Dan Maffei | |
Office: | Chairman of the Federal Maritime Commission |
Term Start: | March 29, 2021 |
Predecessor: | Michael Khouri |
Nominator: | Joe Biden |
Office1: | Commissioner of the Federal Maritime Commission |
Term Start1: | January 23, 2019 |
Predecessor1: | Himself |
Nominator2: | Barack Obama |
Term Start2: | June 30, 2016 |
Term End2: | June 30, 2018 |
Nominator1: | Donald Trump |
Predecessor2: | Richard Lidinsky |
Successor2: | Himself |
State3: | New York |
Term Start3: | January 3, 2013 |
Term End3: | January 3, 2015 |
Predecessor3: | Ann Marie Buerkle |
Successor3: | John Katko |
Term Start4: | January 3, 2009 |
Term End4: | January 3, 2011 |
Predecessor4: | James T. Walsh |
Successor4: | Ann Marie Buerkle |
Birth Name: | Daniel Benjamin Maffei |
Birth Date: | 4 July 1968 |
Birth Place: | Syracuse, New York, U.S. |
Party: | Democratic |
Spouse: | Abby Davidson |
Education: | Brown University (BA) Columbia University (MS) Harvard University (MPP) |
Daniel Benjamin Maffei (; born July 4, 1968) is an American politician and professor who was the United States representative for from 2013 to 2015. Maffei previously represented the district, then numbered as, from 2009 to 2011. He has also worked as a senior adviser[1] at law firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips.
On November 6, 2012, Maffei defeated incumbent 25th district Republican Ann Marie Buerkle in the race for the redistricted 24th, avenging his 2010 loss.[2] Maffei lost his 2014 reelection campaign to Republican nominee John Katko.[3] He served as Commissioner of the Federal Maritime Commission from 2016 to 2018 and was re-appointed in November 2018 to a term ending in 2022.[4] [5] [6] During the four month lapse in his Maritime Commissioner post, Maffei was a professor of practice at George Washington University.[7]
Maffei was born in Syracuse and currently resides there. He graduated from Nottingham Senior High School in 1986, and continued on to receive a B.A. in history from Brown University in 1990, an M.S. in journalism from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1991, and an M.P.P. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 1995.[8] [9]
Upon graduating from Columbia, Maffei went to work as a reporter and producer for Syracuse's ABC affiliate WSYR-TV from 1991 to 1993, and part-time reporter for WWNY-TV in Watertown from then until 1995.
Maffei was the senior vice president for corporate development at consulting firm Pinnacle Capital Management.[10]
Dan's career on Capitol Hill started with an unpaid internship in 1996 with New York Congressman Eliot Engel. He was hired as a press secretary for U.S. Senator Bill Bradley in 1996, then served in the same post for Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan from 1997 to 1998. After working on Senator Bradley's presidential campaign from 1998 to 1999, Maffei went to work for U.S. Representative Charlie Rangel from 1999 to 2005, serving as a senior staff member of the House Ways and Means Committee.
In 2005, Maffei returned to Syracuse to coordinate the successful 2005 re-election campaign of Syracuse Mayor Matt Driscoll. Following his successful return, Maffei decided to make his first bid for public office, challenging popular nine-term Republican Congressman Jim Walsh. He earned the Democratic nomination and mounted the first serious challenge to Walsh in years, coming within two percentage points of defeating the incumbent. Maffei won in the City of Syracuse and the rest of Onondaga County, Walsh's home turf, as well as Monroe County.
See also: 2008 New York's 25th congressional district election. On January 24, 2008, after Maffei had already mounted a strong opposition campaign, Walsh announced that he would not be running for an 11th term. In March 2008, Mayor Driscoll announced he would not be running for the seat, effectively handing the nomination to Maffei. He ran unopposed in the Democratic primary on September 9, 2008. After it appeared he might run unopposed in the general election, on April 3, 2008, Onondaga County legislator Dale Sweetland, coming off a narrowly unsuccessful 2007 bid for Onondaga County Executive, announced that he would oppose Maffei.
Maffei was solidly favored to win the seat. In addition to rating the district as 'Leans Democratic', RealClearPolitics ranked this as the third most likely Congressional district to switch parties.[11] Going into the election, other pundits from CQ Politics, The Cook Report, and the Rothenberg Report also ranked it as 'Lean Democrat' to 'Democrat Favored'.[12]
In May 2008, and again on June 20, 2008, The Washington Posts Chris Cillizza, author of "The Fix", ranked the race in the 25th as a near-certainty to result in a Democratic takeover.[13] [14] Although Walsh had held the seat without serious difficulty until his near-defeat in 2006, the 25th had swung heavily to the Democrats at most other levels since the 1990s. Even though Republicans have a small plurality of registered voters, it hadn't supported a Republican for president since George H. W. Bush carried it in 1988.
On November 4, 2008, Maffei defeated Sweetland, 55% to 42%.[15] He became the first Democrat to represent the area since 1981 (when it was the 32nd District), and only the second Democrat to represent the Syracuse area in Congress since 1917.
Republican Ann Marie Buerkle narrowly defeated Maffei on November 2, 2010 following weeks of absentee ballot counting and precinct recanvassing, in which Buerkle emerged with a 567-vote majority of over 200,000 ballots cast. Maffei conceded the race on November 23, 2010, when it became clear that challenged votes would not change the outcome of the race.[16]
Maffei had been favored to hold the seat. RealClearPolitics rated the district as 'Leans Democratic,' and other pundits from CQ Politics, The Cook Report, and the Rothenberg Report ranked it as 'Lean Democrat' to 'Democrat Favored'.[12]
On August 24, 2011, Maffei announced his intentions to take back his old seat, now renumbered as .[17] [18] Maffei defeated Buerkle on November 6, 2012, 48% to 44% with 99% of precincts reporting.[2] Despite the race being called in Maffei's favor before midnight on Election Day, Buerkle released a statement the following morning, November 7, saying she would not concede until all ballots were counted.[19] Buerkle conceded the race on November 9, 2012.[20]
Maffei ran for a third, non-consecutive term in 2014. Republicans targeted his seat, along with several others in New York. He was unopposed in the Democratic primary, and faced Republican candidate John Katko, a former federal prosecutor, in the general election. Maffei lost to Katko by a margin of 19 percentage points, winning only 40% of the vote to Katko's 59%. This was the largest margin of defeat for an incumbent House member in 2014.[21] [22]
He has been a frequent guest lecturer at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. In fall 2011 and spring 2012, he was a visiting professor of environmental studies at SUNY-ESF, where he taught a graduate seminar on the "Politics of Science and Environmental Policy".[23] Maffei is on the board of advisors of the Global Panel Foundation, a prominent non-partisan NGO which works behind the scenes in conflict areas around the world.
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