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Quick Facts
Personal Details

Caucuses/Former Committees

Chair, Congressional Buy American Caucus

Co-Chair, Congressional Land Conservation Caucus

Staff, Connecticut State Senate Democratic Caucus

Former Member, East Asia, the Pacific, and International Cybersecurity Policy Subcommittee, United States Senate

Former Member, Employment and Workplace Safety Subcommittee, United States Senate

Former Member, Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies, United States Senate

Former Member, Subcommittee on Legislative Branch, United States Senate

Former Member, Subcommittee on Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies, United States Senate

Former Member, Subcommittee on State Department and USAID Management, International Operations, and Bilateral International Development, United States Senate

Education

  • JD, University of Connecticut School of Law, 2002
  • BA, History, Political Science, Williams College, 1996
  • Attended, Exeter College, Oxford, England, 1994-1995

Professional Experience

  • JD, University of Connecticut School of Law, 2002
  • BA, History, Political Science, Williams College, 1996
  • Attended, Exeter College, Oxford, England, 1994-1995
  • Former Employee, Connecticut State Senator George Jepsen
  • Real Estate/Banking Attorney, Ruben, Johnson, and Morgan, Practicing Consultants, 2002-2006
  • Campaign Manager, Charlotte Koskoff United States House of Representatives Campaign, 1996

Political Experience

  • JD, University of Connecticut School of Law, 2002
  • BA, History, Political Science, Williams College, 1996
  • Attended, Exeter College, Oxford, England, 1994-1995
  • Former Employee, Connecticut State Senator George Jepsen
  • Real Estate/Banking Attorney, Ruben, Johnson, and Morgan, Practicing Consultants, 2002-2006
  • Campaign Manager, Charlotte Koskoff United States House of Representatives Campaign, 1996
  • Senator, United States Senate, 2012-present
  • Caucus Whip, Connecticut State Senate
  • Candidate, United States Senate, Connecticut, District Jr, 2018
  • Representative, United States House of Representatives, 2007-2012
  • Senator, Connecticut State Senate, 2003-2006
  • Assistant Majority Leader, Connecticut State Senate, 2006
  • Representative, Connecticut General Assembly, 1998-2002

Former Committees/Caucuses

Chair, Congressional Buy American Caucus

Co-Chair, Congressional Land Conservation Caucus

Staff, Connecticut State Senate Democratic Caucus

Former Member, East Asia, the Pacific, and International Cybersecurity Policy Subcommittee, United States Senate

Former Member, Employment and Workplace Safety Subcommittee, United States Senate

Former Member, Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies, United States Senate

Former Member, Subcommittee on State Department and USAID Management, International Operations, and Bilateral International Development, United States Senate

Current Legislative Committees

Member, Committee on Appropriations

Member, Committee on Foreign Relations

Member, Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions

Member, Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health Policy

Member, Subcommittee on Children and Families

Member, Subcommittee on Europe and Regional Security Cooperation

Chair, Subcommittee on Homeland Security

Member, Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies

Member, Subcommittee on Legislative Branch

Chair, Subcommittee on Near East, South Asia, Central Asia, and Counterterrorism

Member, Subcommittee on Primary Health and Retirement Security

Member, Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs

Member, Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies

Religious, Civic, and other Memberships

  • JD, University of Connecticut School of Law, 2002
  • BA, History, Political Science, Williams College, 1996
  • Attended, Exeter College, Oxford, England, 1994-1995
  • Former Employee, Connecticut State Senator George Jepsen
  • Real Estate/Banking Attorney, Ruben, Johnson, and Morgan, Practicing Consultants, 2002-2006
  • Campaign Manager, Charlotte Koskoff United States House of Representatives Campaign, 1996
  • Senator, United States Senate, 2012-present
  • Caucus Whip, Connecticut State Senate
  • Candidate, United States Senate, Connecticut, District Jr, 2018
  • Representative, United States House of Representatives, 2007-2012
  • Senator, Connecticut State Senate, 2003-2006
  • Assistant Majority Leader, Connecticut State Senate, 2006
  • Representative, Connecticut General Assembly, 1998-2002
  • Member, Southington Planning and Zoning Commission, 1997-1998

