Posts Tagged ‘Politics and Governance’

GMA News

CHICAGO, Illinois – A Filipino American running for US Congress may yet save the day for the Filipino Veterans bill pending before the US Congress.

Ohio State Senator Stephen C. Austria is running for US Congress under the Republican Party for the open seat of the 7th District in Ohio.

He will be in the best position to lobby at least 39 US Republican members of the House of Representatives into voting for passage of Senate Bill 1315 in the House.

Part of the bill grants full benefits for non-service disability pensions to Filipino World War II veterans.

His father, the late Dr. Clement G. Austria, was a “guerrilla under (American) Gen. Douglas MacArthur while studying medicine at the University of Santo Tomas,” that was turned into prison camp by Japanese Invading Forces during World War II.

In an email to this reporter, Austria’s wife, Eileen, quoted her mother-in law, Jean Brockman Austria, as saying that her father-in-law was born in Tiaong, Quezon in the Philippines.

When he was still very young, Steve went to the Philippines three times in 1960 and 1961 and spent six weeks in the Philippines shortly after graduating from high school.

Steve’s folk wanted him to stay for good in the Philippines but his mother prevailed upon him to come back to the United States.

Armin M. Sayson, President, Philippine-American Society of Greater Dayton (Ohio), provided this reporter a brief bio-data of Steve Austria given to him by Steve’s wife, Eileen.

Eileen Austria said Stephen Clement Austria was born in 1958 in Cincinnati, Ohio.
His parents are Jean Brockman Austria of Cincinnati and the late Dr. Clement G. Austria who was born in the Philippines and came to Cincinnati, Ohio to attend Medical School.

“Jean was a nurse and he was a doctor and that is how they met,” Sayson said. Steve is the eldest of nine children – all of whom have graduated from Catholic universities or colleges with their bachelor’s degrees and several graduating from medical, dental or optometry schools.

Steve graduated from Marquette University in 1981 with a degree in Political Science. Marquette is a Catholic, Jesuit university in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. After graduation, Steve worked in politics for a couple of years before turning his professional interests in becoming a Financial Planner with the American Express Company for nearly 16 years.

When public service called, Steve successfully ran for state representative in Ohio in 1998, moving up to the Ohio Senate in 2000 and being re-elected again in 2004.

The family of Dr. Clement Austria was named one of the top 10 families of the year in the nation and was honored at the Reagan White House in 1985. Dr. Austria was a community leader and died unexpectedly at the age of 62 in November 1986.

Senator Steve Austria currently represents Ohio’s 10th Senate District, which includes approximately 375,000 people and covers all of Clark, Greene, and Madison Counties.
Steve and his wife, Eileen, have three sons, Brian, Kevin and Eric.

Brad Mascho, Campaign Manager for Steve Austria for U.S. Congress said Senator Steve Austria is currently the Majority Whip of the Ohio Senate.

He is seeking election to the U.S. House of Representatives of Ohio’s 7th Congressional District, currently held by Congressman Dave Hobson, who announced his retirement late last year and has strongly endorsed Senator Austria’s election.

According to the Los Angeles, California-based Asian Journal, African American Congressman Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (D-VA-03) is the only member of the U.S. House of Representatives to claim Filipino parentage. His mother is a daughter of a Filipino, Valentin Cortez Hamlin.

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GMA News

CHICAGO— As an army captain assigned in Iraq, Mario Bonifacio experienced the war firsthand. Now, he is in a different battlefield, helping Senator Barack Obama get elected as the first African-American president of the United States.

“This is an extremely historic event and I am very proud to be a part of it,” Bonifacio said, referring to the Illinois senator’s candidacy.

Bonifacio is the regional field director of the Obama campaign for the state of New Jersey. He is one of the very few Filipino-Americans with an inside look at the campaign from its early stage.

Recently, the campaign also recruited Charmaine Manansala as director of the Asian American Pacific Islanders voter outreach program.

During Obama’s crucial primary campaign in North Carolina, Bonifacio was in the trenches, mobilizing voters as Obama’s regional Get-Out-The-Vote (GOTV) coordinator.

The effort paid off with a decisive 14-point victory in the Tar Heel State, cementing Obama’s delegate lead.

On June 3, Obama officially clinched the Democratic nomination, becoming the first African-American major party presidential candidate in the nation’s history.

Bonifacio said that despite the intense fight between Obama and New York Senator Hillary Clinton, which dragged on for months, the contest was good for the party.

“It was encouraging for the campaign because it included a lot more people in the nominating process,” he said.

Bonifacio expressed confidence that Clinton supporters will embrace Obama’s candidacy, saying that “people are really hungry for change.”

“I think people recognize the very serious issues that we face in this election, and I think that it will override any sort of feelings people had during the primaries,” he added.

Political awakening

The California native was not always a political animal. As the eldest son of an accountant and an engineer, he is good with numbers.

In college, he steered clear of politics, instead taking up economics at the University of California at Berkeley.

“I really never had any inclination towards politics, although I always voted,” Bonifacio said.

Halfway through his major, 9/11 happened and it altered the course of his career and outlook in life. The terrorist attack prompted him to sign up for the ROTC.

“My parents have always been grateful for the opportunities they’ve had in America, and I’m grateful to them in turn. They’ve worked hard to be able to buy a home, raise four kids and send us to college.”

Bonifacio’s mother, Marilen, is a native of Manila, while his father, Oscar, is from San Jose City, Nueva Ecija.

The Bonifacio family now resides in Orange County, California. His two younger brothers, Jordan and Michael, attend school, while his younger sister, Lauren, lives and works nearby in Los Angeles.

Bonifacio said that joining the military at a time of crisis was his way of expressing his gratitude to the country that welcomed his immigrant parents. After graduation, he formally joined the Army, and eventually rose up the ranks to become an army captain.

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GoodNewsPilipinas

Lawyer Eugenio Insigne, chairman of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, was elected to the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues during the 32nd meeting of the Humanitarian Affairs Segment of the 2008 Substantive Section of the Economic and Social Council.

Insigne, the first Filipino to be elected to the 16-member council of experts on Indigenous Issues and who himself belongs to the Tingguian tribe of Abra, will represent the Asia and Pacific region filling up the seat vacated by China’s representative, Xiaomei Qin, beginning Jan. 9, 2009 up to Dec. 31, 2010.

“This is a triumph not only for the indigenous peoples of the Philippines but also for the indigenous peoples of Asia. I will serve as their voice as I work with the other members of the UN Forum in addressing the various issues that face indigenous peoples today,” Insigne said.

Insigne, who ran against Ambassador Berenado Vunibobo of Fiji, has been actively involved in the indigenous peoples’ struggle for most of his adult life, working with organizations such as director of the Cordillera Tribal Communities Development Foundation Inc., and serving as general counsel of the Binongan Tribal Foundation.

He was also former president of the Tribal Lawyers Assembly of the Philippines and was a member of the Cordillera Peoples Liberation Army-Cordillera Bodong Administrative Negotiating Panel in the 1986 Cordillera Talks.

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