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Brad Avakian

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Preceded by
  
Name
  
Brad Avakian

Succeeded by
  
Political party
  
Party
  
Democratic Party

Preceded by
  
Charlie Ringo

Spouse
  
Deborah Avakian

Preceded by
  
Charlie Ringo

Role
  
Legislator


Brad Avakian Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian will run in Democratic

Governor
  
John KitzhaberKate Brown

Born
  
February 4, 1961 (age 63) Fresno, California, U.S. (
1961-02-04
)

Alma mater
  
Oregon State UniversityLewis and Clark College

Education
  
Oregon State University, Lewis & Clark Law School

Similar People
  
Kate Brown, Ted Wheeler, Bruce Starr, Bob Avakian, Aaron Klein

Brad avakian closing statement


Bradley Paul "Brad" Avakian (Armenian: Բրատ Ավագյան born February 4, 1961) is the Commissioner of the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. He was appointed by Governor Ted Kulongoski on April 8, 2008 and subsequently elected statewide on November 4, 2008. He was re-elected in 2012 and 2014. While the Commissioner of Labor and Industries has been a nonpartisan position since 1995, Avakian is known to be a Democrat; he served in both houses of the Oregon Legislative Assembly as a member of that party, and ran in a Democratic primary election for the United States House of Representatives.

Contents

Brad Avakian wwworegongovboliSiteAssetspagesavakianbioB

He was the Democratic candidate for Oregon Secretary of State in the 2016 election. He was defeated by Dennis Richardson.

Brad Avakian Brad Avakian Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

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Early life

Brad Avakian It39s part of my job to defend women39s rights to make

Born in Fresno, California, he is the son of Larry and Catherine Avakian, who now reside in Thousand Oaks, California. He is of Armenian descent. His grandfather was Avak Avakian, who came to America from Muş in 1898. His grandmother, Sirpoohi Antoyan, came from Bitlis in 1900.

Brad Avakian Bureau of Labor and Industries COMMISSIONER39S OFFICE

Avakian was raised in Washington County, Oregon. He was educated in Oregon’s public schools and graduated as a Juris doctor from Lewis & Clark Law School in 1990. He helped create the YMCA's Juvenile Restitution Program while in law school.

Avakian then worked as a civil rights attorney. He co-founded the Oregon League of Conservation Voters' (OLCV) Washington County chapter, and he was appointed by Governor Barbara Roberts to lead the State Board of Psychologist Examiners. He serves as Honorary Chair of the Oregon Business Leadership Network, a coalition of employers committed to hiring the disabled. Avakian lives in the Portland metropolitan area in the city of Beaverton.

Political career

Avakian ran for the Oregon State Senate in 1998, losing to incumbent Republican Tom Hartung.

Avakian was elected to represent District 34, on Portland's west side, in the Oregon House of Representatives in 2002. He defeated Portland police officer John Scruggs, the only Republican to lose in Washington County that year, with 53 percent of the vote.

Avakian was elected to the Oregon State Senate, representing District 17, in 2006.

While in the legislature, Avakian was honored by both the Oregon AFL-CIO and the SEIU Local 503 for his work on behalf of working families. In the state Senate he chaired the Environment and Natural Resources Committee, and in 2007 the OLCV named him the "Consensus Builder of the Year," recognizing him for passing an extension of the Oregon Bottle Bill and a renewable energy act. In 2008 he led a coalition to approve water supply development for rural communities.

In July 2007, Avakian announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Oregon Secretary of State. He later withdrew from the race when he was appointed by governor Ted Kulongoski to be Commissioner of the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries in early 2008 after Dan Gardner announced his resignation. Gardner was the first Commissioner of Labor and Industries to leave mid-term for a new job.

In April 2011, Avakian announced that he would seek the Democratic nomination for Oregon's 1st congressional district in the United States House of Representatives. The seat was held by fellow Democrat David Wu, who resigned from Congress before the end of his term due to allegations of sexual misconduct. Avakian lost in the Democratic primary to Suzanne Bonamici, who succeeded him in both the Oregon House and Senate.

In July 2015, Avakian ordered Aaron and Melissa Klein, owners of Sweet Cakes by Melissa in Gresham, to pay a lesbian couple $135,000 in damages for unlawful discrimination in public accommodations after the bakery refusing to make a cake for the couple's wedding. The owners cited their Christian beliefs against same-sex marriage. The Kleins' appeal is pending in the Oregon Court of Appeals.

On November 8, 2016, Avakian lost his bid for Oregon Secretary of State to Republican Dennis Richardson, the first time a Republican was elected to statewide office in Oregon since 2002.

References

Brad Avakian Wikipedia


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