She was ranked in the top 10% of all representatives for bills introduced ("Maloney introduced 26 bills and resolutions in 2015").[48]

As a U.S. Representative, Maloney was a superdelegate at presidential conventions. In the 2016 election cycle she was an early supporter of former Secretary of State and Senator Hillary Clinton.[49] According to her 2018 GovTrack Report card Maloney ranked in the 80th percentile among House members for getting bicameral support for the bills she has introduced; she ranked sixth among House Democrats.[50]

In 2019, Govtrack.us ranked Maloney as the top legislative leader in the House. This analysis ranked her second among all representatives for the most co-sponsors on her bills, in the top 5% for the number of bills introduced, and in the top 10% for getting her bills out of committee.[51]

For her tenure as chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee in the 116th Congress, Maloney earned an "A" grade from the nonpartisan Lugar Center's Congressional Oversight Hearing Index.[52]

In 2021 the Center for Effective Lawmaking ranked Maloney the third-most effective lawmaker in the House.[53]

9/11-related issues edit

 
Maloney speaks at a press conference with members of the 9/11 Commission and 9/11 families in 2004

Following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Maloney advocated for federal help for New York's recovery and security efforts. Her efforts prompted Wayne Barrett of the Village Voice to write that Maloney was "like a tiger in the House on every dollar due New York."[54]

On February 25, 2019, she introduced her Never Forget the Heroes Act, HR1327 in the 116th Congress—a bill to establish Permanent Authorization of the September 11 Victim Compensation Fund Act.[55] The $10.2 billion authorization was signed into law, establishing that both the World Trade Center Health Program and September 11 Victim Compensation are effectively permanent, with the WTCHP authorized to operate until 2090 and the VCF until 2092.[56]

National security issues edit

After the 9/11 Commission published its findings, Maloney co-founded the bipartisan House 9/11 Commission Caucus[57] and helped write and secure the enactment into law of many of its recommendations to reform the nation's intelligence agencies[58][59] Congressional Quarterly wrote in its annual guide, 2006 Politics in America: "In the 108th Congress, Maloney reached out beyond her usual roles as a liberal gadfly and persistent Bush administration critic, helping win enactment of a sweeping bill to reorganize U.S. intelligence operations."[60]

Following the Dubai Ports World controversy, Maloney helped secure the passage and enactment of her bill to reform the system for vetting foreign investments in the United States.[61][62] She has supported Scientology's "New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project".[63]

 
Maloney with State Counsellor of Myanmar and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi in September 2016

On October 1, 2020, Maloney co-signed a letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that condemned Azerbaijan’s offensive operations against the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, denounced Turkey’s role in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and criticized "false equivalence between Armenia and Azerbaijan, even as the latter threatens war and refuses to agree to monitoring along the line of contact."[64]

Maloney, who chairs the House Oversight and Reform Committee, called on FBI Director Christopher A. Wray to open a probe into social media platform Parler, writing, "The company was founded by John Matze shortly after he traveled in Russia with his wife, who is Russian and whose family reportedly has ties to the Russian government."[65]

Gun control edit

In response to a number of high-profile incidents of gun violence, Maloney sponsored two bills to address the issue. The Gun Trafficking Prevention Act of 2013 would make gun trafficking a federal crime for the first time and substantially stiffen the penalties for "straw buyers" who knowingly help convicted felons, domestic abusers, the violently mentally ill and others, obtain guns.[66]

In 2014, she joined Senator Ed Markey in sending President Barack Obama a letter asking him to insert $10 million into the budget for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to resume research on gun violence and "conduct scientific research on the causes and prevention of gun violence."[67]

In 2022, as chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, Maloney held a hearing that examined leading gun manufacturers' marketing and sales practices.[68]

Government transparency edit

Maloney introduced a bill in October 2003 intended to enforce transparency in relation to military contracting in Iraq and subject the Coalition Provisional Authority to federal procurement law.[69] In 2008, after reports of corruption among military contractors in both Iraq and Afghanistan, she secured House passage of a further bill to create a database to better monitor all federal contracts, the key provisions of which were adopted into law as part of the defense budget.[70][71]

In 2010, the Project On Government Oversight, a government watchdog group, presented Maloney with its Good Government Award for her contributions to government transparency and oversight, including her investigations into corruption and mismanagement in the Minerals Management Service and her support of a Federal Contractor Misconduct Database similar to POGO's.[72]

In 2019, Maloney introduced a bill that would require corporate entities to disclose the identities of beneficial owners to FinCEN, making it harder for them to hide assets and avoid taxes through a series of limited liability companies.[73]

Health care edit

Maloney has taken several actions on health care issues. Her measure to provide Medicare coverage for annual mammograms was included in the Fiscal Year 1998 federal budget.[74] She advocated for providing federal support for medical monitoring and health care for rescue and recovery workers who were exposed to toxic smoke and dust at the Ground Zero site after the 9/11 attacks.[75] Maloney authored the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act and led the fight for years to push for its passage. In 2010 Obama signed the bill into law. It provides $4.3 billion in federal funds to provide 9/11 responders and survivors with treatment and compensation for their injuries. In June 2012, it was announced that the program would be expanded to cover care for a variety of cancers of the lung, trachea, stomach, colon, rectum, liver, bladder, kidney, thyroid and breast.[76]

In 2015 when roughly 33,000 responders and survivors were battling an assortment of ailments, Maloney led the effort to extend the bill permanently. After a prolonged and very public push, a total of $8.5 billion in funding was included in the Omnibus Spending bill that passed in 2015 and extended the life of the monitoring and health insurance coverage for 75 years.[55] In the 111th Congress, Maloney introduced The Breastfeeding Promotion Act to protect breastfeeding in the workplace under civil rights law and make it illegal for women to lose their jobs or otherwise be discriminated against for expressing milk during lunchtime or on breaks.[77] She has advocated for international women's health and family planning programs supported by the United Nations Population Fund.[78]

A co-founder and co-chair of the Congressional Working Group on Parkinson's Disease,[79] Maloney serves on the board of the Michael Stern Parkinson's Research Foundation[80] and previously served as an honorary board member of the Fisher Center for Alzheimer's Research Foundation.[81]

Maloney has promoted scientifically discredited claims of a link between vaccines and autism.[82] On several occasions, she has introduced legislation that would direct the federal government to conduct studies into the alleged links between autism and vaccines.[83][84][85][82][86] In a 2012 congressional hearing, Maloney equated concerns over a link between autism and vaccines to concerns over a link between smoking and cancer.[82] She said that it was "common sense that [smoking] was bad for your health... The same thing seems to be here with the vaccinations."[82]

Maloney's views on vaccines changed, and she led efforts to bring COVID-19 vaccine sites to North Brooklyn and western Queens. She partnered with The Floating Hospital and the New York City Housing Authority to establish a modular site to provide COVID-19 testing and vaccination services at Astoria Houses in northwest Queens.[87][88]

Financial and economic issues edit

Maloney serves on the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and is the Ranking Democratic member of the Joint Economic Committee. She previously chaired the Democratic Task Force on Homeland Security. From 2009 to 2011, Maloney chaired the Joint Economic Committee, the first woman to do so.

Maloney was the author of the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights, or the Credit CARD Act of 2009, while serving as chair of the Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, in the 110th Congress. A 2014 Social Science Research Network study estimated that since its passage, the CARD Act has saved consumers $11.9 billion per year.[89] Credit card companies fiercely opposed the measure, but it drew praise from editorial boards and consumer advocates.[90][91] The bill was passed as the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act by both houses of the 111th Congress, prompting Money magazine to dub Maloney the "best friend a credit card user ever had."[92] Obama signed the Credit Card Bill of Rights into law in a Rose Garden ceremony Maloney attended on May 22, 2009.[93]

Days after voting against cancellation of a $1 billion, 10-year subsidy plan for U.S. sugar farmers within the 2007 U.S. Farm Bill, Maloney hosted a fundraising event that netted $9,500 in contributions from sugar growers and refiners, according to Federal Election Commission records. Her election attorney, Andrew Tulloch, called the timing of the July 31 fundraiser "pure coincidence." The bill passed the House by a 282–144 vote.[94] The Sunlight Foundation pointed out that among the 435 members of the House, Maloney has the ninth-highest amount of investment in oil stocks.[95] She received a perfect 100 rating from the Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund in 2007,[96] a perfect 100 rating from Environment America in 2008[96] and a perfect 100 from the League of Conservation Voters in 2008.[97] And in 2008, Maloney introduced the Minerals Management Service Improvement Act (HR 7211) as a House companion to Integrity in Offshore Energy Resources Act (S. 3543). The legislation would impose dramatically tougher ethics rules for the Minerals Management Service, which was at the center of a major corruption scandal stemming from its employees' relationships with oil company representatives.[98]

Women's, children's and family issues edit

 
Maloney, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and Joe Crowley speak out on the need to keep birth control safe and legal in 2005
 
Maloney with President George W. Bush at the proclamation signing for Women's History Month in 2008