Other Info

Favorite Book:

This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald, What It Takes by Richard Ben Cramer, Dutch by Edmund Morris, anything by G.B. Shaw

Favorite Movie:

The Natural; Dazed and Confused; Star Wars; Kicking and Screaming (not the Will Ferrell version); Hoosiers

Favorite Musician:

Arcade Fire; Phoenix; Greg Laswell; Royskopp; Seal; Mike and Mechanics; Lady Antebellum

Favorite TV Shows:

DVR'ing 30 Rock, Parks and Recreation, The Office, Modern Family, Family Guy, American Experience, The Newshour, and Lost

Hobbies or Special Talents:

hiking and backpacking, playing tennis and golf, and obsessively following the Red Sox, NY Giants, and UConn basketball

  • 1 Cat: Ramona

Spouse's Occupation:

Attorney

Policy Positions

2021

Abortion

Do you generally support pro-choice or pro-life legislation?
- Pro-choice

Budget

1. In order to balance the budget, do you support an income tax increase on any tax bracket?
- Yes

2. In order to balance the budget, do you support reducing defense spending?
- No

Campaign Finance

Do you support the regulation of indirect campaign contributions from corporations and unions?
- Yes

Economy

1. Do you support federal spending as a means of promoting economic growth?
- Yes

2. Do you support lowering corporate taxes as a means of promoting economic growth?
- No

Education

Do you support requiring states to adopt federal education standards?
- Unknown Position

Energy & Environment

1. Do you support government funding for the development of renewable energy (e.g. solar, wind, thermal)?
- Yes

2. Do you support the federal regulation of greenhouse gas emissions?
- Yes

Guns

Do you generally support gun-control legislation?
- Yes

Health Care

Do you support repealing the 2010 Affordable Care Act ("Obamacare")?
- No

Immigration

1. Do you support the construction of a wall along the Mexican border?
- No

2. Do you support requiring immigrants who are unlawfully present to return to their country of origin before they are eligible for citizenship?
- No

Marijuana

Do you support the legalization of marijuana for recreational purposes?
- Unknown Position

National Security

1. Should the United States use military force in order to prevent governments hostile to the U.S. from possessing a nuclear weapon?
- Unknown Position

2. Do you support increased American intervention in Middle Eastern conflicts beyond air support?
- No

Congress Bills
Endorsements
Connecticut Democratic Party
Connecticut Citizen Action Group
National Organization for Women
Speeches

