John Miller | |
State: | Washington |
District: | 1st |
Term Start: | January 3, 1985 |
Term End: | January 3, 1993 |
Predecessor: | Joel Pritchard |
Successor: | Maria Cantwell |
Office1: | President of the Seattle City Council |
Term Start1: | August 14, 1978 |
Term End1: | January 3, 1980 |
Predecessor1: | Phyllis Lamphere |
Successor1: | Paul Kraabel |
Party: | Republican |
Birth Name: | John Ripin Miller |
Birth Date: | 23 May 1938 |
Birth Place: | New York City, New York |
Death Place: | Corte Madera, California |
Citizenship: | United States |
Education: | Bucknell University (BA) Yale University (MA, LLB) |
Office2: | 2nd United States Ambassador-at-Large to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons |
Termstart2: | July 30, 2004 |
Termend2: | December 15, 2006 |
Preceded2: | Nancy Ely-Raphel |
Succeeded2: | Mark P. Lagon |
John Ripin Miller (May 23, 1938 - October 4, 2017) was an American politician who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1985 to 1993. He represented the of Washington as a Republican. While in Congress he was an advocate of human rights in the Soviet Union, China, and South Africa.
Miller received his LL.B. from Yale Law School and an MA in Economics from Yale Graduate School in 1964. He graduated with a BA from Bucknell University in 1959, where he was a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity, and served as an Army Infantry officer on active duty in 1960 and later in the U.S. Army Reserves.[1]
Miller did not run for re-election in 1992. Prior to being elected congressman, he was active in state and municipal governments, serving as assistant attorney general for Washington; vice president and legal counsel for the Washington Environmental Council; and Seattle City Councilman (1972–1979). Miller's first campaign for the City Council was tied to saving the Pike Place Market and while on the Council he oversaw the rehabilitation of the Market. He founded Seattle's urban P-Patch program, a gardening allotment program that was first of its kind in the nation which includes at least 90 sites as of 2016. Miller led the Council in rejecting Seattle's entry into Washington Public Power Supply System nuclear plants 4 and 5 (Satsop nuclear power plant) which later went bankrupt, and unsuccessfully sought the demolition of the Alaska Way Viaduct separating Seattle's downtown from its waterfront.
Miller served as the director, Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons for the U.S. State Department, with the rank of Ambassador-at-Large, starting in 2002. He sought to increase public awareness of modern-day slavery and nurture a worldwide abolitionist movement with the United States in the lead. Miller resigned effective December 15, 2006, to join the faculty of George Washington University. He later taught at Yale University and was named a visiting scholar at the Institute for Governmental Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Miller served as a distinguished senior fellow in international affairs and human rights with the Discovery Institute. Prior to his time at State, he had served as the chair of the institute, and was an English teacher at Northwest Yeshiva High School in Mercer Island, Washington.
On October 4, 2017, Miller died in Corte Madera, California from cancer at the age of 79.[2]