Maloney has been active on many other issues involving women, children and families since the beginning of her career.[12] A former co-chair of the House Caucus on Women's Issues, she authored and helped secure the enactment into law of a measure to provide federal funding to clear the backlog of rape kits for which evidence had been collected, but never entered into law enforcement DNA databases. The Rape Abuse and Incest National Network called it "the most important anti-rape legislation ever considered by Congress".[99] Maloney's bill, included in the Justice for All Act of 2005, was named the Debbie Smith Act in honor of Debbie Smith, a rape survivor. The effort to enact the bill was later the subject of a Lifetime Television movie, A Life Interrupted: The Debbie Smith Story,[100] in which Maloney was played by Lynne Adams. Maloney also co-authored and helped secure passage of bipartisan legislation to curb the demand for sex trafficking.[101]

Maloney introduced the Child Care Affordability Act of 2007 to increase access to child care by providing tax credits.[102] Her amendment to a foreign aid bill succeeded in securing $60 million in funding for programs for Afghan women and girls and to help establish an Afghan commission on human rights.[103] She is the chief House sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment.[104] In 2008 and again in 2009, Maloney authored, and secured House passage of, a bill to provide four weeks of paid parental leave to federal employees.[105][106]

In 2011, Maloney sponsored the Campus Sexual Violence Elimination Act, known as the Campus SaVE Act. It became part of the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act of 2013. The measure guarantees counseling, legal assistance, and medical care on campuses for victims of sexual assault, establishes minimum, national standards for schools to follow in responding to allegations of sexual assault and sexual violence, and makes explicit that schools must provide to both the alleged perpetrator and the alleged victim the same rights, including access to advisers, written notifications, as well as appeals processes during campus disciplinary proceedings.[107]

Saying that "for too long, women's stories have been left out of the telling of our nation’s history", Maloney began work in the 1990s on establishing a Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum on the National Mall.[108] After years of effort, her bill passed and was signed into law in 2020.

After Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the ERA, Maloney and Jackie Speier introduced a resolution to recognize that the ERA had met all legal requirements to be considered the 28th amendment to the Constitution.[109] In March 2022, Maloney sent U.S. archivist David Ferriero a letter urging him to fulfill his statutory duty and publish the ERA.[110]

District issues edit

Maloney has helped secure funding for major mass transit projects, resulting in the commitment of billions of federal dollars for New York State.[111][112] She has been hailed as a champion of the Second Avenue Subway.[112][113]

Maloney co-sponsored the 2009 reintroduction of the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act (H.R. 801, originally introduced as H.R. 6845 in 2008) and the Research Works Act (H.R. 3699) introduced in 2011. Both bills aim to reverse the NIH's Public Access Policy,[114] which mandates open access to NIH-funded research.[115] Some scientists criticized the Association of American Publishers-backed Research Works Act. In a New York Times op-ed, Michael Eisen said the bill would force the public to pay $15–$30 per paper to read the results of research they had already paid for as taxpayers.[116] (Such results must now be published in Pubmed Central (PMC) after an embargo period of up to 12 months; this embargo period was imposed to minimize financial harm to publishers who were concerned that their readership would diminish if the results appeared concurrently in PMC, though authors of the paper are required to submit their papers to PMC as soon as their paper gets accepted for publication by a peer-review journal.) Some have suggested that Maloney supports the measure because she is the recipient of campaign contributions from Elsevier, the largest scholarly publishing company.[116][117] On February 27, 2012, following a boycott of the organization, Maloney wrote to her constituents, "it is important to be mindful of the impact of various industries on job creation and retention. New York State is home to more than 300 publishers that employ more than 12,000 New Yorkers, many of whom live in or around New York City in my district. New York City scientific publishers represent a significant subset of the total, and more than 20 are located in Manhattan, publishing thousands of scientific journals and employing thousands of New Yorkers."[118] Elsevier withdrew its support for the legislation.[119][120]

In 2021, Maloney protested the expansion of the New York Blood Center, a nonprofit biomedical research facility, from a three-story-headquarters to a 16-story tower on Manhattan's Upper East Side.[121]

Committee assignments edit

Caucus memberships edit

Scores by interest groups edit

Maloney's ratings from various interest groups include the following:[133]

Controversies edit

Wearing burqa on House floor edit

 
Carolyn Maloney gives a speech while donning an Afghan burqa on October 16, 2001

On October 16, 2001, Maloney wore an Afghan burqa while giving a speech in the United States House of Representatives in support of Afghan women's rights and American military involvement against the Taliban.[150] It was the first time an Islamic veil had been worn on the House floor, and was technically not allowed under an unenforced 1837 hat ban.[151]

In a 2018 Foreign Policy article, Rafia Zakaria, a Pakistani-American feminist author and journalist, called Maloney's display "theatrical" and an example of "American feminist exceptionalism, in which American women—intrepid and veil-free—are beacons of freedom with a duty to evangelize their particular brand of empowerment, even if it means using bombs."[152] Muslim-American Rana Abdelhamid, while running in the Democratic primary against Maloney in 2021, criticized this event as feeding negative stereotypes about Muslims and of "weapon[izing my identity] to justify American wars". Maloney subsequently defended it as being necessary to make her point.[153]

Use of the N-word edit

On July 20, 2009, Maloney apologized after saying the ethnic slur "nigger" while quoting a phone call she had received about U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand in an interview with City Hall News.[154] At the time, she was a week away from announcing an official campaign against Gillibrand in the 2010 United States Senate Democratic Primary election in New York.[155] The quote, as reported by The Atlantic,[156] was:

In fact, I got a call from someone from Puerto Rico, said [Gillibrand] went to Puerto Rico and came out for English-only [education]. And he said, 'It was like saying nigger to a Puerto Rican,'

Civil rights activist Al Sharpton criticized the remark and called Maloney's casual use of the word "alarming" but said he did not believe she was racist.[157][155] She apologized and dropped out of the race on August 7, 2009, reportedly for different reasons.[158]

2022 primary edit

During the 2022 primary, Maloney campaigned on her work within the district, as well as her gender in the wake of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.[159] Many of Maloney's activities were scrutinized, including her comments and legislation promoting the theory that vaccines cause autism.[159] During a debate with Nadler, Maloney attracted attention for saying that she believed President Joe Biden would not run for reelection in 2024. She also told The New York Times that she thought he should not run in 2024. Maloney later apologized and said that Biden should run again, though she maintained her belief that he would not.[160]

Alleged Met Gala solicitation edit

In 2022, the House Ethics Committee was investigating Maloney for allegedly casting around for an invitation to the Met Gala.[161] Investigators alleged Maloney had sought an invitation for herself after being cut from the invite list in 2016.[162][163] Maloney called former president of the Met, Emily Rafferty, to request an invitation, according to testimony Rafferty gave investigators.[162] Investigators also found that Maloney might have requested an invitation to the 2020 Met Gala, citing an email thread with a staffer in which she asked whether she was invited and how to contact the Met's government affairs staffer.[162] In a February 2022 report, the Office of Congressional Ethics said it found "substantial reason to believe that Rep. Maloney may have solicited or accepted impermissible gifts associated with her attendance at the Met Gala."[163]

