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Steve Santarsiero

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Steve Santarsiero
Member of thePennsylvania Senate
from the10thdistrict
Assumed office
January 1, 2019(2019-01-01)
Preceded byChuck McIlhinney
Member of thePennsylvania House of Representatives
from the31stdistrict
In office
January 6, 2009(2009-01-06)[1]– November 30, 2016(2016-11-30)
Preceded byDavid J. Steil
Succeeded byPerry Warren
Personal details
Born(1965-02-13)February 13, 1965(age 59)
Montclair, New Jersey,U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseRonni
Children3
Residence(s)Lower Makefield Township, Pennsylvania,U.S.
Alma materTufts University(B.A.)

University of Pennsylvania(J.D.)

Holy Family University(M.Ed.)
Websitewww.senatorstevesantarsiero.com

Steven J. Santarsiero(born 1965) is an American attorney and politician. A member of theDemocratic Party,he has represented the10th Districtin thePennsylvania State Senatesince 2019. Santarsiero previously served in thePennsylvania House of Representatives,representing the31st Districtbetween 2009 and 2016.

Early life and education

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Santarsiero was born on February 13, 1965, inMontclair, New Jersey.He graduated fromVerona High Schoolin 1983.[2]Santarsiero received his bachelor's degree fromTufts Universityin 1987. He went on to earn a J.D. from theUniversity of Pennsylvania Law Schoolin 1992.[3]He received his M.Ed. fromHoly Family Universityin 2006.[2]

Political career

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After witnessing the9/11 attacks,Santarsiero quit his law career and became a high school teacher to "give back more to the community."[4][5]While a teacher atBensalem High School,he encouraged his students to be active in their community.[4]

In 2003, Santarsiero was elected to a seat on theLower Makefield TownshipBoard Supervisors, defeating a longtime incumbent while also becoming the firstDemocratsupervisor in 18 years.[4]In 2004, Santarsiero organized the Southeastern Bucks League of Municipalities, a forum meant to deepen cooperation between 19 townships and boroughs in lowerBucks County, Pennsylvania.[6]

Santarsiero was first elected to thePennsylvania House of Representativesin2008.Representing the31st District,he was reelected in2010,2012,and2014.[2]

2016 congressional election

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In 2016, Santarsiero ran for Pennsylvania's open8th Congressional District,following the retirement of RepresentativeMike Fitzpatrick.He faced fellow Democrat Shaughnessy Naughton in the primary election,[7]whom he defeated.[8]During the primary, Santarsiero was criticized after his campaign sent out mailers which claimed he "wrote PA’s Gun Safety Law."[7][9]PolitiFactrated the claim as "False", given that Pennsylvania's standing gun law was passed in 1995, before Santarsiero was elected to the State House in 2008. Santarsiero's campaign manager later said the claim was a misstatement referring to a gun control bill which Santarsiero was the primary sponsor.[9]

In the general election, Santarsiero faced Fitzpatrick's brother, RepublicanBrian Fitzpatrick.The race was labelled as the only competitive one in Pennsylvania,[10]where both Republicans and Democrats were almost equally present within the district.[7]Ultimately, Fitzpatrick won, 54%-46%.[11]

State Senate

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In2018,Santarsiero defeated Republican state representativeMarguerite Quinnfor the open10th Districtseat in thePennsylvania State Senate.[12]He was reelected in2022,[13]deafeating challenger Matthew McCullough.[14]

In April 2019, Santarsiero resigned from the law firm Curtin & Heefner. His resignation came after Curtin & Heefner took up the case ofEast Rockhill Townshipresidents who opposed the reopening of the previously dormant Rockhill Quarry. An attorney for the quarry accused Santarsiero of a conflict of interest because his position as a state senator could allow him to access information on the quarry that may influence the outcome of the case. Santarsiero defended himself by saying he was a non-equity partner with the firm and had not been involved in the quarry case. Nonetheless, he resigned to "avoid so much as the appearance of any conflict."[15]

Political positions

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Campaign finance reform

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Following theCitizens United Supreme Court Ruling,Santarsiero introduced a bill calling for a convention to amend theUnited States Constitutionto allow states and theUnited States Congressto pass laws limiting the amount of money that any person or group can donate to federal or state elections. He reintroduced the resolution twice more in 2011 and 2013.[16]

Environment

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Following the passage of Act 13 of 2012, Santarsiero was one of six Democratic state representatives who authored the individual bills making up the "Marcellus Compact." Their bills sought to reestablish stronger taxation, stronger environmental protections, and local regulations on natural gas drilling rolled back by Act 13.[17][18]Republicans threatened to prevent the bills from coming to a vote,[18]which is what happened.[19]

Gun policy

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Following theSandy Hook school shootingin 2013, Santarsiero introduced a bill in the State House which would mandate background checks for all gun sales.[20]The bill was never put to vote. He reintroduced it in 2015 with similar results.[9]

Israel

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Santarsiero supports continued American support forIsrael"as a long-standing ally and the only true democracy in a volatile region of the world" and "for the Jewish people... a homeland."[21][22]He has twice introduced legislation that would punish Pennsylvania colleges fordivesting from Israel,first in 2015 and again in 2024 following widespreadcollege protests against Israel.The 2024 bill would withhold funds from colleges who take "actions that are intended to financially penalize the government of Israel or commercial financial activity in Israel."[21]Santarsiero has previously stated that proponents of theBDS movementare "misinformed" and anycomparisons of IsraeltoapartheidSouth Africais "offensive."[23]

