Leroy M. Garcia Jr.[1] is an American politician who served in the Colorado Senate from the 3rd district, from 2019 to 2022, as a member of the Democratic Party. He served as the president of the state senate from 2019 until his 2022 resignation to join the Department of Defense and previously served as the Minority Leader from 2018 to 2019. Before his tenure in the state senate, he served in the Colorado House of Representatives from the 46th district from 2013 to 2015 and on the city council in Pueblo, Colorado.
Garcia was selected to serve as the assistant minority leader before switching positions with Minority Leader Lucía Guzmán and was later selected to serve as president of the state senate. An unsuccessful attempt was made to call a recall against him, but the petitioners only submitted four signatures.
Garcia served on the Appropriations, and Agriculture, Natural Resources and Energy committees during his tenure in the Colorado Senate.[18] He is a member of the Democratic Latino Caucus.[19] He served as acting governor in 2019, while Governor Polis was outside of Colorado due to a meeting of the National Governors Association and Lieutenant Governor Dianne Primavera was in Pennsylvania.[20]
He was selected to serve as the assistant minority leader on November 10, 2016.[21] Senator Lucía Guzmán resigned as Minority Leader, stating that she could not work with the Republican leadership in the state senate on sexual harassment issues, and Garcia was selected to replace her, with Senator Rhonda Fields being the only vote against him, while Guzmán was selected to replace him as assistant minority leader.[22] He was selected to serve as president of the state senate on November 8, 2018, becoming the first Hispanic person to hold the position, and reelected to the position in 2020.[23][24][25] Garcia announced on February 3, 2022, that he would resign from the state senate, with his resignation taking effect on February 23, to become special assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Manpower and Reserve Affairs.[26]Steve Fenberg was selected to succeed him on February 22.[27]
Alexander Armijo won $25,000 in a lawsuit against Garcia stating that Garcia had violated his First Amendment rights by blocking him on Facebook.[31] The state paid for the $25,000 and Garcia's legal fees which cost $2,030.[32]
Political positions
Garcia stated that it was "a shameful affront to both the victims who have come forward and those subjected to harassment in workplaces across the country" after an attempt to expel Senator Randy Baumgardner due to sexual harassment allegations failed.[33]
In 2013, the Colorado House of Representatives voted thirty-four to thirty one, with Garcia against, in favor of two pieces of legislation which prohibited high-capacity ammunition magazines from having more than fifteen rounds and which prohibited concealed carry on college campuses.[34] Garcia was one of four Democrats to sponsor legislation to repeal the limit on high-capacity ammunition magazine sizes in 2015.[35] In 2019, the state senate voted eighteen to seventeen, with Garcia as the only Democrat voting against, in favor of red flag legislation.[36][37]
Garcia and six other Hispanic members of the Colorado General Assembly sent a letter to President Donald Trump asking him to maintain the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy.[38] Garcia opposed Trump's attempt to add a citizenship question to the 2020 United States census, stating that it would lead to an inaccurate census that would reduce federal funding for Colorado and could prevent the state from gaining a congressional district.[39]
In 2016, the state house voted fifty-five to nine, with Garcia in favor, in favor of legislation that required the Public Employees' Retirement Association to remove investments from foreign companies if they supported boycotts of Israel. The board of directors of the Public Employees' Retirement Association opposed the legislation as they did not want their investment decisions to influenced by politics, and the American Civil Liberties Union opposed it, stating that it was a violation of freedom of speech.[40][41]
He received an A rating from NARAL Pro-Choice America.[45] The Disabled American Veterans Department of Colorado named him as the legislator of the year in 2017.[46] He and nine other Democratic members of the state senate received a 100% score from the AFL–CIO in 2018.[47] Garcia was the only Democratic member of the state senate to not receive a 100% rating from Conservation Colorado in 2019.[48]
Electoral history
2012 Colorado House of Representatives 46th district Democratic primary[6]