Ira Ruskin
Prior offices
California State Assembly District 21
Personal
Ira Ruskin is a former Democratic member of the California State Assembly, representing District 21 from 2004 to 2010. He served as Mayor of Redwood City from 1999 to 2001 and on the Redwood City Council from 1995 to 2003.
Biography[edit]
Email editor@ballotpedia.org to notify us of updates to this biography.
Ruskin's professional experience includes owning Ruskin Communications and MRP.
He is a member of the Committee for Green Foothills, Democratic Activists for Women Now, Organization of Chinese Americans Advisory Board - San Mateo County, Redwood City Education Foundation and the Sierra Club.[1]
Committee assignments[edit]
Ruskin served on the following committees:
- Banking and Finance Committee, California General Assembly
- Budget Committee, California General Assembly
- Business and Professions Committee, California General Assembly
- Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials Committee, California General Assembly
- Higher Education Committee, California General Assembly
- Select Committee on Procurement
- Select Committee on Wine
Issues[edit]
Political Courage test[edit]
Ruskin did not provide answers to the California State Legislative Election 2008 Political Courage Test. The test informs voters how a candidate would vote on the issues if elected.[2]
[edit]
Ruskin's sponsored legislation includes:
- AB 19 - Greenhouse gas emissions: consumer product
- AB 226 - Coastal resources: California Coastal Act
- AB 1023 - Renewable energy resources
For details and a full listing of sponsored bills, see the House site.
Elections[edit]
2010[edit]
Ruskin was ineligible to run for re-election in 2010 due to the term limits of the California State Assembly.
2008[edit]
In 2008, Ruskin was re-elected to the California State Assembly District 21. Ruskin (D) finished with 133,856 votes while his opponent Ann Marie Temple (R) finished with 54,849 votes.
| California State Assembly District 21
|
| Candidates
|
Votes
|
Ira Ruskin (D)
|
133,856
|
| Ann Marie Temple (R)
|
54,849
|
Campaign donors[edit]
2008[edit]
Below are Ruskin's top five campaign contributors in the 2008 election:[3]
| Contributor
|
2008 total
|
| Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 467
|
$14,400
|
| SEIU California State Council
|
$14,400
|
| Professional Engineers in CA Government
|
$13,200
|
| California State Pipe Trades Council
|
$11,700
|
| California State Council of Laborers
|
$9,200
|
Legislative scorecard[edit]
Capitol Weekly, California's major weekly periodical covering the state legislature, publishes an annual legislative scorecard to pin down the political or ideological leanings of every member of the legislature based on how they voted on an assortment of bills in the most recent legislative session. The 2009 scores were based on votes on 19 bills, but did not include how legislators voted on the Proposition 1A (2009). On the scorecard, "100" is a perfect liberal score and "0" is a perfect conservative score.[4][5]
On the 2009 Capitol Weekly legislative scorecard, Hill ranked as a 94.[6]
Recent news[edit]
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for "Ira + Ruskin + California + Assembly"
See also[edit]
- California State Legislature
- California State Assembly
- California Assembly Committees
- California state legislative districts
External links[edit]
- Official state assembly website of Ira Ruskin
- Legislative profile of Ira Ruskin on Project Vote Smart
- Biographical profile of Ira Ruskin on Project Vote Smart
- Campaign contributions: 2008, 2006, 2004
[edit]
- ↑ Project Vote Smart, "Biography," accessed December 10, 2014
- ↑ Project Vote Smart, "Issue positions," accessed December 10, 2014
- ↑ Follow the Money, "2008 contributions," accessed November 20, 2014
- ↑ Capitol Weekly, "Capitol Weekly's Legislative Scorecard," December 17, 2009
- ↑ Fox and Hounds Daily, "Random Thoughts on the Political Scene," December 18, 2009
- ↑ Capitol Weekly," Downloadable 2009 Capitol Weekly State Legislative Scorecard
| Political offices
|
Preceded by -
|
California State Assembly District 21 2004–2010
|
Succeeded by Rich Gordon
|
[show]
Current members of the California State Assembly
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Anthony Rendon
Majority Leader:Eloise Reyes
Minority Leader:James Gallagher
Representatives
District 1
Megan Dahle (R)
District 3
James Gallagher (R)
District 4
Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D)
District 5
Frank Bigelow (R)
District 6
Kevin Kiley (R)
District 7
Kevin McCarty (D)
District 8
Ken Cooley (D)
District 9
Jim Cooper (D)
District 10
Marc Levine (D)
District 11
Lori Wilson (D)
District 12
Heath Flora (R)
District 13
Carlos Villapudua (D)
District 14
Tim Grayson (D)
District 15
Buffy Wicks (D)
District 16
Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D)
District 17
Matt Haney (D)
District 18
Mia Bonta (D)
District 19
Phil Ting (D)
District 20
Bill Quirk (D)
District 21
Adam Gray (D)
District 22
Kevin Mullin (D)
District 23
Jim Patterson (R)
District 24
Marc Berman (D)
District 26
Devon Mathis (R)
District 27
Ash Kalra (D)
District 29
Mark Stone (D)
District 30
Robert Rivas (D)
District 31
Joaquin Arambula (D)
District 32
Rudy Salas (D)
District 33
Thurston Smith (R)
District 34
Vince Fong (R)
District 35
Jordan Cunningham (R)
District 36
Tom Lackey (R)
District 37
Steve Bennett (D)
District 38
Suzette Valladares (R)
District 39
Luz Rivas (D)
District 40
James Ramos (D)
District 41
Chris Holden (D)
District 42
Chad Mayes (I)
District 43
Laura Friedman (D)
District 44
Jacqui Irwin (D)
District 45
Jesse Gabriel (D)
District 46
Adrin Nazarian (D)
District 47
Eloise Reyes (D)
District 48
Blanca Rubio (D)
District 49
Mike Fong (D)
District 50
Richard Bloom (D)
District 51
Wendy Carrillo (D)
District 52
Freddie Rodriguez (D)
District 53
Miguel Santiago (D)
District 54
Isaac Bryan (D)
District 55
Phillip Chen (R)
District 56
Eduardo Garcia (D)
District 57
Lisa Calderon (D)
District 58
Cristina Garcia (D)
District 59
Reginald Jones-Sawyer (D)
District 60
Sabrina Cervantes (D)
District 61
Jose Medina (D)
District 62
Tina McKinnor (D)
District 63
Anthony Rendon (D)
District 64
Mike Gipson (D)
District 65
Sharon Quirk-Silva (D)
District 66
Al Muratsuchi (D)
District 67
Kelly Seyarto (R)
District 68
Steven Choi (R)
District 70
Patrick O'Donnell (D)
District 71
Randy Voepel (R)
District 72
Janet Nguyen (R)
District 73
Laurie Davies (R)
District 74
Cottie Petrie-Norris (D)
District 75
Marie Waldron (R)
District 76
Tasha Horvath (D)
District 77
Brian Maienschein (D)
District 78
Christopher Ward (D)
District 79
Akilah Weber (D)
District 80
David Alvarez (D)
Democratic Party (60)
Republican Party (19)
Independent (1)
 |
State of California Sacramento (capital) |
| Elections |
What's on my ballot? |
Elections in 2022 |
How to vote |
How to run for office |
Ballot measures
|
|---|
| Government |
Who represents me? |
U.S. President |
U.S. Congress |
Federal courts |
State executives |
State legislature |
State and local courts |
Counties |
Cities |
School districts |
Public policy
|
|---|