Electoral history edit

New York's 14th congressional district general election, 1992
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 94,613 51
Republican Bill Green 89,423 49
Total votes 184,036 100.0
Democratic gain from Republican
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 1994
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 92,390 63
Republican Charles Millard 52,754 36
Other Thomas Leighton 1,310 1
Total votes 146,454 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 1996
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 112,026 72
Republican Jeffrey E. Livingston 36,740 24
Right to Life Delco L. Cornett 1,113 1
Conservative Joseph A. Lavezzo 2,024 1
Independence Thomas K. Leighton 3,073 2
Total votes 154,976 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 1998
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 101,848 77
Republican Stephanie E. Kuplerman 30,426 23
Total votes 132,274 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 2000
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 133,420 73
Republican C. Adrienne Rhodes 41,603 23
Green Sandra Stevens 5,163 3
Independence Frederick D. Newman 2,157 1
Total votes 182,343 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 2002
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 83,509 75
Republican Anton Srdanovic 27,614 25
Total votes 111,123 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 2004
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 140,551 76
Independence Carolyn B. Maloney 3,651 2
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 4,467 2
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 148,669 80
Republican Anton Srdanovic 35,774 19
Conservative Anton Srdanovic 1,162 1
Total Anton Srdanovic 36,936 20
Total votes 185,575 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 2006
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 107,095 75.6
Independence Carolyn B. Maloney 4,387 3.1
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 8,100 5.7
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 98,811 84.5
Republican Danniel Maio 21,969 15.5
Total votes 141,571 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 2008
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 176,378 76.9
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 6,812 3.0
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 183,190 79.9
Republican Robert G. Heim 43,365 18.9
Libertarian Isaiah Matos 2,659 1.2
Total votes 229,239 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 14th congressional district general election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 98,953 69.2
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 8,374 5.9
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 107,327 75
Republican David Ryan Brumberg 32,065 22.4
Independence Dino L. Laverghetta 1,617 1.1
Conservative Timothy J. Healy 1,891 1.3
Total votes 143,042 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 12th congressional district general election, 2012
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 185,780 76.9
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 8,614 3.6
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 194,394 80.5
Republican Christopher R. Wight 42,120 17.4
Independence Christopher R. Wight 2,475 1.0
Conservative Christopher R. Wight 2,257 0.9
Total Christopher R. Wight 46,852 19.4
Total votes 241,464 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 12th congressional district general election, 2014
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 78,440 69.1
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 12,163 10.7
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 90,603 79.8
Republican Nicholas S. Di Iorio 19,564 17.2
Independence Nicholas S. Di Iorio 1,326 1.2
Conservative Nicholas S. Di Iorio 1,841 1.6
Total Nicholas S. Di Iorio 22,731 20.03
Total votes 113,501 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 12th congressional district primary election, 2016
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 15,101 89.04
Democratic Peter Lindner 1,654 9.75
Total votes 16,959 100.0
New York's 12th congressional district general election, 2016
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 230,153 78.26
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 14,205 10.7
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 242,358 83.6
Republican Robert Ardini 49,399 17.03
Total votes 294,071 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 12th congressional district primary election, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 26,742 59.4
Democratic Suraj Patel 18,098 40.2
Total votes 45,033 100.0
New York's 12th congressional district general election, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 205,858 81.7
Working Families Carolyn B. Maloney 10,972 4.4
Reform Carolyn B. Maloney 600 0.2
Total Carolyn B. Maloney 251,877 86.3
Republican Eliot Rabin 30,446 12.1
Green Scott Hutchins 3,728 1.5
Total votes 251,877 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 12th congressional district primary election, 2020
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 40,362 42.7
Democratic Suraj Patel 37,106 39.3
Democratic Lauren Ashcraft 12,810 13.6
Democratic Peter Harrison 4,001 4.2
Total votes 94,477 100.0
New York's 12th congressional district general election, 2020
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 265,172 82.1
Republican Carlos Santiago-Cano 49,157 15.2
Conservative Carlos Santiago-Cano 3,904 1.2
Total Carlos Santiago-Cano 53,061 16.43
Libertarian Steve Kolln 4,015 1.2
Total votes 323,032 100.0
Democratic hold
New York's 12th congressional district primary election, 2022
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jerrold Nadler 45,545 55.4
Democratic Carolyn B. Maloney 20,038 24.4
Democratic Suraj Patel 15,744 19.2
Democratic Ashmi Sheth 832 1.0
Total votes 82,159 100.0

Personal life edit

Maloney and her husband, Clifton Maloney, raised two daughters.[164] Her husband died on a climbing expedition in 2009, after climbing the world's sixth-tallest peak, Cho Oyu in Tibet.[165][166]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • - Text of bill introduced by Maloney

External links edit

Civic offices
Preceded by
Robert Rodriguez
Member of the New York City Council
from the 8th district

1983–1991
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the New York City Council
from the 4th district

1992
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 14th congressional district

1993–2013
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Joint Economic Committee
2009–2011
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 12th congressional district

2013–2023
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Oversight Committee
2019–2023
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former US Representative Order of precedence of the United States
as Former US Representative
Succeeded byas Former US Representative

