Harley Rouda

Last updated

Harley Rouda
Rep. Rouda Official Portrait.jpg
Member of the U.S.HouseofRepresentatives
from California's 48th district
In office
January 3, 2019 January 3, 2021
Spouse
(m. 1990)
Children4
Education University of Kentucky (BA)
Capital University (JD)
Ohio State University (MBA)

Harley Edwin Rouda Jr. (born December 10, 1961) is an American attorney, businessman and politician who served as the U.S. representative for California's 48th congressional district from 2019 to 2021. [1] He was the first Democrat to represent the district, which encompasses southwestern coastal portions of Orange County including the cities of Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.

Contents

Rouda first ran for office in the 2018 election, when he defeated 15-term Republican incumbent Dana Rohrabacher. [2] He was defeated for reelection by Orange County Supervisor Michelle Steel in 2020. [3] After considering running for Congress in the 2022 elections, Rouda announced he would not seek any public office that cycle.[ citation needed ]

On January 11, 2023, Rouda announced his candidacy for California's 47th congressional district , the House seat to be vacated by incumbent Katie Porter. [4] [5] Three months later Rouda announced he was ending his campaign, citing a "concerning diagnosis." [6]

Early life and education

Rouda was born December 10, 1961, in Columbus, Ohio, [7] the son of Marlese Rouda and the late Harley Edwin Rouda. [8]

Rouda received his Bachelor of Science from the University of Kentucky in 1984, where he was a member of Delta Tau Delta social fraternity. He also earned a Juris Doctor from Capital University Law School in 1986 and Master of Business Administration from Ohio State University in 2002. [9] [10]

Career

Following passage of the Ohio bar examination, Rouda worked at the law firm of Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP in Columbus, Ohio until 1990. [11] He later left the firm to join his family business, HER Realtors, and eventually served as CEO of Trident Holdings, the parent company of HER Realtors. [12]

Early political career

Rouda says he was raised in a "traditional Republican household." [2] He was a registered Republican until 1997, when he left the party and became an independent because he felt the Republican Party had been moving in the "wrong direction" on social issues. [13] Rouda says the last Republican he voted for was Bob Dole in the 1996 presidential election. He switched his party affiliation to the Democratic Party after the 2016 election. [2] Shortly before registering as a Democrat, Rouda donated to the John Kasich 2016 presidential campaign. Kasich would suspend his campaign shortly before he was defeated by Donald Trump in the California primaries. Due to these donations, he was criticized by Democrats as insufficiently loyal to the party or being a "Republican in disguise" during the campaign, [14] to which Rouda responded, “we gave … because they are personal friends – not because he is someone who I share a political ideology with – and because I wanted to stop Donald Trump and his divisive campaign.” [15]

U.S. House of Representatives

Elections

2018

On March 2, 2017, Rouda announced his candidacy for U.S. Representative from California's 48th congressional district , challenging the incumbent, Dana Rohrabacher, shortly after changing his party registration from no party preference into a Democrat. [11] His primary opponent, Hans Keirstead, was endorsed by the Democratic Party of California at the party convention. [16] Rouda received the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee endorsement in May 2018. [17] In the nonpartisan blanket primary election, Rouda secured the second spot over Keirstead on the ballot by 125 votes (from a total of 174,024), thus allowing him to face Rohrabacher in the general election. [18]

On October 25, Michael Bloomberg announced he would be supporting Rouda's campaign by donating $4 million to his PAC, Independence USA. That made Rouda's race against Rohrabacher the most expensive House race in the 2018 election cycle. [19]

On November 6, the election was too close to call, as Rouda held a narrow lead over Rohrabacher. [20] As mail-in votes were counted, Rouda's lead expanded, [21] and the Associated Press called the race in his favor on November 10. [22]

2020

Rouda ran for reelection and faced off against the Republican challenger, Orange County supervisor Michelle Steel, [23] during the general election on November 3, 2020. Steel ultimately defeated Rouda, garnering 51.1% of the vote to Rouda's 48.9%. [24] [25] Immediately after his loss, Rouda announced he would run against Steel again in 2022. [26]

