Vinny deMacedo explained

Vinny deMacedo
State Senate1:Massachusetts
District1:Plymouth and Barnstable
Term Start1:January 7, 2015
Term End1:November 29, 2019
Predecessor1:Therese Murray
Successor1:Susan Moran
State House2:Massachusetts
District2:1st Plymouth
Term Start2:1999
Term End2:January 7, 2015
Preceded2:Joseph Gallitano
Succeeded2:Matt Muratore
Birth Date:16 October 1965
Birth Place:Brava, Cape Verde
Birthname:Viriato Manuel Pereira de Macedo
Nationality:American
Party:Republican
Spouse:Jennifer deMacedo
Children:3
Website:http://www.demacedo.org

Viriato Manuel Pereira de Macedo (born October 16, 1965[1]), also popularly known as Vinny deMacedo, is a Cape Verdean American politician, and was the Massachusetts State Senator for the Plymouth and Barnstable District, which comprises the communities of Bourne, Falmouth, Kingston, Pembroke, Plymouth, and Sandwich. He is a Republican who was sworn into the Massachusetts Senate on January 7, 2015. In November 2019 deMacedo resigned from the Massachusetts Senate to take a job in higher education.[2]

Political career

Senator deMacedo had no political experience prior to becoming a candidate for the Massachusetts House of Representatives on November 3, 1998, running against the Democratic incumbent Joseph Gallitano. He won the election by a tight margin of 189 votes.[3] He subsequently won re-election as Massachusetts State Representative seven times, serving through 2014.[2]

In November 2014, he was elected to the Massachusetts Senate, succeeding retiring Massachusetts Senate President Therese Murray as state senator for the Plymouth and Barnstable District.[4] As of 2016 he held the position of Ranking Minority Member on the Senate Committee on Ways and Means.[5] His legislative priorities included solving the opiate epidemic facing Massachusetts and ensuring the Commonwealth's fiscal responsibility.[6] Vinny served as one of five state senators (along with 11 state representatives) on the Joint Committee on Marijuana Policy.[7]

During his 16 years in the Massachusetts House, he received many awards for his legislative work including:

Biography

Senator deMacedo was born in Brava, Cape Verde.[8] He has six siblings, including an older brother, Donaldo Macedo.[8] In 1966, when he was six months old, the family immigrated to the New England region of the United States, where they lived at first in Dorchester, before three years later moving to Kingston, where deMacedo was raised.[8] He graduated from Silver Lake Regional High School in 1983. He went on to study at New York's The King's College, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Business Administration in 1987.

After graduating deMacedo began working for his brother in the car business before starting his own gas station in Cedarville in 1991. He continues to be the owner and operator of the RWA Mobil Station on Route 3A. He is a member of the Cedarville and Sagamore Business Association and the Plymouth Area Chamber of Commerce.

He is married to Jennifer de Macedo, and is the father of three children.

He visited Cape Verde in January 2008, for the first time since moving to the United States, as part of a political mission,[9] and met several members of the Cape Verdean government, including the President Pedro Pires.[10]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://keepusconnected.capwiz.com/bio/id/1822 profile at Keep Us Connected
  2. Spillane, Geoff (November 21, 2019). "State Sen. Viriato 'Vinny' deMacedo, R-Plymouth, wraps up 21-year legislative career". Cape Cod Times. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  3. Web site: Pondering A Pair Of Political Improbables: Gas station owner makes the grade. Robert Pree. 1998-11-15. Boston Globe/NewsBank.
  4. Web site: DeMacedo handily wins Senate seat.
  5. Web site: Senate Committee on Ways and Means . https://web.archive.org/web/20160726051547/https://malegislature.gov/Committees/Senate/S30?generalCourtNumber=189 . July 26, 2016 . The 189th General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. malegislature.gov.
  6. Web site: New Senator Says His Top Priority is Curbing Opiate Addiction.
  7. Web site: Joint Committee on Marijuana Policy . MALegislature.gov . The General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts . August 24, 2018.
  8. Miller, Yawu (January 11, 2012). "Two Brothers, Two Sets of Political Viewpoints". CommonWealth. commonwealthmagazine.org. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  9. Web site: Lei de repatriação dos EUA prejudica países pequenos. 2008-01-16. A Nação. pt.
  10. Web site: Pedro Pires Recebe Deputado Estadual Norte-Americano, Vinny Macedo. 2008-01-07. Expresso das Ilhas. pt.