carolyn, maloney, american, mathematician, carolyn, mahoney, carolyn, jane, maloney, née, bosher, february, 1946, american, politician, served, representative, york, 12th, congressional, district, from, 2013, 2023, york, 14th, congressional, district, from, 19. For the American mathematician see Carolyn Mahoney Carolyn Jane Maloney nee Bosher February 19 1946 is an American politician who served as the U S representative for New York s 12th congressional district from 2013 to 2023 and for New York s 14th congressional district from 1993 to 2013 The district includes most of Manhattan s East Side Astoria and Long Island City in Queens Greenpoint Brooklyn as well as Roosevelt Island A member of the Democratic Party Maloney ran for reelection in 2022 but lost the primary to 10th district incumbent Jerry Nadler after redistricting drew them both into the 12th district 1 Carolyn MaloneyChair of the House Oversight CommitteeIn office November 20 2019 January 3 2023Acting October 17 2019 November 20 2019Preceded byElijah CummingsSucceeded byJames ComerVice Chair of the Joint Economic CommitteeIn office January 3 2019 January 16 2020Preceded byMike LeeSucceeded byDon BeyerMember of theU S House of Representativesfrom New YorkIn office January 3 1993 January 3 2023Preceded byBill Green Redistricting Succeeded byJerry Nadler Redistricting Constituency14th district 1993 2013 12th district 2013 2023 Member of the New York City CouncilIn office January 1 1983 January 3 1993Preceded byRobert RodriguezSucceeded byAndrew Sidamon EristoffConstituency8th district 1983 1991 4th district 1992 1993 Personal detailsBornCarolyn Jane Bosher 1946 02 19 February 19 1946 age 77 Greensboro North Carolina U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseClifton Maloney m 1976 died 2009 wbr Children2EducationGreensboro College BA Carolyn Maloney s voice source source Carolyn Maloney on reauthorizing the Debbie Smith ActRecorded October 23 2019Maloney was the first woman to represent New York City s 7th Council district where she was the first woman to give birth while in office 2 Maloney was also the first woman to chair the Joint Economic Committee On October 17 2019 she became the first woman to chair the House Committee on Oversight and Reform following the death of Elijah Cummings 3 4 5 6 On November 20 2019 Maloney was formally chosen to succeed Cummings 7 Contents 1 Early life education and career 2 New York City Council 3 U S House of Representatives 3 1 Elections 3 2 Tenure 3 2 1 9 11 related issues 3 2 2 National security issues 3 2 3 Gun control 3 2 4 Government transparency 3 2 5 Health care 3 2 6 Financial and economic issues 3 2 7 Women s children s and family issues 3 2 8 District issues 3 3 Committee assignments 3 4 Caucus memberships 3 5 Scores by interest groups 4 Controversies 4 1 Wearing burqa on House floor 4 2 Use of the N word 4 3 2022 primary 4 4 Alleged Met Gala solicitation 5 Electoral history 6 Personal life 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life education and career editCarolyn Jane Bosher was born in Greensboro North Carolina on February 19 1946 8 She attended Greensboro College After graduating she visited New York City in 1970 and decided to stay 9 For several years she worked as a teacher and an administrator for the New York City Board of Education 10 In 1977 she obtained a job working for the New York State Legislature and held senior staff positions in both the State Assembly and the State Senate 10 In 1976 she married Clifton Maloney an investment banker New York City Council editMaloney was elected to the New York City Council in 1982 defeating incumbent Robert Rodriguez 11 in a heavily Spanish speaking district based in East Harlem and parts of the South Bronx She served as a council member for 10 years 12 On the council she served as the first chair of the Committee on Contracts investigating contracts issued by New York City in sludge and other areas She authored legislation creating the city s Vendex program which established computerized systems tracking information on city contracts and vendors doing business with the city 13 Maloney also introduced the first measure in New York to recognize domestic partnerships including those of same sex couples 14 She was the first person to give birth while serving as a council member and the first to offer a comprehensive package of legislation to make day care more available and affordable 10 U S House of Representatives editElections edit Main article New York s 12th congressional district Recent elections In 1992 Maloney ran for Congress in what was then the 14th district The district had previously been the 15th represented by 15 year incumbent Bill Green a progressive Republican She won with 51 of the vote 15 The district nicknamed the silk stocking district had been one of the few in the city in which Republicans usually did well in fact they held the seat for all but eight of the 56 years between 1937 and Maloney s victory But it had been made significantly friendlier to Democrats by redistricting The old 15th had been more or less coextensive with the Upper East Side but the new 14th included Long Island City portions of the Upper West Side and a sliver of Brooklyn Maloney also benefited from Bill Clinton s strong showing in the district 16 The core of Maloney s district was the Upper East Side an area with a history of electing moderate Republicans Their dominance waned throughout the 1990s and by the early 2000s Democrats dominated every level of government 17 This was exemplified in 1994 the year of the Republican Revolution when a serious challenger to Maloney Republican City Councilman Charles Millard lost badly No Republican has gotten more than 30 of the vote in the district since 18 In 2004 Maloney faced a potential Democratic primary challenge from Robert Jereski a former Green Party political candidate and unsuccessful candidate for delegate to the 2004 Democratic National Convention on the slate of Dennis Kucinich Jereski opposed the Iraq War while Maloney had initially voted for the resolution to authorize force she later renounced the war including at a town hall meeting in her district with antiwar Congressman John Murtha where her comments made headlines 19 Jereski failed to qualify for the ballot because his petition was found to have invalid signatures leaving him four short of the 1 250 required In December 2008 Maloney hired a public relations firm to help bolster her efforts to be named by Governor David Paterson as Hillary Clinton s successor in the U S Senate She toured parts of the state but was overshadowed by Caroline Kennedy s promotional tour for the same seat Maloney interviewed with Paterson for 55 minutes Public opinion polls placed Maloney s support for the Senate seat in the single digits trailing the front runner then State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo although her bid was endorsed by the National Organization for Women Political Action Committee the Feminist Majority Political Action Committee 20 New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof 21 and other columnists 22 and editorial boards 23 On January 23 2009 Paterson chose Representative Kirsten Gillibrand 24 Since Gillibrand is from upstate many in NYC s political circles urged Maloney to primary Gillibrand in 2010 25 Despite leading Gillibrand in the polls 26 27 she instead ran to retain her congressional seat 28 A decade later Maloney was the sole member of Congress to endorse Gillibrand s 2020 presidential campaign In the Democratic primary for Congress on September 14 2010 Maloney defeated a well funded opponent Reshma Saujani a 34 year old Indian American hedge fund lawyer by 62 percentage points 29 That night Saujani said I m definitely running again 30 but three months later announced publicly that she would not challenge Maloney again 31 In 2012 Maloney s Republican challenger was Christopher Wright who took a leave of absence from J P Morgan to campaign Maloney won with 80 9 of the vote a margin of over 120 000 votes 32 In 2014 Maloney defeated Republican nominee Nicholas Di Iorio a financial contractor with Pfizer 33 with 80 of the vote 34 In the 2016 Democratic primary Maloney defeated Pete Lindner with 90 1 of the vote She defeated Republican Robert Ardini in the general election with 83 2 of the vote 35 In the 2018 Democratic primary Maloney defeated progressive candidate Suraj Patel with 59 6 of the vote In the general election she defeated Republican nominee Eliot Rabin with 86 4 of the vote 36 In the 2020 Democratic primary Patel challenged Maloney again as did progressive Democrat Lauren Ashcraft 37 and housing activist Peter Harrison Erica Vladimer a co founder of New York State s Sexual Harassment Working Group withdrew from the race before the primary 38 39 By July 29 2020 it was revealed that Maloney led Patel by about 4 and 3 700 votes 40 41 On August 4 2020 local election officials declared Maloney the winner of the primary 42 43 The redistricting process of 2022 consolidated parts of the 12th and 10th Congressional districts Maloney chose to face fellow incumbent Jerry Nadler in the Democratic primary race for the newly combined seat and in August of that year lost the primary to Nadler by thirty points 1 Tenure edit nbsp Maloney with President Bill Clinton Tony Blair and Jack Kingston in 1999In 2009 the National Journal s annual ranking placed Maloney as the 114th most liberal or 314th most conservative member of Congress with more liberal scores on foreign policy than on economic and social policy Her score of 75 5 ranked her as modestly more liberal than the New York Congressional delegation as a whole 44 In 2011 a Daily News survey found that Maloney ranked first among New York s 28 representatives for activity with 36 proposed bills resolutions and amendments 45 In the 2013 legislative session Govtrack us scored her third among House Democrats for Leadership third among all representatives for Powerful Co sponsors third highest in the New York delegation for Working with the Senate and fifth highest among all representatives for Bills Sponsored 46 During the 2014 election cycle the New York Daily News ran a story that said Maloney has proposed more legislation than any other House member according to records and called her James Zadroga 9 11 Health and Compensation Act giving compensation to Ground Zero workers who have fallen ill as big a bill for the New York area as any in the last decade 47 For the 2015 legislative session Govtrack us scored Maloney first for Leadership among House Democrats based on sponsoring the most bills It scored her second among all representatives for having the most co sponsors second for Working with the Senate and fourth among House Democrats for having powerful cosponsors She was ranked in the top 10 of all representatives for bills introduced Maloney introduced 26 bills and resolutions in 2015 48 As a U S Representative Maloney was a superdelegate at presidential conventions In the 2016 election cycle she was an early supporter of former Secretary of State and Senator Hillary Clinton 49 According to her 2018 GovTrack Report card Maloney ranked in the 80th percentile among House members for getting bicameral support for the bills she has introduced she ranked sixth among House Democrats 50 In 2019 Govtrack us ranked Maloney as the top legislative leader in the House This analysis ranked her second among all representatives for the most co sponsors on her bills in the top 5 for the number of bills introduced and in the top 10 for getting her bills out of committee 51 For her tenure as chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee in the 116th Congress Maloney earned an A grade from the nonpartisan Lugar Center s Congressional Oversight Hearing Index 52 In 2021 the Center for Effective