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Jim Graham
American lawyer

Jim Graham

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American lawyer
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Wishaw
Age
79 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Jim Graham (born August 26, 1945) is a Scottish-born American politician and a former member of the Council of the District of Columbia. He is a Democrat who represented Ward 1 in Washington, D.C. from 1999–2015.

Early life and education

Graham's parents, neither of whom had high school degrees, settled in Hyattsville, Maryland after immigrating to the United States from Scotland. A graduate of Michigan State University where he was a student politician and vice president of the National Student Association, Graham received a J.D. degree from the University of Michigan Law School and a L.L.M. from Georgetown University Law Center. He was a clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren and held a staff attorney position with the U.S. Senate Governmental Affairs Committee (chaired by Senator Abe Ribicoff, D-Connecticut). He is experienced in private, agency and public interest law. Graham has served as an adjunct professor at Georgetown University Law Center and George Washington University, as well as supervising instructor at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Graham is licensed to practice law in the District of Columbia and before the U.S. Supreme Court. Prior to taking a seat on the city council, Graham was executive director of the Whitman-Walker Clinic, a non-profit organization that provides services to AIDS and HIV patients in Washington. He is a recovering alcoholic and "came out" as gay after leaving federal employment.

Gay community pioneer

In October 1979, Graham joined Whitman-Walker Clinic's board. He helped the clinic survive its initial funding crises and in April 1981 became president of the board. Within three years, he became the executive director, leading the clinic's response to AIDS for 15 years (1984–1999). Under his leadership the clinic became a leading HIV/AIDS institution, with more than 1,200 volunteers, 270 full-time employees, and satellite operations in Southeast Washington, Maryland and Virginia. When Graham left Whitman-Walker in January 1999, it had become one of the most comprehensive community based medical organizations responding to HIV/AIDS in the country.

In 1984, dismayed by the quality of legal support, Graham himself undertook the legal aid counseling of those with AIDS for 18 months: "I went to dying people to straighten out their legal affairs ... in addition to other duties. It carried me right into the trenches; it created the whole experience. I vividly remember going to the bedsides, the horrible circumstances. ... It was extremely emotional." In an oral history for the Rainbow History Project, Graham commented, "We’ve had one of the greatest epidemics of all time and this was the history, the history of the community banding together and helping itself. It was a phenomenal story." He says of the time: "It was the most difficult period that I’ve ever been through, there’s no question."

Public service

Graham was first elected in 1998 and won reelection in 2002, 2006, and 2010 but was defeated in his bid for a fifth term in the Democratic primary election on April 1, 2014 by a margin of 41 percent to 59 percent for challenger Brianne Nadeau.

He is the second openly gay elected official in D.C., after David Catania. He is an immigrant from Wishaw, Scotland, having become a naturalized as an American. and currently resides in Adams Morgan.

Graham has served as chairman of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority's board of directors twice—once in 2003 and again in 2009.

In 1999 and 2007, Graham donated a large collection of his personal and professional papers to the George Washington University. The collection is currently under the care of GWU's Special Collections Research Center, located in the Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library.

Committees

Graham served as a member of the following committees on the D.C. Council:

  • Committee on Human Services (Chair)
  • Committee of the Whole
  • Committee on Business, Consumer and Regulatory Affairs
  • Committee on Transportation and the Environment
  • Committee on Workforce and Community Affairs

    Organizations

    • D.C. AIDS Task Force (member since 1983)
    • AIDS Action Council (previous Board member)
    • National Lesbian and Gay Health Foundation (previous Board member)
    • Coalition for Consumers Health and Safety
    • Washington AIDS Partnership (previous Advisory Committee member)
    • Concerned Citizens on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Inc. (previous Advisory Board member)
    • National AIDS Network (previous Treasurer and Board member)
    • Rock Hard DC Strip Club

      Criticism

      In early 2005, Graham was accused (allegedly by Washington businessman Sinclair Skinner) of driving historically African-American businesses from the neighborhoods of Columbia Heights, Shaw, and the U Street corridor. The Washington City Paper reported on the accusation:

      In early 2005, just as the Club U issue was heating up, posters portraying Graham as a reptile holding a pitchfork labeled "Grahamzilla" appeared on light poles and street signs around the ward. Another set of posters depicted Graham standing on a porch partying with young white men at the Graham "plantation." The latter included an illustration showing "Graham opponents" hanging from a gallows. The posters stretched the limits of political speech and disappeared quickly after they were put up.

      On September 24, 2009, Graham's Chief of Staff, Ted Loza, was arrested by the FBI and charged with two counts of accepting bribes. The indictment alleges that Loza accepted two payments and promised to promote the legislation and policies concerning D.C. taxi cabs that the alleged briber wanted. Graham was the chairman of the committee that oversees taxi cab regulation, but he voluntarily gave up oversight of cabs after Loza's arrest.

      The District of Columbia Board of Ethics and Government Accountability found substantial evidence that Graham asked a developer to withdraw its bid for a real estate project so that another firm, who had donated to Graham, could win the bid. In exchange, Graham offered to support the firm's bid for a lottery contract, violating the District employees code of conduct. The District Council also reprimanded Graham for his inappropriate actions. Graham described his actions as political horsetrading rather than anything illegal or unethical.

      Election Results

      1998

      1998 Democratic Primary, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham4,89449
      DemocraticFrank Smith3,21932
      DemocraticTodd Mosley1,45814
      DemocraticLenwood Orlando "Lenny" Johnson2322
      DemocraticBaruti "BJ" Jahi2242
      DemocraticWrite-In581
      1998 General Election, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham10,95372
      UmojaNik Earnes1,92713
      GreenScott McLarty1,2608
      RepublicanMark Leventhal8686
       Write-In1251

      2002

      2002 Democratic Primary, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham6,06464
      DemocraticShelore Williams1,58617
      DemocraticDee Hunter1,15712
      DemocraticHector Rodriguez4365
      DemocraticTony De Pass1301
      DemocraticWrite-In470
      2002 General Election, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham11,25885
      D.C. Statehood GreenEdward Chico Troy1,91014
       Write-In1291

      2006

      2006 Democratic Primary, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham9,02886
      DemocraticChad Williams1,36113
      DemocraticWrite-In701
      2006 General Election, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham11,48997
       Write-In3263

      2010

      2010 Democratic Primary, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham8,38157
      DemocraticJeff Smith3,15921
      DemocraticBryan Weaver3,15521
      DemocraticWrite-In390
      2010 General Election, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticJim Graham11,94681
      D.C. Statehood GreenNancy Shia1,3769
      RepublicanMarc Morgan1,1378
       Write-In2332

      2014

      2014 Democratic Primary, Council of the District of Columbia, Ward 1
      PartyCandidateVotes%
      DemocraticBrianne K. Nadeau6,68859
      DemocraticJim Graham4,64241
      DemocraticWrite-In571
      The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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