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Neil Giuliano

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Neil Giuliano
30thMayor of Tempe
In office
1994–2004
Preceded byHarry Mitchell
Succeeded byHugh Hallman
Personal details
Born(1956-10-26)October 26, 1956(age 68)
Political partyRepublican(until 2008)
Democratic(2008–present)[1]
Alma materArizona State University

Neil Gerard Giuliano(born October 26, 1956) is an American politician who served as mayor ofTempe, Arizonafor four terms, from 1994 to 2004 (Three two-year terms and one four-year term). After serving in elected office he served as president of theGay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation(GLAAD) from 2005 to 2009, and served as President/CEO of theSan Francisco AIDS Foundationfrom December 2010 to December 2015.[2][3]Giuliano was the first directly-elected openly gay mayor in the United States, and Tempe was the largest city in America with an openly gay mayor for nearly six years, 1996- 2001.

Since January 2016 he has served as President/CEO of Greater Phoenix Leadership.[citation needed]

Education

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Giuliano attended Bloomfield High School inBloomfield, New Jersey.While a student, he was a member ofKey ClubatBloomfield High School.[4]

Giuliano graduated with aBAdegree from what is now theHugh Downs School of CommunicationatArizona State Universityin 1979, and received a master's degree in Higher Education Administration in 1983.[2]While a student, he served as student body president (1982–83) as well as the 1977–78 International President ofCircle K International.[5]He worked professionally at ASU from 1981 to 2005 in numerous student affairs and university relations roles. He also taught a 3-credit hour course in Personal Leadership Development during most of his tenure at the university.

Community service

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He remains an active member of theKiwanisClub of Tempe, which he joined in February 1981, and served as president of the club from 1986 to 1987.[6]He also served as president of Tempe Leadership and on numerous non-profit boards of directors including the Tempe Community Council, Big Brothers-Big Sisters and the Friends of the Tempe Center for the Arts.[citation needed]He currently serves on the board of director for the Valley of the Sun United Way and was a founding member of the Friends of Tempe Center for the Arts board of directors. He currently serves on the board of directors for The Partnership for Economic Innovation, Valley of the Sun United Way and Visit Phoenix.

Political career

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Giuliano began his political career as a city council member, elected in May 1990, and was appointed vice-mayor ofTempe, Arizonafor 1992–94.[2]He was elected mayor of Tempe four times, serving from 1994 to 2004; the first three terms were two-years each, the fourth was for four years.[2]After he first came out as gay in August 1996, political opponents tried to initiate a recall election to remove him from office, but that effort failed. Following a controversy over city funds being directed to the Boy Scouts of America in 2000, a successful recall effort proceeded to the ballot.[7]The recall election was held on September 11, 2001. Giuliano won in a landslide, defeating a campaign that was called "blatantly homophobic".[8]

He also co-chaired the planning thethird debateof the2004 United States presidential elections.[9]Upon retiring from elected office in 2004 and a 24-year career at Arizona State University in 2005, where he served as director of federal relations among other positions, Giuliano received praise from SenatorJohn McCainand then-GovernorJanet Napolitano.[citation needed]In 2008, Giuliano changed his registration from theRepublican Partyto the Democratic Party andThe Arizona Republicreported that he has considered running for governor of Arizonain 2010as a Democrat but he declined to run.[10]In2014,it was again speculated that he would run for governor, but he instead endorsedFred DuValfor the Democratic nomination.[11]

GLAAD

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Giuliano served as president of theGay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation(GLAAD), a nationalLGBTorganization dedicated to ensuring fair, accurate and inclusive representation of LGBT people and events in the media, from 2005 to 2009.[2]He initiated LGBT media advocacy programs and awareness in the areas of sports, advertising and religion/faith/values, helping bridge the divide about LGBT issues in these critical communities. During his tenure the GLAAD Media Awards were first broadcast on the BRAVO Network, reaching over 80 million homes with LGBT affirming messages.

Giuliano was featured onCBS Sunday Morningin 1999 and has appeared onCNN,ABC World News Tonight,Showbiz Tonight,andAccess Hollywood.He has been quoted in Newsweek, TIME, USA Today and numerous state and regional media outlets discussing LGBT images in the media and issues as well as the state of HIV/AIDS in the United States.[12]

Awards and recognition

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Giuliano was named one of the Top 25 of 2005 byInstinct Magazine.[13]In 2004, he received the Individual Achievement Award from theArizona Human Rights Fund.[14]He was named to the OUT 100 by OUT Magazine, which notes the top 100 people in gay culture in the US.[13]While he was mayor in 2003, Tempe was named an "All American-City," an award honoring local governments demonstrating success in problem solving.[3]He was named Tempe Humanitarian of the year in 2014 and among the Most Admired Leaders of the Phoenix region in 2017 by the Phoenix Business Journal. In 2018 he received the highest recognition for leadership and community service when selected as the 69th Man of the Year. Former US Senator Barry Goldwater was the first recipient of the award in 1949.

Giuliano is the author of The Campaign Within: A Mayor's Private Journey to Public Leadership.

References

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  1. ^McCroy, Winnie."Gay Former Mayor Neil Giuliano Considers a Run for Az. Governor".edgeboston.com.Retrieved8 February2013.
  2. ^abcde"Neil Giuliano".linkedin.com.Retrieved8 February2013.
  3. ^abOur Leadership - San Francisco AIDS Foundation
  4. ^""The Club of Clubs"".
  5. ^Cordova, Randy."Former Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano memoir tells trials of being openly gay politician".azcentral.com.Retrieved8 February2013.
  6. ^"The 60 Year History of the Kiwanis Club of Tempe. 1952-2012".historypreserved.com.Retrieved8 February2013.
  7. ^"Gay Former Mayor Neil Giuliano Considers a Run for Az. Governor".Edge Boston.25 August 2012.Retrieved26 April2013.
  8. ^"Giuliano triumphs in recall election".ASU.12 September 2001. Archived fromthe originalon 16 June 2013.Retrieved26 April2013.
  9. ^"Neil Giuliano's Homecoming Project".liveoutloud.info.Archived fromthe originalon 19 March 2013.Retrieved8 February2013.
  10. ^Benson, Matther (September 24, 2009)."Pederson will not enter 2010 race for governor".The Arizona Republic.RetrievedSeptember 24,2009.
  11. ^"Neil Guiliano –" The Campaign Within "".KJZZ.org. 13 June 2012.Retrieved2012-11-19.
  12. ^Peters, Jeremy W. (March 26, 2007). Gay Media Outlets Seek Place at the Table At Awards for the Representation of Gays.New York Times
  13. ^abKane, Matt (27 July 2012)."Conversation and Book Signing with Neil Giuliano, Former GLAAD President".glaad.org.Retrieved8 February2013.
  14. ^"2012 Award Winners and Beyond".equalityarizone.org.Archived fromthe originalon 21 November 2012.Retrieved8 February2013.