Lawmaking ranked Maloney the third most effective lawmaker in the House 53 9 11 related issues edit nbsp Maloney speaks at a press conference with members of the 9 11 Commission and 9 11 families in 2004Following the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001 Maloney advocated for federal help for New York s recovery and security efforts Her efforts prompted Wayne Barrett of the Village Voice to write that Maloney was like a tiger in the House on every dollar due New York 54 On February 25 2019 she introduced her Never Forget the Heroes Act HR1327 in the 116th Congress a bill to establish Permanent Authorization of the September 11 Victim Compensation Fund Act 55 The 10 2 billion authorization was signed into law establishing that both the World Trade Center Health Program and September 11 Victim Compensation are effectively permanent with the WTCHP authorized to operate until 2090 and the VCF until 2092 56 National security issues edit After the 9 11 Commission published its findings Maloney co founded the bipartisan House 9 11 Commission Caucus 57 and helped write and secure the enactment into law of many of its recommendations to reform the nation s intelligence agencies 58 59 Congressional Quarterly wrote in its annual guide 2006 Politics in America In the 108th Congress Maloney reached out beyond her usual roles as a liberal gadfly and persistent Bush administration critic helping win enactment of a sweeping bill to reorganize U S intelligence operations 60 Following the Dubai Ports World controversy Maloney helped secure the passage and enactment of her bill to reform the system for vetting foreign investments in the United States 61 62 She has supported Scientology s New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project 63 nbsp Maloney with State Counsellor of Myanmar and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi in September 2016On October 1 2020 Maloney co signed a letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that condemned Azerbaijan s offensive operations against the Armenian populated enclave of Nagorno Karabakh denounced Turkey s role in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict and criticized false equivalence between Armenia and Azerbaijan even as the latter threatens war and refuses to agree to monitoring along the line of contact 64 Maloney who chairs the House Oversight and Reform Committee called on FBI Director Christopher A Wray to open a probe into social media platform Parler writing The company was founded by John Matze shortly after he traveled in Russia with his wife who is Russian and whose family reportedly has ties to the Russian government 65 Gun control edit In response to a number of high profile incidents of gun violence Maloney sponsored two bills to address the issue The Gun Trafficking Prevention Act of 2013 would make gun trafficking a federal crime for the first time and substantially stiffen the penalties for straw buyers who knowingly help convicted felons domestic abusers the violently mentally ill and others obtain guns 66 In 2014 she joined Senator Ed Markey in sending President Barack Obama a letter asking him to insert 10 million into the budget for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to resume research on gun violence and conduct scientific research on the causes and prevention of gun violence 67 In 2022 as chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee Maloney held a hearing that examined leading gun manufacturers marketing and sales practices 68 Government transparency edit Maloney introduced a bill in October 2003 intended to enforce transparency in relation to military contracting in Iraq and subject the Coalition Provisional Authority to federal procurement law 69 In 2008 after reports of corruption among military contractors in both Iraq and Afghanistan she secured House passage of a further bill to create a database to better monitor all federal contracts the key provisions of which were adopted into law as part of the defense budget 70 71 In 2010 the Project On Government Oversight a government watchdog group presented Maloney with its Good Government Award for her contributions to government transparency and oversight including her investigations into corruption and mismanagement in the Minerals Management Service and her support of a Federal Contractor Misconduct Database similar to POGO s 72 In 2019 Maloney introduced a bill that would require corporate entities to disclose the identities of beneficial owners to FinCEN making it harder for them to hide assets and avoid taxes through a series of limited liability companies 73 Health care edit Maloney has taken several actions on health care issues Her measure to provide Medicare coverage for annual mammograms was included in the Fiscal Year 1998 federal budget 74 She advocated for providing federal support for medical monitoring and health care for rescue and recovery workers who were exposed to toxic smoke and dust at the Ground Zero site after the 9 11 attacks 75 Maloney authored the James Zadroga 9 11 Health and Compensation Act and led the fight for years to push for its passage In 2010 Obama signed the bill into law It provides 4 3 billion in federal funds to provide 9 11 responders and survivors with treatment and compensation for their injuries In June 2012 it was announced that the program would be expanded to cover care for a variety of cancers of the lung trachea stomach colon rectum liver bladder kidney thyroid and breast 76 In 2015 when roughly 33 000 responders and survivors were battling an assortment of ailments Maloney led the effort to extend the bill permanently After a prolonged and very public push a total of 8 5 billion in funding was included in the Omnibus Spending bill that passed in 2015 and extended the life of the monitoring and health insurance coverage for 75 years 55 In the 111th Congress Maloney introduced The Breastfeeding Promotion Act to protect breastfeeding in the workplace under civil rights law and make it illegal for women to lose their jobs or otherwise be discriminated against for expressing milk during lunchtime or on breaks 77 She has advocated for international women s health and family planning programs supported by the United Nations Population Fund 78 A co founder and co chair of the Congressional Working Group on Parkinson s Disease 79 Maloney serves on the board of the Michael Stern Parkinson s Research Foundation 80 and previously served as an honorary board member of the Fisher Center for Alzheimer s Research Foundation 81 Maloney has promoted scientifically discredited claims of a link between vaccines and autism 82 On several occasions she has introduced legislation that would direct the federal government to conduct studies into the alleged links between autism and vaccines 83 84 85 82 86 In a 2012 congressional hearing Maloney equated concerns over a link between autism and vaccines to concerns over a link between smoking and cancer 82 She said that it was common sense that smoking was bad for your health The same thing seems to be here with the vaccinations 82 Maloney s views on vaccines changed and she led efforts to bring COVID 19 vaccine sites to North Brooklyn and western Queens She partnered with The Floating Hospital and the New York City Housing Authority to establish a modular site to provide COVID 19 testing and vaccination services at Astoria Houses in northwest Queens 87 88 Financial and economic issues edit Maloney serves on the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and is the Ranking Democratic member of the Joint Economic Committee She previously chaired the Democratic Task Force on Homeland Security From 2009 to 2011 Maloney chaired the Joint Economic Committee the first woman to do so Maloney was the author of the Credit Cardholders Bill of Rights or the Credit CARD Act of 2009 while serving as chair of the Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit in the 110th Congress A 2014 Social Science Research Network study estimated that since its passage the CARD Act has saved consumers 11 9 billion per year 89 Credit card companies fiercely opposed the measure but it drew praise from editorial boards and consumer advocates 90 91 The bill was passed as the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act by both houses of the 111th Congress prompting Money magazine to dub Maloney the best friend a credit card user ever had 92 Obama signed the Credit Card Bill of Rights into law in a Rose Garden ceremony Maloney attended on May 22 2009 93 Days after voting against cancellation of a 1 billion 10 year subsidy plan for U S sugar farmers within the 2007 U S Farm Bill Maloney hosted a fundraising event that netted 9 500 in contributions from sugar growers and refiners according to Federal Election Commission records Her election attorney Andrew Tulloch called the timing of the July 31 fundraiser pure coincidence The bill passed the House by a 282 144 vote 94 The Sunlight Foundation pointed out that among the 435 members of the House Maloney has the ninth highest amount of investment in oil stocks 95 She received a perfect 100 rating from the Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund in 2007 96 a perfect 100 rating from Environment America in 2008 96 and a perfect 100 from the League of Conservation Voters in 2008 97 And in 2008 Maloney introduced the Minerals Management Service Improvement Act HR 7211 as a House companion to Integrity in Offshore Energy Resources Act S 3543 The legislation would impose dramatically tougher ethics rules for the Minerals Management Service which was at the center of a major corruption scandal stemming from its employees relationships with oil company representatives 98 Women s children s and family issues edit nbsp Maloney Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Joe Crowley speak out on the need to keep birth control safe and legal in 2005 nbsp Maloney with President George W Bush at the proclamation signing for Women s History Month in 2008Maloney has been active on many other issues involving women children and families since the beginning of her career 12 A former co chair of the House Caucus on Women s Issues she authored and helped secure the enactment into law of a measure to provide federal funding to clear the backlog of rape kits for which evidence had been collected but never entered into law enforcement DNA databases The Rape Abuse and Incest National Network called it the most important anti rape legislation ever considered by Congress 99 Maloney s bill included in the Justice for All Act of 2005 was named the Debbie Smith Act in honor of Debbie Smith a rape survivor The effort to enact the bill was later the subject of a Lifetime Television movie A Life Interrupted The Debbie Smith Story 100 in which Maloney was played by Lynne Adams Maloney also co authored and helped secure passage of bipartisan legislation to curb the demand for sex trafficking 101 Maloney introduced the Child Care Affordability Act of 2007 to increase access to child care by providing tax credits 102 Her amendment to a foreign aid bill succeeded in securing 60 million in funding for programs for Afghan women and girls and to help establish an Afghan commission on human rights 103 She is the chief House sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment 104 In 2008 and again in 2009 Maloney authored and secured House passage of a bill to provide four weeks of paid parental leave to federal employees 105 106 In 2011 Maloney sponsored the Campus Sexual Violence Elimination Act known as the Campus SaVE Act It became part of the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act of 2013 The measure guarantees counseling legal assistance and medical care on campuses for victims of sexual assault establishes minimum national standards for