Daniel P. Gordon

American politician (1969–2017) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daniel Peter Gordon Jr. (April 12, 1969 – March 25, 2017) was an American politician and construction contractor. Gordon was a Libertarian member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives. Gordon was elected as a Republican Representative in November 2010 for the 71st District, defeating Democratic candidate George S. Alzaibak.

Succeeded byDennis Canario
Born(1969-04-12)April 12, 1969
DiedMarch 25, 2017(2017-03-25) (aged 47)[1]
Quick facts Member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives from the 71st district, Preceded by ...
Daniel P. Gordon Jr.
Member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives
from the 71st district
In office
January 4, 2011  January 4, 2013
Preceded byJohn J. Loughlin, Jr.
Succeeded byDennis Canario
Personal details
Born(1969-04-12)April 12, 1969
DiedMarch 25, 2017(2017-03-25) (aged 47)[1]
PartyRepublican (until 2011)
Libertarian (2011–2017)
Alma materMarine Corps Institute
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Marine Corps
Years of service1987–1991
Close

In September 2011 he was expelled from the Republican caucus for allegedly making derogatory comments about other Republicans online.[2] Gordon changed his party affiliation from Republican to Libertarian, becoming the only Libertarian Party member in any United States legislature during that time.

Background

Gordon was born in Bristol, Pennsylvania. He served in the United States Marine Corps.[3]

Rhode Island House of Representatives

2010 Election

Gordon decided to run as a Republican for Rhode Island's 71st house district, based in Jamestown, Portsmouth, and Little Compton, when Republican State Representative John J. Loughlin, Jr. retired from that position to run for Rhode Island's 1st congressional district, which had been vacated by retiring Democrat U.S. Congressman Patrick J. Kennedy.

Gordon became the Republican nominee and narrowly defeated Democratic nominee George Alzaibak 50.4–49.6%, a difference of just 47 votes.[4][5]

Controversies

In March 2011, he received media attention over a controversial comment on an online article reporting that Tiverton High School started the school's first Gay-Straight Alliance. His comment read "And this is why if I have anything to say about it, Tiverton will lose school funding to local charter schools. It doesn't matter if gay or straight, if sexual meet-up groups are being promoted in our schools rather than improving test scores, that school is failing. Is it really more important for our children to get 'sexed-up', than learning advanced math?". [6][7]

On September 16, 2011, Gordon was arrested on a Massachusetts warrant for failure to appear in court.[7] This arose from an incident in 2008 in which, allegedly, a Massachusetts state trooper attempted to stop Gordon for driving erratically and Gordon fled in his car, eventually being apprehended on a dead-end street. Gordon was charged with leaving the lane of travel, failing to stop for the police, driving an unregistered motor vehicle, and driving on a suspended license. He then failed to appear in court in 2008. These charges were dismissed after Gordon paid $1000 and spent a year on probation. [8][9]

2012 Election

Gordon ran for re-election in the November 6, 2012 election as a Libertarian, but failed to get enough signatures to get on the ballot.[10] He ran as a write-in candidate, but lost the election to Democrat Dennis Canario by a wide margin, thus leaving no Libertarians in any state legislature in the country.[11]

Death

Gordon died on March 25, 2017.[3]

References

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