Sam Meas (born) is a Haverhill, Massachusetts-based political candidate who has run as both a Republican and later a Democrat. Meas is the first Cambodian-American in U.S. history to run for Congress.
He was born Meas Sombo, and grew up in Kandal Province, Cambodia. He lost his father to the Khmer Rouge and was subsequently separated from his mother and sisters during the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia. He fled Cambodia with a cousin and ended up at the Khao-I-Dang refugee camp in Thailand. In 1986 he was sponsored as a refugee by Catholic Charities USA and moved to Virginia, where he lived with a foster family. He did not know his exact date of birth at the time; an examination by an orthodontist engaged by the Immigration and Naturalization Service estimated his year of birth to be between 1970 and 1972. As a result, Meas chose 31 December 1972 as his legal date of birth, not knowing that the date he had chosen, New Year's Eve, was a major holiday in the United States.[1] In 1996, Meas graduated from Virginia Tech with a degree in finance.
Meas is married to his wife Leah and together they have two children, Monique and Sydney. Meas and his wife currently reside in Haverhill, Massachusetts.[2]
In 2010, Meas unsuccessfully ran for a seat in Massachusetts's 5th congressional district, which includes the cities of Haverhill, Lawrence and Lowell.[3] This made him the first Cambodian-American in U.S. history to run for Congress.[4] In 2012, Meas was a Republican candidate for the Massachusetts State Senate (First Essex District). He lost the 6 September primary election to fellow Republican Shaun Toohey, who received 70% of the votes.[5] Meas went on to work as a campaign manager for Rady Mom, but the two men later had a falling-out.[6] After working as campaign manager for Rady Mom, Meas took Mom to court in a harassment claim. In 2018 Meas and Mom attended a banquet in lowell. Mom allegedly attacked and choked Meas at the banquet. Security footage was unable to prove this and the court denied his request for protection. [7]
Outside of politics, Meas has worked at the State Street Corporation and also owns a grocery store in Lynn, Massachusetts. He has served on the board of directors of the North Suffolk Mental Association.