schools to follow in responding to allegations of sexual assault and sexual violence and makes explicit that schools must provide to both the alleged perpetrator and the alleged victim the same rights including access to advisers written notifications as well as appeals processes during campus disciplinary proceedings 107 Saying that for too long women s stories have been left out of the telling of our nation s history Maloney began work in the 1990s on establishing a Smithsonian American Women s History Museum on the National Mall 108 After years of effort her bill passed and was signed into law in 2020 After Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the ERA Maloney and Jackie Speier introduced a resolution to recognize that the ERA had met all legal requirements to be considered the 28th amendment to the Constitution 109 In March 2022 Maloney sent U S archivist David Ferriero a letter urging him to fulfill his statutory duty and publish the ERA 110 District issues edit Maloney has helped secure funding for major mass transit projects resulting in the commitment of billions of federal dollars for New York State 111 112 She has been hailed as a champion of the Second Avenue Subway 112 113 Maloney co sponsored the 2009 reintroduction of the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act H R 801 originally introduced as H R 6845 in 2008 and the Research Works Act H R 3699 introduced in 2011 Both bills aim to reverse the NIH s Public Access Policy 114 which mandates open access to NIH funded research 115 Some scientists criticized the Association of American Publishers backed Research Works Act In a New York Times op ed Michael Eisen said the bill would force the public to pay 15 30 per paper to read the results of research they had already paid for as taxpayers 116 Such results must now be published in Pubmed Central PMC after an embargo period of up to 12 months this embargo period was imposed to minimize financial harm to publishers who were concerned that their readership would diminish if the results appeared concurrently in PMC though authors of the paper are required to submit their papers to PMC as soon as their paper gets accepted for publication by a peer review journal Some have suggested that Maloney supports the measure because she is the recipient of campaign contributions from Elsevier the largest scholarly publishing company 116 117 On February 27 2012 following a boycott of the organization Maloney wrote to her constituents it is important to be mindful of the impact of various industries on job creation and retention New York State is home to more than 300 publishers that employ more than 12 000 New Yorkers many of whom live in or around New York City in my district New York City scientific publishers represent a significant subset of the total and more than 20 are located in Manhattan publishing thousands of scientific journals and employing thousands of New Yorkers 118 Elsevier withdrew its support for the legislation 119 120 In 2021 Maloney protested the expansion of the New York Blood Center a nonprofit biomedical research facility from a three story headquarters to a 16 story tower on Manhattan s Upper East Side 121 Committee assignments edit Committee on Financial Services Subcommittee on Investor Protection Entrepreneurship and Capital Markets Subcommittee on Housing Community Development and Insurance Committee on Oversight and Reform chair As chair of the full committee Maloney may serve as an ex officio member of all subcommittees Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis 122 Joint Economic Committee Vice Chair Caucus memberships edit House 9 11 Commission Caucus House Caucus on Women s Issues United States Congressional International Conservation Caucus 123 Congressional Arts Caucus 124 Americans Abroad Caucus founder and co chair Congressional Progressive Caucus 125 House Baltic Caucus 126 Co chair Congressional Hellenic Caucus 127 Afterschool Caucuses 128 Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus 129 U S Japan Caucus 130 Medicare for All Caucus House Pro Choice Caucus 131 Congressional Skin Cancer Caucus founder and co chair 132 Scores by interest groups edit Maloney s ratings from various interest groups include the following 133 The American Association of University Women AAUW gives her a 100 134 NARAL Pro Choice America gives her a 100 135 Drug Policy Action gives her an A for 2015 2016 136 Planned Parenthood gives her a 100 137 The Human Rights Campaign gives her a 100 138 The Alliance for Retired Americans gives her a 100 139 The League of Conservation Voters gives her a 96 for 2013 and 95 lifetime 140 The Children s Defense Fund gives her a 90 for 2011 141 The National Education Association gives her an A 142 The American Public Health Association gives her a 100 143 The American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees AFSCME gives her a 100 144 The AFL CIO gave her a 2019 core of 90 and a lifetime score of 97 145 The Humane Society gave her a 100 rating in 2013 146 and a 100 in 2020 147 The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence gives her a 100 148 The NRA gives her an F 149 The Gun Owners of America gave her an F in 2010 133 Controversies editWearing burqa on House floor edit nbsp Carolyn Maloney gives a speech while donning an Afghan burqa on October 16 2001On October 16 2001 Maloney wore an Afghan burqa while giving a speech in the United States House of Representatives in support of Afghan women s rights and American military involvement against the Taliban 150 It was the first time an Islamic veil had been worn on the House floor and was technically not allowed under an unenforced 1837 hat ban 151 In a 2018 Foreign Policy article Rafia Zakaria a Pakistani American feminist author and journalist called Maloney s display theatrical and an example of American feminist exceptionalism in which American women intrepid and veil free are beacons of freedom with a duty to evangelize their particular brand of empowerment even if it means using bombs 152 Muslim American Rana Abdelhamid while running in the Democratic primary against Maloney in 2021 criticized this event as feeding negative stereotypes about Muslims and of weapon izing my identity to justify American wars Maloney subsequently defended it as being necessary to make her point 153 Use of the N word editOn July 20 2009 Maloney apologized after saying the ethnic slur nigger while quoting a phone call she had received about U S Senator Kirsten Gillibrand in an interview with City Hall News 154 At the time she was a week away from announcing an official campaign against Gillibrand in the 2010 United States Senate Democratic Primary election in New York 155 The quote as reported by The Atlantic 156 was In fact I got a call from someone from Puerto Rico said Gillibrand went to Puerto Rico and came out for English only education And he said It was like saying nigger to a Puerto Rican Civil rights activist Al Sharpton criticized the remark and called Maloney s casual use of the word alarming but said he did not believe she was racist 157 155 She apologized and dropped out of the race on August 7 2009 reportedly for different reasons 158 2022 primary edit During the 2022 primary Maloney campaigned on her work within the district as well as her gender in the wake of Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization 159 Many of Maloney s activities were scrutinized including her comments and legislation promoting the theory that vaccines cause autism 159 During a debate with Nadler Maloney attracted attention for saying that she believed President Joe Biden would not run for reelection in 2024 She also told The New York Times that she thought he should not run in 2024 Maloney later apologized and said that Biden should run again though she maintained her belief that he would not 160 Alleged Met Gala solicitation edit In 2022 the House Ethics Committee was investigating Maloney for allegedly casting around for an invitation to the Met Gala 161 Investigators alleged Maloney had sought an invitation for herself after being cut from the invite list in 2016 162 163 Maloney called former president of the Met Emily Rafferty to request an invitation according to testimony Rafferty gave investigators 162 Investigators also found that Maloney might have requested an invitation to the 2020 Met Gala citing an email thread with a staffer in which she asked whether she was invited and how to contact the Met s government affairs staffer 162 In a February 2022 report the Office of Congressional Ethics said it found substantial reason to believe that Rep Maloney may have solicited or accepted impermissible gifts associated with her attendance at the Met Gala 163 Electoral history editNew York s 14th congressional district general election 1992 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 94 613 51Republican Bill Green 89 423 49Total votes 184 036 100 0Democratic gain from RepublicanNew York s 14th congressional district general election 1994 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 92 390 63Republican Charles Millard 52 754 36Other Thomas Leighton 1 310 1Total votes 146 454 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 1996 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 112 026 72Republican Jeffrey E Livingston 36 740 24Right to Life Delco L Cornett 1 113 1Conservative Joseph A Lavezzo 2 024 1Independence Thomas K Leighton 3 073 2Total votes 154 976 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 1998 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 101 848 77Republican Stephanie E Kuplerman 30 426 23Total votes 132 274 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 2000 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 133 420 73Republican C Adrienne Rhodes 41 603 23Green Sandra Stevens 5 163 3Independence Frederick D Newman 2 157 1Total votes 182 343 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 2002 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 83 509 75Republican Anton Srdanovic 27 614 25Total votes 111 123 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 2004 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 140 551 76Independence Carolyn B Maloney 3 651 2Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 4 467 2Total Carolyn B Maloney 148 669 80Republican Anton Srdanovic 35 774 19Conservative Anton Srdanovic 1 162 1Total Anton Srdanovic 36 936 20Total votes 185 575 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 2006 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 107 095 75 6Independence Carolyn B Maloney 4 387 3 1Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 8 100 5 7Total Carolyn B Maloney 98 811 84 5Republican Danniel Maio 21 969 15 5Total votes 141 571 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 2008 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 176 378 76 9Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 6 812 3 0Total Carolyn B Maloney 183 190 79 9Republican Robert G Heim 43 365 18 9Libertarian Isaiah Matos 2 659 1 2Total votes 229 239 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 14th congressional district general election 2010 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 98 953 69 2Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 8 374 5 9Total Carolyn B Maloney 107 327 75Republican David Ryan Brumberg 32 065 22 4Independence Dino L Laverghetta 1 617 1 1Conservative Timothy J Healy 1 891 1 3Total votes 143 042 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 12th congressional district general election 2012 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 185 780 76 9Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 8 614 3 6Total Carolyn B Maloney 194 394 80 5Republican Christopher R Wight 42 120 17 4Independence Christopher R Wight 