Executive Calendar

Apr. 27, 2021Floor Speech
Articles

Yahoo Sports - Big-Time College Sports Aren't Amateur-Covid-19 Has Proved It

Jan. 27, 2021

By U.S. Senator Chris Murphy (Editor's note: Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat, wrote this op-ed to make the case for athlete compensation and collective bargaining rights.) In retrospect, it seems quaint to think that the 2020-21 college football and basketball seasons wouldn't be played. Even as COVID-19 spread like wildfire through college campuses, big-time college sports could not be stopped. Even as games got canceled and postponed left and right, college sports could not be stopped. Even when Big Ten and Pac-12 leaders tried to put the health of their athletes first, college sports could not be stopped. The $15 billion industry, and the millions of dollars in profit made by adults off the free labor of students, had to go on. No matter the cost. Big-time college football and basketball haven't been "amateur" for a long time. The product on the field and court is as good as the pros. The profits are comparable. The stadiums and practice facilities, frankly, are often bigger or more extravagant than anything found in the professional leagues. College sports has looked like professional sports for a while. But in 2020, with many schools keeping their non-athlete students at home out of safety concerns while putting athletes at risk, it became clear as day that the only thing separating professional sports from college sports is that one group of predominantly black players gets paid handsomely to risk their health while the other group of predominantly black players gets paid nothing -- with all the profits going to almost exclusively white millionaire coaches, athletic directors and sports industry leaders. If colleges are going to treat their athletes as commodities, then it's time for the law to catch up. As we begin a new Congress and a new era of Democratic control in Washington, now is the time to finally address the long-standing inequities that have been endemic in college sports. Doing so will require not just an expansion of economic rights of college athletes, but a wholesale overhaul of the bargaining rights that the NCAA has long denied in the name of "amateurism." First, we need to lift restrictions on how college athletes make money off their own name, image and likeness. It's crazy that Nick Saban can make millions by appearing in non-stop Aflac commercials, but if his star players did the same, they would be banned from college sports. I'll be introducing legislation that gives college athletes the right to make money off their talent, and I won't support legislation that puts the NCAA in charge of regulating this right. Putting the NCAA -- the group that has the most to lose from generous college athlete endorsement deals -- in charge of these endorsement deals would effectively render the right meaningless. If coaches can have unrestricted endorsement rights, so should students. The world won't end, like all the adults making money off the kids' free labor claim. Second, we need to finally recognize athletes for who they really are: employees. A model that respects college athletes also means ensuring they can receive a fair share of the revenues they generate and finally have the baseline academic and health protections the NCAA has denied them. To get there, college athletes need collective bargaining rights, and this spring I will introduce a second bill that grants athletes these rights. The NCAA has successfully made this fact the third rail of reform. The NCAA says that no matter what, athletes are not and can never be considered employees. But they are employees. They provide a valuable service; they receive compensation in the form of scholarships; and they lose that compensation if they refuse to do the job. What a gift to their employers that this set of highly valuable employees, performing labor that in a free market would earn million dollar salaries, are not allowed to join together to bargain for a share of the profits and safe working conditions. Despite the NCAA's claims, sports fans won't suddenly stop caring about their home state team just because the exploitation of the players ends. I'm a huge college sports fan, and frankly, I will enjoy watching a UConn basketball game more if I know all that the players and their families aren't going hungry while the coaches pull down multi-million dollar contracts. With Democratic control in the Senate, House and the White House, Congress now has a chance to finally recognize the professionalization of college sports by opening up the endorsement rights of athletes as well as asserting their right to organize. In doing so, we'll address a civil rights crisis that has existed for far too long. We can't waste this opportunity.

