PAUL E. KANJORSKI


'Paul E. Kanjorski' (born April 2, 1937)is an American Democratic politician from the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, currently representing Pennsylvania's 11th congressional district (map) in the United States House of Representatives. His district includes the cities of Scranton, Wilkes-Barre and Hazleton as well as most of the Poconos.

Contents
Biography
Early life and career
External links

Biography


Early life and career

Kanjorski is a lifelong resident of Nanticoke, just outside Wilkes-Barre. He attended Temple University and the Dickinson School of Law. He also served in the United States Army. Before his election to Congress, Kanjorski was a trial attorney in Pennsylvania. During that time, he served as a worker’s compensation administrative law judge and served as solicitor to several communities.
Kanjorski ran four times for Congress in the early 1980s. He ran in a special election to replace longtime Congressman Dan Flood in 1980. He ran as an independent and finished a distant fourth behind State Representative Ray Musto. He ran against Musto in the Democratic primary election later that year and finished third. Musto lost to Republican James Nelligan in November. In 1982, he finished second in the primary election to college professor Frank Harrison, who went on to unseat Nelligan. On the fourth try, in 1984, he sought a rematch in the Democratic primary against Harrison and won. Despite the wide perception that 1984 was a disaster for Democrats (largely due to the landslide reelection of Ronald Reagan), Kanjorski won by a decisive 17-point margin. Kanjorski's opponent in 1986 was a younger, well-financed candidate, Marc Holtzman. The race was initially seen as one of the hottest in the country. However, Kanjorski won by 41 points, still his largest margin of victory in a contested election.
He was unopposed for reelection in 1988 and 1990 and didn't face another credible opponent until 2002. That year, Hazleton mayor Lou Barletta faced him and briefly gained momentum when reports that Kanjorski improperly used his influence to funnel millions of dollars in federal funds to companies owned by family triggered an FBI investigation. However, Kanjorski got an unwitting assist from the state legislature. In the neighboring 10th District, longtime congressman Joe McDade's successor, Don Sherwood, won by only 515 votes in his initial 1998 bid and faced another squeaker in 2000. The legislature moved heavily Democratic Scranton, the heart of the 10th for more than a century, into the 11th. If anything, this made the heavily Democratic 11th even more Democratic. There was nothing altruistic about this remap, as the Republican-controlled legislature's goal was to make Sherwood safer while packing most of the Democratic votes in Northeast Pennsylvania into the 11th. (Ironically, Sherwood was unseated in 2006.) Kanjorski was reelected by 13 points and was unopposed for reelection in 2004.
Over the course of his Congressional career, Kanjorski has had a mixed voting record — liberal on economics and moderate on social issues. He has served on the Financial Services Committee since his first election in 1984 and is the second-ranking Democrat on that committee. Kanjorski usually plays behind-the-scenes roles in the advocacy or defeat of legislation and steers appropriations money toward improving the infrastructure and economic needs of Northeastern Pennsylvania.
In a February 2007 speech, as Congress prepared to vote on a resolution against President George Bush's escalation of the war, Rep. Kanjorski said: "the President, the Vice President, and the former Secretary of Defense believed they could fight this war on the cheap, with too few troops, too little armor, and too little help. They were wrong, and now it is too late."
By the summer of 2007, a majority of 11th District voters had become very war-weary and were opposed to continuing the war. Outrage over Iraq in Eastern Pennsylvania has made voters vocal about wanting to "get out." Kanjorski's voting record in the 110th Congress reflects his district's strong anti-war and pro-labor leanings.
On May 10, 2007, the usually moderate Kanjorski voted with fellow Democrats to begin the redeployment of all forces from Iraq. This bill was defeated, but the high number of yays symbolized the growing anti-war sentiment in the Congress.
After the bridge collapse in August, 2007, Kanjorski said he thought the $250 million bill Congress passed to rebuild the collapsed bridge in Minneapolis was a ripoff because it exceeded the normal $100 million limit for emergency relief projects. Said Kanjorski:
Minnesotans “discovered they were going to get all the money from the federal government and they were taking all they could get,” he said. They took the opportunity “to screw us.” Times Leader

External links



U.S. Representative Paul E. Kanjorski 'official House site'



Federal Election Commission — Paul E. Kanjorski campaign finance reports and data

On the Issues — Paul Kanjorski issue positions and quotes

OpenSecrets.org — Paul E. Kanjorski campaign contributions

Project Vote Smart — Representative Paul E. Kanjorski (PA) profile

SourceWatch Congresspedia — Paul Kanjorski profile

Washington Post — Congress Votes Database: Paul E. Kanjorski voting record

Politico - Kanjorski's $9.25 million scandal

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