2 475 1 0Conservative Christopher R Wight 2 257 0 9Total Christopher R Wight 46 852 19 4Total votes 241 464 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 12th congressional district general election 2014 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 78 440 69 1Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 12 163 10 7Total Carolyn B Maloney 90 603 79 8Republican Nicholas S Di Iorio 19 564 17 2Independence Nicholas S Di Iorio 1 326 1 2Conservative Nicholas S Di Iorio 1 841 1 6Total Nicholas S Di Iorio 22 731 20 03Total votes 113 501 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 12th congressional district primary election 2016 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 15 101 89 04Democratic Peter Lindner 1 654 9 75Total votes 16 959 100 0New York s 12th congressional district general election 2016 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 230 153 78 26Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 14 205 10 7Total Carolyn B Maloney 242 358 83 6Republican Robert Ardini 49 399 17 03Total votes 294 071 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 12th congressional district primary election 2018 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 26 742 59 4Democratic Suraj Patel 18 098 40 2Total votes 45 033 100 0New York s 12th congressional district general election 2018 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 205 858 81 7Working Families Carolyn B Maloney 10 972 4 4Reform Carolyn B Maloney 600 0 2Total Carolyn B Maloney 251 877 86 3Republican Eliot Rabin 30 446 12 1Green Scott Hutchins 3 728 1 5Total votes 251 877 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 12th congressional district primary election 2020 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 40 362 42 7Democratic Suraj Patel 37 106 39 3Democratic Lauren Ashcraft 12 810 13 6Democratic Peter Harrison 4 001 4 2Total votes 94 477 100 0New York s 12th congressional district general election 2020 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 265 172 82 1Republican Carlos Santiago Cano 49 157 15 2Conservative Carlos Santiago Cano 3 904 1 2Total Carlos Santiago Cano 53 061 16 43Libertarian Steve Kolln 4 015 1 2Total votes 323 032 100 0Democratic holdNew York s 12th congressional district primary election 2022 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Jerrold Nadler 45 545 55 4Democratic Carolyn B Maloney 20 038 24 4Democratic Suraj Patel 15 744 19 2Democratic Ashmi Sheth 832 1 0Total votes 82 159 100 0Personal life editMaloney and her husband Clifton Maloney raised two daughters 164 Her husband died on a climbing expedition in 2009 after climbing the world s sixth tallest peak Cho Oyu in Tibet 165 166 See also editWomen in the United States House of RepresentativesReferences edit a b Shabad Rebecca August 23 2022 Rep Jerry Nadler beats Rep Carolyn Maloney in New York House primary NBC News Retrieved August 24 2022 About Congresswoman Carolyn B Maloney Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney October 17 2019 Carolyn B Maloney Archives of Women s Political Communication Retrieved October 24 2022 Edmondson Catie November 20 2019 Carolyn Maloney Elected First Woman to Lead House Oversight Panel The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 24 2022 Maloney to be acting House oversight chair after Cummings death aide Reuters October 17 2019 There can be no slowdown Dems keep up impeachment push while mourning Cummings Politico October 17 2019 Retrieved October 18 2019 Ferris Sarah November 20 2019 Rep Carolyn Maloney wins election to chair House Oversight Committee Politico Retrieved November 20 2019 MALONEY Carolyn Bosher 1946 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved April 14 2021 Janofsky Michael December 26 1992 For Maloney a New Arena but the Same Style The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 14 2021 a b c About Congresswoman Carolyn B Maloney Early Career Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney December 11 2012 Archived from the original on August 15 2014 Retrieved March 4 2012 website as viewed on 9 29 2009 Ourcampaigns com Retrieved January 11 2012 a b Janofsky Michael December 26 1992 For Maloney a New Arena but the Same Style The New York Times Retrieved January 11 2012 Lyall Sarah Lyall Sarah October 25 1992 2 Run on Records in Silk Stocking District The New York Times Retrieved August 7 2018 The New York Times October 25 1992 Lee Felicia R Bill Would Give Unwed Couples Equal Benefits The New York Times November 21 1990 THE 1992 ELECTIONS NEW YORK STATE U S HOUSE RACES Years of Seniority Are Gone in One Swoop Retrieved January 21 2023 Lyall Sarah November 10 1992 In Redrawn District What Went Wrong for Green in Election The New York Times New York City NY Retrieved June 1 2019 Sargent Greg Benson Josh November 17 2002 Here s One Place GOP Curled Up Our Fair Island New York Observer Archived from the original on October 4 2008 Retrieved June 27 2008 The 1994 Election New York State New York Congressional Results The New York Times November 9 1994 Smith Chad After Supporting War Maloney Calls for Pullout The Villager April 12 18 2006 1 Archived August 15 2009 at the Wayback Machine Women s Groups Endorse Carolyn Maloney for Clinton s Senate Seat National Organization for Women Women s Groups Endorse Carolyn Maloney for Clinton s Senate Seat Archived from the original on September 25 2009 Retrieved September 23 2009 Kristof Nicholas For Senate Caroline or Carolyn The New York Times December 17 2008 2 Baldwin Alec Paterson Must Appoint A Woman The Huffington Post December 11 2008 3 Maloney Is Best Choice for U S Senate Queens Gazette editorial December 3 2008 4 Sources Gillibrand to get Clinton s Senate seat NBC News January 23 2008 It s Called Democracy Democrats Should Welcome All Comers Intro Primary for U S Senate New York Daily News editorial June 17 2008 5 permanent dead link kernel 20 Rasmussen Reports September 12 2012 Archived from the original on September 12 2012 Retrieved July 17 2018 Quinnipiac University Office of Public Affairs June 24 2009 New York Governor s Disapproval Bottoms Out At 2 1 Quinnipiac University Poll Finds Cuomo Holds 3 1 Lead In Dem Primary Race For Gov Quinnipiac University Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved January 11 2012 Hernandez Raymond Recognizing Long Odds Maloney Drops Her Senate Bid The New York Times August 7 2009 Maloney Drops Out Daley Elizabeth Maloney wins primary permanent dead link Queens Chronicle September 16 2010 Pareene Alex Wall Street s Favorite Candidate I Will Run Again Salon com September 15 2010 Pillifant Reid Reshma Not Interested In 2012 Re Match Eyes 2013 Instead The New York Observer December 17 2010 New York House Election Results 2012 Map District Results Live Updates POLITICO Meet Nick Nick for New York Archived from the original on December 5 2014 Retrieved December 8 2014 New York Election Results The New York Times Retrieved July 17 2018 Robert Ardini Ballotpedia Retrieved July 17 2018 New York s 12th Congressional District election 2018 Ballotpedia Retrieved May 27 2020 Lauren Ashcraft for Congress Progressive Democrat for Congress NY 12 laurenashcraft com Retrieved August 29 2019 Wang Vivian February 12 2019 How 7 Women Helped Put Sexual Harassment on New York s Agenda The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 22 2019 Congressional Campaign Erica Vladimer for Congress Erica for Congress Retrieved November 22 2019 Hallum Mark July 28 2020 Patel refuses to concede as Maloney s lead grows by 3 700 votes in contested congressional race AM New York Retrieved August 2 2020 Brand David July 29 2020 Maloney expands NY 12 lead but Patel won t concede until lawsuit resolved Queens Eagle Retrieved August 2 2020 Matt Stevens August 4 2020 After 6 Weeks Victors Are Declared in 2 N Y Congressional Primaries The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved August 5 2020 Six weeks later election officials declare winners in two N Y Democratic primaries The Washington Post August 4 2020 Retrieved August 5 2020 National Journal Online Vote Ratings Nationaljournal com February 27 2009 Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved July 12 2010 Gendar Alison August 14 2011 Nydia Velazquez is most inactive New Yorker in Congress Carolyn Maloney is most active survey Daily News New York Carolyn Maloney Report Card 2013 GovTrack us GovTrack us Friedman Dan October 12 2014 Rep Carolyn Maloney sponsors the most bills New York Daily News Retrieved July 17 2018 2015 Report Card Govtrack us 2015 Hillary racks up endorsements for 2016 April 15 2015 Retrieved October 17 2019 Rep Carolyn Maloney s 2018 Report Card January 20 2019 Rep Carolyn Maloney D NY12 s 2019 legislative statistics GovTrack us Retrieved October 26 2022 Congressional Oversight Hearing Index Welcome to the Congressional Oversight Hearing Index The Lugar Center Find Legislators Center for Effective Lawmaking Retrieved October 26 2022 Barrett Wayne October 18 2005 The 10 Ways Bush Screwed New York Village Voice Archived from the original on May 17 2011 Retrieved September 23 2009 a b Joseph Cameron McShane Larry December 19 2015 Zadroga Act reauthorization finally passes through Congress health care program extended 75 years for 9 11 first responders nydailynews com Kim Catherine July 29 2019 The 9 11 victims compensation fund explained Vox Retrieved October 15 2019 Action Alert 9 11 Commission Caucus Families of September 11 July 29 2004 Retrieved January 11 2012 Relatives of 9 11 Victims Disband The New York Times Associated Press January 11 2005 H R 1 Implementing Recommendations of the 9 11 Commission Act of 2007 Govtrack us Retrieved October 17 2019 Nutting B ed CQ s Politics in America 2006 Washington Congressional Quarterly Publications 2006 Treasury Gets New CFIUS Authority The Washington Times January 24 2008 Dodd Frank Bachus and Maloney Laud Passage of CFIUS Reform Legislation Archived October 8 2009 at the Wayback Machine press release issued by U S Senator Christopher Dodd July 11 2007 Schindler Paul August 5 2005 Margarita Lopez stays mum through Scientology flap Downtown Express 18 11 Archived from the original on January 2 2009 Retrieved January 29 2009 Senate and House Leaders to Secretary of State Pompeo Cut Military Aid to Azerbaijan Sanction Turkey for Ongoing Attacks Against Armenia and Artsakh The Armenian Weekly October 2 2020 House Oversight Committee chairwoman requests FBI probe of Parler including its role in Capitol siege The Washington Post January 22 2021 Bipartisan plan on gun trafficking POLITICO February 5 2013 Markey to introduce smart gun bill POLITICO February 20 2014 Murray Isabella Leib Mason July 27 2022 Gun CEOs testify to House after mass shootings blame erosion of personal responsibility ABC News Retrieved November 5 2022 Congress gov H R 3275 Clean Contracting in Iraq Act of 2003 introduced in the House on 8 October 2003 accessed 30 November 2022 Tracking the Spoils of the Private Sector The New York Times editorial April 27 2008 Newell Elizabeth House Passes Three Contracting Bills Archived July 19 2008 at the Wayback Machine Governmentexecutive com April 23 2008 Good Government Award Home Page Archived July 7 2010 at the Wayback Machine Project On Government Oversight website Retrieved July 1 2010 Saksa Jim October 7 2019 House may join money laundering disclosure bills to gain votes Roll Call Profile Congresswoman Carolyn B Maloney Playground website of the Child Friendly Initiative DePalma Anthony September 8 2007 Representatives Join Forces to Push New 9 11 Medical Bill The New York Times Certain cancers to be included in 9 11 compensation fund Reuters June 9 2012 Archived from the original on July 9 2012 Retrieved June 30 2017 Brown Campbell September 17 2009 Mom Breast Feeding Cost Me My Job CNN Archived from