ForeignPolicy.com - America Must Reclaim the Global Lead on Climate Change

Jan. 19, 2021

By Senator Chris Murphy Sometimes seismic change has an unlikely beginning. Back in 2007, American diplomats stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing were worried about the air they were breathing. It was no secret that Beijing had truly abysmal air quality, but few trusted the Chinese government's publicly available pollution reports. So the embassy staff did something that seemed innocuous at the time: They installed a pollution monitor on the roof of the embassy to measure the local air quality and started tweeting the results. All the Twitter account was meant to do was help U.S. citizens based in Beijing figure out when it was safe for their children to be outdoors. It ended up pushing a superpower to the table to collaborate with the United States on climate policy. Chinese citizens quickly noticed that the measurements tweeted by the U.S. Embassy didn't match the rosier figures published by the Chinese government. Pollution was off the charts in Beijing, caused mainly by the power plants and heavy industry driving the Chinese economy. At first, Chinese officials complained about the account and blocked access to Twitter throughout China, but the embassy continued to publish the air-quality measurements. Many Chinese now had public proof that the air they were breathing was deeply unsafe. The public outcry sparked by a trustworthy, fact-based U.S. Twitter account helped pave the way for the United States and China to begin working together to address climate issues. China's government pledged to dramatically cut down on the air pollution choking its cities and pursue a regional carbon-capping system. In 2013, China made its first set of climate commitments in tandem with the United States, followed by another set of pledges in 2014 to peak its emissions and help land an international climate accord. Although China is still responsible for almost 30 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions, these breakthroughs set the stage for a global coalition to fight climate change culminating in the 2015 Paris Agreement. Of course, outgoing U.S. President Donald Trump abandoned this agreement, and the United States officially pulled out on Nov. 4, 2020. Fortunately, President-elect Joe Biden will rejoin as soon as he takes office. The landmark Paris Agreement was made possible, in part, because the United States installed a few thousand dollars' worth of air-monitoring equipment on the roof of a building in Beijing and shared the information freely. That small action helped bring the world's largest emitter of carbon pollution into the fight against climate change, which had long been a goal of the United States. It's a reminder that U.S. influence, when deployed smartly, can be a force for global change. And there are few areas right now where principled U.S. leadership is needed more urgently than on climate change. Since I arrived in the U.S. Senate, I have been arguing for the need to reconfigure the U.S. foreign-policy toolkit to match the actual security threats our nation faces today. The United States is not likely to be subject to a conventional military attack. Though we still need to manage the rise of China and counter the Kremlin's provocations, the modern threats to our security will not likely come from a foreign army. The most menacing 21st-century enemies won't be nation-states, but propaganda artists, hackers, pandemic diseases, shadowy and ever-changing non-state extremist groups, and--yes--the droughts, storms, and rising seas caused by a rapidly changing climate. There are few areas right now where principled U.S. leadership is needed more urgently than on climate change. Rebuilding the U.S. foreign-policy toolkit to equip the Biden administration with the resources to meet these threats will be a major endeavor. Our prior obsession with conventional military buildup must be matched by a new obsession for creating a more diverse set of cards--beyond military deployments and arms sales--that a U.S. president can play to protect our interests. This buildup of smart power can--and must--begin by giving the Biden administration the ability to rebuild the global consensus around the implementation of the Paris Agreement. Climate change is one of the few existential global security issues, and thus Congress must act quickly to put the new president in a position to quickly reverse the damage done to worldwide carbon-emission reductions by the Trump administration. Here are five places we can start. First, Congress can restore the United States' commitment to the Green Climate Fund, providing the funding to meet the nation's original 2014 pledge of $3 billion, and then putting us on a schedule to double that amount by the end of the administration. The United States helped create the Green Climate Fund in order to help poorer countries invest in climate solutions, and it's the best way for us to both drive climate action overseas and leverage substantial additional dollars from other partner governments. After the trauma of the last four years, the world is rightly wary of following the United States' lead on climate policy, afraid of having the rug pulled out once again. The full funding of the Green Climate Fund will serve as a highly visible and tangible signal that the United States is back in the game. Second, Congress should ensure that, from now on, foreign policy is climate policy. Whether we're talking about national defense, promoting U.S. exports, or alleviating global poverty, climate considerations should play a role in every policy and spending decision the United States makes overseas. We cannot indefinitely afford to be promoting fossil-fuel development and green energy overseas at the same time. This would be a big shift that Congress can help make a reality by mandating that our foreign-policy agencies adopt climate as a central, guiding principle--and by keeping a close eye on the process.Congress can help make this shift a reality by mandating that our foreign-policy agencies adopt climate as a central, guiding principle. No domain is larger than that of the Department of Defense. The nation's military accounted for over three-quarters of all U.S. government carbon emissions. If it were a country, the U.S. military would be the 55th-largest carbon emitter on the planet. Fortunately, the Pentagon already recognizes climate change as a catastrophic national security threat. Sober assessments predict mass migration, more complex emergencies, new wars over water resources, and chaos brought on by state collapse in places such as Nigeria and Pakistan. Climate