Rouda missed federally mandated deadlines for reporting that his wife traded stocks while he was in office. The missed reporting appeared to violate the STOCK Act, which is designed to combat insider trading. [27] [28]

2022

After conceding the election, Rouda had announced that he would challenge Steel in 2022. [26] However, new congressional maps going into effect for the 2022 cycle placed the homes of Rouda, Steel and two-term Democratic Representative Katie Porter in the same district, now numbered the 47th district. When Porter announced her intention to run in the 47th district, [29] Steel chose to run in the new 45th district. [30]

After initially announcing his intent to challenge Porter, [31] Rouda dropped out of the race in January 2022. [32] Rouda formed a political action committee, Join Together PAC, to support the election of moderate Democrats, such as Katrina Foley of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. [33]

2024

After incumbent representative Katie Porter announced that she would not be running reelection to the House in the 47th district, instead opting to run in the 2024 United States Senate election in California, Rouda announced that he would run for the seat in the 2024 elections. [34] However, on April 11, 2023, Rouda announced his withdrawal from the race, citing a traumatic brain injury he received following a fall. [6]

Committee assignments

Caucus memberships

Electoral history

California's 48th congressional district election, 2018 [35] [36]
Primary election
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Dana Rohrabacher (incumbent)52,73730.3
Democratic Harley Rouda30,09917.3
Democratic Hans Keirstead 29,97417.2
Republican Scott Baugh 27,51415.8
Democratic Omar Siddiqui8,6585.0
Republican John Gabbard5,6643.3
Democratic Rachel Payne (withdrawn)3,5982.1
Republican Paul Martin2,8931.7
Republican Shastina Sandman2,7621.6
Democratic Michael Kotick (withdrawn)2,6061.5
Democratic Laura Oatman (withdrawn)2,4121.4
Democratic Deanie Schaarsmith1,4330.8
Democratic Tony Zarkades1,2810.7
Libertarian Brandon Reiser9640.6
Republican Stelian Onufrei (withdrawn)7390.4
No party preference Kevin Kensinger6900.4
Total votes174,024 100.0
General election
Democratic Harley Rouda 157,837 53.6
Republican Dana Rohrabacher (incumbent)136,89946.4
Total votes294,736 100.0
Democratic gain from Republican
2020 California's 48th congressional district primary results by county supervisorial district
Map legend
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Rouda--50-60%
Rouda--40-50% 2020CA48primary.svg
2020 California's 48th congressional district primary results by county supervisorial district
Map legend
  •   Rouda—50–60%
  •   Rouda—40–50%
California's 48th congressional district , 2020
Primary election
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic Harley Rouda (incumbent)99,65946.7
Republican Michelle Steel 74,41834.9
Republican Brian Burley25,88412.1
American Independent Richard Mata5,7042.7
Republican John Thomas Schuesler4,9002.3
Republican James Brian Griffin2,7141.3
Total votes213,279 100.0
General election
Republican Michelle Steel 196,208 50.9
Democratic Harley Rouda (incumbent)189,23549.1
Total votes385,443 100.0
Republican gain from Democratic

Personal life

Rouda and author Kaira Rouda (née Sturdivant) have been married since 1990. They have four children. They moved to California after Rouda sold the family firm. [2]

Rouda has been heavily critical of fellow Congress member Katie Porter. In her recent memoir I Swear: Politics is Messier Than My Minivan, Porter stated that Rouda mistook her for a valet and made heavy real estate purchases in D.C. In response, Rouda published an opinion piece on the Orange County Register criticizing Porter for her mischaracterizations of him and his family. He has referred to Porter as "a bully with a whiteboard" and has called on voters to vote for anyone in the 2024 California Senate Primary other than her. [37]

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References

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U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the  U.S. House of Representatives
from California's 48th congressional district

2019–2021
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former US Representative Order of precedence of the United States
as Former US Representative
Succeeded byas Former US Representative