the original on February 28 2012 Retrieved January 11 2012 American Honoree Congresswoman Carolyn B Maloney Americans for the UNFPA Archived from the original on January 28 2012 Retrieved January 11 2012 Bicameral Caucus on Parkinson s Disease Parkinson s Action Network Board of Trustees Honorary Trustees The Michael Stern Parkinson s Research Foundation Retrieved January 11 2012 Board of Trustees Fisher Center for Alzheimer s Research Foundation January 24 2015 Archived from the original on January 24 2015 a b c d Maloney goes on attack in debate with primary challenger Politico PRO Retrieved June 22 2018 Legislation Aims to Resolve Thimerosal Controversy Maloney Introduces Bill to Require Comprehensive Study to Resolve the Question of a Possible Link between Mercury and Autism Maloney house gov Text of H R 1757 113th Vaccine Safety Study Act Introduced version GovTrack us Brainard Curtis May June 2013 Sticking with the truth Columbia Journalism Review 52 1 19 21 ISSN 0010 194X Archived from the original on May 4 2013 Retrieved June 22 2018 Lopez German February 4 2015 Understanding the fear of vaccines an activist explains why he buys a debunked idea Vox Retrieved June 22 2018 Parry Bill March 5 2021 Maloney AOC urge mayor to establish COVID 19 vax sites at HANAC facilities in Queens qns com Retrieved November 6 2022 pr 20220414 www nyc gov Retrieved November 6 2022 Regulating Consumer Financial Products Evidence from Credit Cards August 2014 SSRN 2330942 Plastic Card Tricks The New York Times March 29 2008 Retrieved January 11 2012 The Fed Aims at Credit Cards The New York Times May 3 2008 Retrieved January 11 2012 Rosato Donna May 2009 Best Friend A Credit Card User Ever Had Money Archived from the original on January 19 2012 Remarks by the President at Signing of The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act whitehouse gov May 22 2009 Retrieved January 11 2012 via National Archives Morgan Dan November 2 2007 Sugar Industry Expands Influence The Washington Post The Sunlight Foundation Blog Oil Industry Influence Personal Finances Sunlight Foundation August 8 2008 Archived from the original on August 12 2008 Retrieved August 8 2008 a b Carolyn Maloney s Ratings and Endorsements The Voter s Self Defense System Vote Smart Project Vote Smart Rep Maloney Earn Perfect Rating from League of Conservation Voters Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney Archived from the original on October 18 2012 Retrieved May 21 2012 CBM Oil Accomplishmentshouse gov Archived September 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Fighting Sexual Violence with DNA Rape Abuse and Incest National Network Movies A Life Interrupted Mylifetime com Archived from the original on March 2 2009 Retrieved January 11 2012 Blumenfeld Laura December 15 2005 In A Shift Anti Prostitution Efforts Target Pimps and Johns The Washington Post H R 4164 Child Care Affordability Act of 2007 Open Congress org Maloney Carolyn B November 9 2003 Women in Politics An All Points Bulletin The New York Times Retrieved January 11 2012 Bergland Jim April 4 2007 Uphill Fight Forecast for Equal Rights Amendment The Boston Globe Associated Press Baribeau Simone June 20 2008 Paid Parental Leave Passes House But Faces Veto Threat The Washington Post Miller Jason June 5 2009 House Passes Paid Parental Leave Bill Federal News Radio Lombardi Kristen March 2013 Campus Sexual Violence Elimination Act headed for President s signature Center for Public Integrity Mineiro Megan October 20 2022 Lawmakers look to the Mall for new Smithsonians but it s not a done deal yet Roll Call Retrieved November 6 2022 Gonzalez Oriana January 27 2022 House Dems introduce resolution to ratify Equal Rights Amendment to Constitution Axios Retrieved November 6 2022 On 50th Anniversary of Congress Passing the ERA Chairwoman Maloney Presses Archivist to Recognize ERA as 28th Amendment House Committee on Oversight and Reform March 22 2022 Retrieved November 6 2022 Maloney Gillibrand Applauded for Records Queens Gazette editorial August 19 2009 6 permanent dead link a b Newman Philip February 4 2009 MTA s East Side Tunnels Will Create Jobs Maloney Astoria Times NYC Maloney Second Avenue Subway Project Entrances To Open On Time CBS New York March 19 2016 Retrieved July 17 2018 Rosen Rebecca J January 5 2012 Why Is Open Internet Champion Darrell Issa Supporting an Attack on Open Science The Atlantic Suber Peter 2008 An open access mandate for the National Institutes of Health Open Medicine 2 2 39 41 PMC 3090178 PMID 21602938 a b Eisen Michael B January 11 2012 Research bought then paid for The New York Times Kingsley Danny January 27 2012 A small bill in the US a giant impact for research worldwide The Conversation Eisen Michael January 13 2012 Plagiarist or Puppet US Rep Carolyn Maloney s reprehensible defense of Elsevier s Research Works Act michaeleisen org Grant Bob February 28 2012 Elsevier Abandons Anti Open Access Bill The Scientist Archived from the original on March 1 2012 Retrieved February 29 2012 ELSEVIER WITHDRAWS SUPPORT FOR THE RESEARCH WORKS ACT February 27 2012 Archived from the original on February 29 2012 Britschgi Christian May 24 2021 New York NIMBYs Protest the Manhattanization of Manhattan Reason com Retrieved May 24 2021 Pelosi Names Select Members to Bipartisan House Select Committee on the Coronavirus Crisis Speaker Nancy Pelosi April 29 2020 Archived from the original on May 11 2020 Retrieved May 11 2020 Our Members U S House of Representatives International Conservation Caucus Archived from the original on August 1 2018 Retrieved August 4 2018 Membership Congressional Arts Caucus Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved March 13 2018 Caucus Members Congressional Progressive Caucus Retrieved January 30 2018 Members House Baltic Caucus Retrieved February 21 2018 Congressional Caucus on Hellenic Issues Retrieved July 17 2018 Members Afterschool Alliance Retrieved April 17 2018 Members Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus Retrieved May 17 2018 Members U S Japan Caucus Retrieved December 14 2018 Members August 19 2021 Congress forms caucus on skin cancer Dermatology Times July 8 2013 Retrieved October 29 2022 a b Rep Carolyn Maloney D N Y 14th The Hill February 19 2010 Congressional Voting Record 112th Congress 2011 12 PDF American Association of University Women AAUW Archived PDF from the original on July 15 2021 NARAL Pro Choice America 2013 Congressional Record on Choice prochoiceamerica org Archived from the original on February 24 2014 2016 Carolyn Maloney Democrat www drugpolicyaction org Archived from the original on October 27 2016 Congressional scorecard Carolyn Maloney Planned Parenthood Archived from the original on June 14 2014 Congressional Scorecard for the 112th Congress PDF Human Rights Campaign Archived from the original PDF on June 15 2020 Congressional Voting Record retiredamericans org Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Carolyn B Maloney League of Conservation Voters Scorecard League of Conservation Voters Scorecard Children s Defense Fund Action Council 2011 Nonpartisan Congressional Scorecard Archived from the original on February 26 2014 Legislative Report Card for the 113th Congress 2013 2014 House nea org National Education Association Archived from the original on August 15 2020 American Public Health Association Rating The Voter s Self Defense System Vote Smart Project Vote Smart Congressional Scorecard 115th Congress 1st Session PDF AFSCME Archived from the original PDF on January 14 2019 Legislative Voting Records Rep Carolyn B Maloney AFL CIO Archived from the original on July 15 2021 Humane Scorecard 2013 PDF p 14 Archived from the original PDF on April 13 2018 Humane Scorecard 2020 PDF p 14 Archived PDF from the original on July 15 2021 Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence Rating The Voter s Self Defense System Vote Smart Project Vote Smart Bloch Matthew Fairfield Hannah Harris Jacob Keller Josh December 19 2012 How the N R A Rates Lawmakers The New York Times Horowitz Jason November 14 2009 Carolyn Maloney Is All Over the Place The New York Observer Retrieved August 13 2021 Alen Jonathan November 19 2018 Democrats seek rule change to formally allow hijabs yarmulkes on House floor NBC News Retrieved August 13 2021 Zakaria Rafia November 12 2018 Two Muslim Women Are Headed to Congress Will They Be Heard Foreign Policy Retrieved August 13 2021 Frey Kevin August 25 2021 Rep Maloney defends wearing burqa as the Taliban s takeover in Afghanistan triggers debate in the NY 12 Democratic primary Spectrum News NY1 Retrieved May 11 2023 Thrush Glenn July 20 2009 Maloney uses the N word Politico Retrieved August 13 2021 a b Saul Michael July 20 2009 Rep Carolyn Maloney apologizes over use of N word but slip may cost her against Sen Gillibrand New York Daily News Retrieved January 11 2012 Good Chris July 22 2009 Rep Maloney And The N Word The Atlantic Retrieved August 13 2021 Maloney regrets use of N word Times Union July 21 2009 Retrieved August 13 2021 Hernandez Raymond August 7 2009 Recognizing Long Odds Maloney Drops Her Senate Bid The New York Times Retrieved August 13 2021 a b Fandos Nicholas August 16 2022 Carolyn Maloney s Campaign Pitch A Man Can t Do My Job The New York Times Retrieved August 24 2022 Rep Carolyn Maloney says off the record Biden is not running again CBS News August 15 2022 Daniel Cassady November 23 2022 New York Representative Carolyn Maloney Investigated for Allegedly Soliciting Met Gala Ticket ART News a b c Nicholas Wu November 21 2022 The House Ethics Committee is investigating Carolyn Maloney for allegedly asking for an invitation to the Met Gala Politico a b Nicholas Fandos November 21 2022 How Carolyn Maloney s Ticket to the Met Gala Led to an Ethics Inquiry New York Times Clifton Maloney 71 Died On One of Highest Peaks Archived October 10 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Villager September 30 2009 Thrush Glenn Rep Maloney s husband dies in Tibet Politico September 2009 Caruso David September 27 2009 NY congresswoman s husband dies on mountain climb Associated Press Retrieved September 28 2009 Further reading editStop Deceptive Advertising for Women s Services Act Text of bill introduced by MaloneyExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carolyn B Maloney nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Carolyn Maloney Carolyn Maloney at CurlieBiography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Financial information federal office at the Federal Election Commission Legislation sponsored at the Library of Congress Profile at Vote Smart Appearances on C SPANCivic officesPreceded byRobert Rodriguez Member of the New York City Councilfrom the 8th district1983 1991 Succeeded byAdam Clayton Powell IVPreceded byRonnie Eldridge Member of the New York City Councilfrom the 4th district1992 Succeeded byAndrew Sidamon EristoffU S House of RepresentativesPreceded bySusan Molinari Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom New York s 14th congressional district1993 2013 Succeeded byJoseph CrowleyPreceded byChuck Schumer Chair of the Joint Economic Committee2009 2011 Succeeded byBob CaseyPreceded byNydia Velazquez Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom New York s 12th congressional district2013 2023 Succeeded byJerry NadlerPreceded byElijah Cummings Chair of the House Oversight Committee2019 2023 Succeeded byJames ComerU S order of precedence ceremonial Preceded byJose E Serranoas Former US Representative Order of precedence of the United Statesas Former US Representative Succeeded byJimmy Duncanas Former US Representative Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carolyn Maloney amp oldid 1199306868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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