change also threatens military readiness; a 2019 Pentagon report raised several alarms, including that wildfires, sea-level rise, desertification, and storms are increasingly damaging defense installations across the country. Military leaders have taken some steps in the right direction. The Navy invested in fuel cell parks to save money and energy, while the Air Force is developing deployable, self-sustaining power systems that could revolutionize combat logistics. But to no one's surprise, Trump muzzled these efforts and ended U.S. leadership on greening the military. Congress can get things back on track by including language in the annual Defense Authorization Act directing the Department of Defense to invest heavily in energy savings and renewable energy sources for domestic military installations, massively expand research into energy technologies that would reduce vulnerable logistics chains supplying remote forward operating bases, and launch a new military-to-military green cooperation program to train and advise our allies on how they can follow suit. Making the military green is a no-brainer: It saves money, saves our planet, and saves lives. Similarly, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) need changes both large and small. At the top, both agencies need a senior-level official responsible for coordinating climate policy and ensuring that climate issues are integrated at the upper echelons of strategic decision-making. At the ground level, we need to start regularly training our foreign-service officers on climate policy and building career incentives to encourage diplomats to become climate experts. We also need to change the way USAID missions work so that we're not spending foreign-aid dollars without factoring in climate risks on the front end. Climate should be at the heart of our bilateral outreach to partner countries so that it forms the basis for U.S. cooperation overseas. Third, economic statecraft needs to be as green as our assistance. We must change climate governance structures in places where most people don't look when they think of foreign policy--such as the Treasury Department, where much of our financial and economic diplomacy is actually conducted. China is eating our lunch by financing green-energy projects from Argentina to Scotland. The Development Finance Corporation is making inroads in fighting back through investing in solar and has a new authorization to invest in European energy independence projects. We need to supercharge this fund and clarify that energy independence does not just mean divesting from Russia; it means divesting from carbon. Similarly, the Millennium Challenge Corporation is already making headway with climate-sensitive solar projects in Indonesia and Benin. Both agencies must prioritize and fast-track their climate work. As China faces a well-deserved backlash overseas, the United States needs to be there with our diplomacy and dollars.When Congress passes much needed economic stimulus, let's make it a green stimulus. Fourth, in the wake of Trump's counterproductive trade wars, we need to move in the opposite direction when it comes to clean energy technology. Rather than throwing up trade barriers and tariffs, we should be making it easier for the world to buy green technologies from us. Exporting U.S.-made green technologies will help countries meet global climate goals while creating millions of jobs for Americans in the process. There's been years' worth of talk about pursuing an agreement on global environmental goods, but it's never had strong leadership from the United States. America wins when it leads the world in next-generation technologies--but falling backwards into protectionist policies on clean energy will only make that harder. We should also double the Export-Import Bank Environment Export Financing, with a focus on helping small and medium-sized companies reach the world's markets. While the U.S. technology sector is second to none, we need to up our game in industrial green research and development through innovative public-private partnerships--for instance, by expanding the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy program. The fifth and final thing we must do is lead by example every step of the way. During the last four years, as our federal government abandoned our global responsibilities, our cities and states have kept up the fight. Over 300 U.S. cities pledged to maintain our Paris commitments. For years, my home state of Connecticut has led the way with innovation, participating in a multi-state carbon trading program known as the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative and creating the nation's first green bank in 2011, an incredibly successful effort to leverage private financing to reduce carbon emissions that I am seeking to replicate across the country. Let's continue to take advantage of our federal structure and encourage U.S. cities and states to innovate. On the federal level, we need to undo the Trump administration's efforts to weaken emissions standards for power plants and cars, the latter of which major car manufacturers are fighting to maintain. And when Congress finally rises to the moment and passes much needed economic stimulus, let's make it a green stimulus. The European Union has invested 20 percent of its stimulus in climate-related projects--we can beat that. And yes, the new Congress must take on the Green New Deal. We can't afford not to be bold: The world is watching. The bottom line is that we can't expect to lead the world if we don't pass our own ambitious climate legislation. And we can't lead the world with green technology if we don't align market incentives at home to make that leadership possible. Think back to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, and the vast changes wrought by its rooftop pollution monitor. The tables have turned since then, in a rather dispiriting fashion. Now the United States is the global laggard in climate action, while China is getting reams of credit for announcing new climate pledges. It doesn't have to be this way--and Biden, with support from Congress, needs to make sure it no longer is. We've had four years of head-in-the-sand U.S. foreign policy across the board. This has been particularly dangerous when it comes to the Trump administration's climate policy, as the window for reducing emissions and averting the most cataclysmic outcome for the planet is shrinking. Biden can now align our moral leadership, trade dollars, and foreign aid to put our country, and the world, back on the right track and restore faith in the United States as a nation whose lead is worth following.

