Michael A. Feighan Explained

Michael Aloysius Feighan
State1:Ohio
District1:20th
Term Start1:January 3, 1943
Term End1:January 3, 1971
Predecessor1:Martin L. Sweeney
Successor1:James V. Stanton
Office2:Member of the Ohio House of Representatives
Term2:1937-1940
Birth Date:16 February 1905
Birth Place:Lakewood, Ohio
Death Place:Washington, D.C.
Nationality:American
Party:Democratic
Spouse:Florence Feighan
Relations:Ed Feighan (nephew)
Alma Mater:John Carroll University
Princeton University
  • Harvard Law School
  • Michael Aloysius Feighan (February 16, 1905  - March 19, 1992) was an American politician from Lakewood, Ohio, near Cleveland. He served as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives, and as a Democratic Party U.S. Representative from 1943 to 1971, serving Ohio's 20th congressional district.

    Originally, he was recruited by national Democrats who wanted to replace Congressman Martin L. Sweeney (D-OH), who had for eleven years held the seat representing the west side of Cleveland. They considered Sweeney to be too isolationist; for example, he had argued against enacting Lend-Lease to the United Kingdom.

    After Feighan had served almost three decades in the House of Representatives, some local Democratic officials, led by Cleveland City Council President James V. Stanton, had grown tired of his leadership. Sensing that they could not beat Feighan in one election, they set up a stalking horse running a Michael A. Sweeney, a local lawyer with a good political name. Sweeney lost, but his vote total showed that Feighan could be vulnerable in a rematch. Four years later, in 1970, Stanton himself ran and defeated Feighan in the Democratic primary, concluding Feighan's political career.

    During the legislation of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 Feighan insisted that "family unification" should take priority in immigration policy over "employability", on the premise that such a weighting would maintain the existing ethnic profile of the country. That change instead resulted in chain migration dominating the subsequent patterns of immigration to the United States and consequently a more ethnically diverse population.[1] [2]

    Electoral history

    Year!!
    DemocratVotesPctRepublicanVotesPct3rd PartyPartyVotesPct
    1942 align="right" 34,462 align="right" 61.81% align="right" 14,001 align="right" 25.11%Independent align="right" 7,289 align="right" 13.07%
    1944 align="right" 75,218 align="right" 75.85% align="right" 23,945 align="right" 24.15%
    1946 align="right" 49,670 align="right" 66.99% align="right" 24,476 align="right" 33.01%
    1948 align="right" 64,241 align="right" 100% align="right" align="right"
    1950 align="right" 60,565 align="right" 74.21% align="right" 21,044 align="right" 25.79%
    1952 align="right" 109,211 align="right" 65.21% align="right" 58,271 align="right" 34.79%
    1954 align="right" 81,304 align="right" 67.66% align="right" 38,865 align="right" 32.34%
    1956 align="right" 105,562 align="right" 65.25% align="right" 56,209 align="right" 34.75%
    1958 align="right" 113,200 align="right" 79.43% align="right" 29,308 align="right" 20.57%
    1960 align="right" 113,302 align="right" 67.79% align="right" 53,845 align="right" 32.21%
    1962 align="right" 91,544 align="right" 71.04% align="right" 37,325 align="right" 28.96%
    1964 align="right" 115,675 align="right" 74.43% align="right" 39,747 align="right" 25.57%
    1966 align="right" 63,629 align="right" 76.05% align="right" 20,034 align="right" 23.95%
    1968 align="right" 72,918 align="right" 72.38% align="right" 27,827 align="right" 27.62%

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Tom Gjelten, Laura Knoy . 2016-01-21 . The Exchange . NPR's Tom Gjelten on America's Immigration Story . Radio broadcast . 2016-06-07 . New Hampshire Public Radio.
    2. Web site: Michael Feighan and LBJ . Gjelten . Tom . Tom Gjelten . 2015-08-12 . 2016-06-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160506171239/http://www.tomgjelten.com/feighan-lbj/ . 2016-05-06.