Alexandria (Alexandria) Ocasio-Cortez (D-USH14)
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Capitol: 202.225.3965
FAX: 202.225.1909
District: 718.662.5970
Representative
Room 250 CHOB- Cannon House Office Building 25 Independence Avenue, SE
Washington, DC 20515-3214

Residence: Bronx, NY
Elected: 2018    Next Election: 2024
Spouse: Riley Roberts   DOB: 10/13/1989
Committee Assignments
RM MemberHouse Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources
MemberHouse Subcommittee on Health Care and Financial Services
FC MemberCongressional Bangladesh Caucus
MemberHouse Committee on Oversight and Accountability
MemberHouse Committee on Natural Resources
FC MemberHouse Quiet Skies Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Caucus on Global Migration
FC MemberDemocratic Women's Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Renters Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Hispanic Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Progressive Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Labor Caucus
FC MemberBipartisan Congressional Pro-Choice Caucus
FC MemberCongressional Equality Caucus
Counties Representing
New York City / Queens

Bio

Alexandria was born in The Bronx to working class parents- her father was a small business owner and architect from the South Bronx, and her mother cleaned homes after moving to New York from Arecibo, Puerto Rico. As school violence and dropout rates in The Bronx rose in the early 90's, her parents put their savings together and purchased a modest home 30 miles north of the city in search of better schools for the family. As a result, much of Alexandria's adolescence was spent in transit between her tight-knit extended family in The Bronx and school in Yorktown Heights. It struck Alexandria as unfair, even then, how the opportunities available to children and their families were often based on their ZIP code.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as a baby with her father Alexandria went on to study Economics and International Relations at Boston University. At the start of her sophomore year, Alexandria's father passed away suddenly from cancer at just 48 years old. Facing huge medical bills, the family risked foreclosure and her mother took another job driving a school bus. The unjust medical debt left a lasting impression on Alexandria, and she sought out an internship in the late Sen. Ted Kennedy's office. Upon graduating college, Alexandria came back to The Bronx and pursued work in education and community organizing- as an Educational Director for the National Hispanic Institute, she worked with promising high school youth to expand their skill-sets in community leadership and social enterprise; she also piloted projects to help improve literacy skills in young children and middle-schoolers. But as the economy floundered, Alexandria found herself working two jobs and 18-hour shifts in restaurants to help keep her family afloat, while balancing student loan and insurance payments.

After Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016, Alexandria joined many Americans who felt a strong calling to do more in civic life. That December, she traveled to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota where indigenous people were demonstrating against a dangerous gas pipeline. Alexandria was inspired by the experience and, shortly thereafter, decided to run for Congress. Despite being a political longshot - she received no major endorsements and was outspent nearly 10 to 1 by her opponent - Alexandria won her primary challenge on June 26, 2018, and went on to win the election, becoming the first woman of color to represent NY-14, and the youngest woman in history to serve in Congress.