The New York Times - Require a Background Check on Every Gun Purchase in America

Dec. 4, 2020

By Chris Murphy We are a nation awash in gun violence. Every day, roughly 100 Americans die from a gunshot wound. If you are a citizen of this country, you are 10 times more likely to be killed by a gun than someone living in another high-income nation. But the problem is much deeper than just the casualty numbers. In neighborhoods with high gun murder rates, studies show that children's brain chemistry can be changed by the constant fear of physical harm, rendering it difficult for them to learn and cope. This epidemic of gun violence is a choice. We know how to reduce this carnage, but we live with a policy paralysis caused by a small industry with outsized political power. For the past 30 years, the gun lobby has successfully blocked action to reduce gun violence. But thankfully, their power is quickly fading, and Congress is closer than ever to passing lifesaving reforms. There is no single law change that will prevent every gun death or mass shooting. But the data points to one particular intervention with an eye-popping return on investment. Passing a national requirement that no gun be sold without the purchaser passing a background check will save thousands of lives. States that have already implemented universal background checks, including my home state of Connecticut, have seen significant drops in gun homicides. Federal law already requires anyone who buys a gun at a firearms store to undergo a background check -- a process that usually takes less than two minutes. This helps keep weapons out of the hands of convicted felons, domestic abusers and anyone a court deems dangerously mentally ill. But people who buy guns online, at a gun show or through a private seller don't have to pass a background check. This begs for a national solution, because no state can adequately protect itself. A recent study showed that in New York, a state with a strict background checks requirement, three-quarters of the guns used in crimes were bought in states with weaker gun laws. The good news is that a federal universal background law is wildly popular. More than 90 percent of all Americans support this approach, including 85 percent of gun owners and an overwhelming majority of N.R.A. members. That makes universal background checks more popular than baseball or apple pie (in some polls, at least). By making this simple and urgently needed change in law, Congress can save thousands of lives.

Funding
10,447,106 6,989,101 8,242,722 0

Financial Summary March 7, 2024 14:29 ET

Period Receipts Disbursements CashOnHand DebtsLoans
10,447,106 6,989,101 8,242,722 0
10,447,106 6,989,101 8,242,722 0
Source:Federal Election Commission
Total Raised
Total receipts$7,914,453.12
Total receipts$7,914,453.12
Total contributions$7,513,408.3694.93%
Total contributions$7,513,408.3694.93%
Total individual contributions$7,471,408.36
Total individual contributions$7,471,408.36
Itemized individual contributions$5,359,367.69
Itemized individual contributions$5,359,367.69
Unitemized individual contributions$2,112,040.67
Unitemized individual contributions$2,112,040.67
Party committee contributions$0.00
Party committee contributions$0.00
Other committee contributions$42,000.00
Other committee contributions$42,000.00
Candidate contributions$0.00
Candidate contributions$0.00
Transfers from other authorized committees$150,253.761.9%
Transfers from other authorized committees$150,253.761.9%
Total loans received$0.000%
Total loans received$0.000%
Loans made by candidate$0.00
Loans made by candidate$0.00
Other loans$0.00
Other loans$0.00
Offsets to operating expenditures$18,075.110.23%
Offsets to operating expenditures$18,075.110.23%
Other receipts$232,715.892.94%
Other receipts$232,715.892.94%
Total Spent
Total disbursements$3,604,624.67
Total disbursements$3,604,624.67
Operating expenditures$3,472,702.0196.34%
Operating expenditures$3,472,702.0196.34%
Transfers to other authorized committees$2,360.000.07%
Transfers to other authorized committees$2,360.000.07%
Total contribution refunds$105,020.062.91%
Total contribution refunds$105,020.062.91%
Individual refunds$104,995.06
Individual refunds$104,995.06
Political party refunds$0.00
Political party refunds$0.00
Other committee refunds$25.00
Other committee refunds$25.00
Total loan repayments$0.000%
Total loan repayments$0.000%
Candidate loan repayments$0.00
Candidate loan repayments$0.00
Other loan repayments$0.00
Other loan repayments$0.00
Other disbursements$24,542.600.68%
Other disbursements$24,542.600.68%
Cash Summary
Ending cash on hand$8,242,722.25
Ending cash on hand$8,242,722.25
Debts/loans owed to committee$0.00
Debts/loans owed to committee$0.00
Debts/loans owed by committee$0.00
Debts/loans owed by committee$0.00
Events

2020

Jun. 25
Our Lives on the Line: ACA Under Attack

Thur 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM EDT