LGBTQ issues

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Santarsiero supportssame-sex marriage.[24]His youngest soncame out as gayin 2021.[25]

In 2020, Santarsiero introduced a resolution in the State Senate to recognize the day afterValentine's Day,February 15, as "Love is Love Day" in support ofLGBTQpeople.[26]The resolution never made it to a vote.[27]

In 2022, Santarsiero defended a "Queer Prom" hosted by a LGBTQ organization where he was present as a chaperone. The prom came under criticism from conservatives and conservative media after videos ofdrag performersat the event emerged, and attendees received swag bags which reportedly included condoms andlube.Santarsiero labeled the criticism as "distorted" and said he had been labelled a "pedophile" and "groomer" after the story was published onFox News.[25]

Personal life

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Santarsiero and his wife, Ronni Fuchs,[28]reside inLower Makefield Township, Pennsylvania.The couple have three children.[29]

References

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  1. ^"SESSION OF 2009 - 193D OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY - No. 1"(PDF).Legislative Journal.Pennsylvania House of Representatives. January 6, 2009.
  2. ^abc"Steven J. Santarsiero".Pennsylvania House of Representatives Archives.RetrievedMay 30,2023.
  3. ^Seymour, Kara (January 8, 2015)."Steve Santarsiero to Run for Congress".Newtown Patch.RetrievedMay 5,2016.
  4. ^abcMartin, Erich (January 8, 2015)."Santarsiero Files Candidacy Forms For 8th District Congressional Seat".LevittownNow.com.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  5. ^Benshoff, Laura (April 24, 2016)."Race for Pa.'s 8th Congressional District, part 2: Dueling Democrats".WHYY-FM.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  6. ^Pappas, Leslie A. (August 3, 2004)."Towns seek ways to cope regionally 19 southeast communities are joining a forum to regularly discuss common traffic, development and other problems".Philly.com.Archived from the original on September 22, 2015.RetrievedJune 6,2023.{{cite news}}:CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^abcMcDaniel, Justine (April 11, 2016)."Heated words in hot Pa. Congress battle".The Philadelphia Inquirer.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  8. ^Andrews, Wilson; Bloch, Matthew; Bowers, Jeremy; Giratikanon, Tom (September 26, 2016)."Pennsylvania Primary Election Results 2016".The New York Times.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  9. ^abcOrso, Anna (April 21, 2016)."Claim in Bucks lawmaker's gun law mailer isn't exactly what happened".PolitiFact.Poytner Insittute.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  10. ^Benshoff, Laura (October 13, 2016)."8th District candidates find lots of common ground, quarrel over 'insider' insult".WHYY-FM.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  11. ^"2016 Pennsylvania Results".The New York Times.September 13, 2017.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  12. ^Couloumbis, Angela; Navratil, Liz (November 8, 2018)."Democrats have Philly suburbs to thank for gains in Pa. legislature".The Philadelphia Inquirer.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  13. ^Werner, Jeff (January 8, 2023)."Santarsiero Begins Second Term As 10th District State Senator".Patch.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  14. ^"Steve Santarsiero Facing Matthew McCullough In November Election".LevittownNow.com.May 18, 2022.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  15. ^Bagenstose, Kyle (April 19, 2019)."Santarsiero resigns from law firm after ethics dig".Phillyburbs.com.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  16. ^Seymour, Kara (January 21, 2013)."Santarsiero Calls for Campaign Finance Reform".Patch.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  17. ^Seymour, Kara (May 25, 2012)."Santarsiero Introduces Bill as Part of Marcellus Shale Compact".Patch.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  18. ^abBertrand, Pierre (May 30, 2012)."Pennsylvania Democrats Launch Attack On State's Fracking Law".International Business Times.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  19. ^"Bill Information - Regular Session 2011-2012 House Bill 2414".Pennsylvania House of Representatives.Pennsylvania General Assembly.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  20. ^Bumsted, Brad (July 17, 2013)."Newtown shooting victim's mom, NRA argue for and against background checks in Pa".Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.Archived fromthe originalon July 28, 2013.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  21. ^abHuangpu, Kate (June 21, 2024)."Colleges would face financial punishments for boycotting or divesting from Israel under new Pa. bill".Spotlight PA.RetrievedJune 24,2024.
  22. ^"Senators Santarsiero and Phillips-Hill Announce Legislation to Protect State Investments in Israel".Pennsylvania Senate Democrats.June 7, 2024.
  23. ^Tabachnick, Toby (May 20, 2015)."Tough new BDS bill will seek consequences for colleges, universities".Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle.RetrievedJune 24,2024.
  24. ^Kara, Seymour (June 26, 2013)."'Why Shouldn't Two People in Love Get Married?:' Reactions to DOMA Ruling ".Patch.RetrievedJune 6,2023.
  25. ^abSofield, Tom (January 24, 2023)."Sen. Santarsiero Responds To Sen. Mastriano's Claim About Bucks County LGBTQ+ Teen Event".LevittownNow.com.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  26. ^Hardison, Elizabeth (February 5, 2020)."Amid objections, Senate GOP bottles up Bucks lawmaker's resolution honoring Pa.'s LGBTQ youth".Pennsylvania Capital-Star.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  27. ^"Bill Information - Regular Session 2019-2020 Senate Resolution 307".Pennsylvania General Assembly.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
  28. ^"Ronni Fuchs Bio".Troutman Pepper.RetrievedApril 15,2024.
  29. ^"About".Senator Steve Santarsiero.RetrievedJune 7,2023.
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