Derek Tran
Derek Truyen Tran is an American lawyer and politician who has served as the U.S. representative from since 2025. A member of the Democratic Party, Tran is the third Vietnamese American to be elected to Congress and the first to represent California.
Early life, military career, and education
Tran was born in Los Angeles County, California, on December 22, 1980. Tran grew up in the San Gabriel Valley as the son of Vietnamese refugees. His father fled Vietnam in 1975 after the fall of Saigon as a boat person. Their boat capsized, resulting in the deaths of his first wife and children. Later, his father returned to Vietnam and met Tran's mother. After living in a refugee camp for about a year, his parents immigrated to the U.S. and established a corner store.Tran has stated that his family's reliance on government assistance, such as SNAP, WIC, and Section 8, inspired him to enlist in the United States Army when he turned 18 without telling his parents or friends. He spent eight years serving in the U.S. Army Reserve, including some time spent training at the Joint Forces Training Base in Los Alamitos. He was activated for Operations Noble Eagle and Enduring Freedom before receiving an honorable discharge. Afterward, Tran attended Bentley University, graduating with a B.S. and a J.D. from Glendale University College of Law. In 2012, he moved to Orange County, California.
Career
Tran has worked as an attorney since 2014; in 2020, he founded his own law firm, the Tran Firm, in Huntington Beach. The now-defunct firm's website said it focused on personal injury and employment law. In 2023, Feher Law, a practice based in Torrance, acquired Tran's firm.Tran has served on the board of the Consumer Attorneys Association of America and was appointed traffic commissioner for Orange. With his wife, he co-owns a pharmacy in Anaheim.
During the 2024 House election, Tran received criticism from his opponent, Michelle Steel, for previously supporting legal clients who had employment terminated due to workplace incidents such as sexual harassment, sexual assault, and hanging a noose.
U.S. House of Representatives
Elections
2024
At the end of 2023, Tran announced that he would enter the 2024 all-party "top two" primary in California's 45th congressional district. HuffPost reported that, unlike the other Democratic candidates who lacked financial support, Tran was a significant fundraiser according to FEC data. In March, 23 days after the primary, it was determined that Republican incumbent Michelle Steel finished first while Tran had placed second by finishing ahead of Kim Nguyen-Penaloza by 366 votes.Steel was running for a third term in the competitive "battleground district". The majority-minority district encompasses parts of Los Angeles and Orange counties including the predominantly Vietnamese cities of Westminster, Fountain Valley, and Garden Grove in Little Saigon in addition to the predominantly Asian American communities of Artesia and Cerritos. Hence, Tran's campaign emphasized the centrality of his Vietnamese American identity to his bid. KABC, the Los Angeles ABC affiliate, reported that the district was 39% Asian.
Both Steel and Tran vied for support from the district's Vietnamese community. On October 19, Steel claimed to a Vietnamese TV station, VietFace TV, that she was "more Vietnamese than my opponent" due to a better understanding of the Vietnamese community. Tran challenged her claim of being more Vietnamese than a son of Vietnamese Americans, noting it was "insulting and disgraceful." Steel's campaign also rejected Tran's claims of proficiency in Vietnamese as a point of criticism, noting his usage of a translator; yet, The New York Times reported that some Vietnamese in Little Saigon felt any claims of fluency were irrelevant to Tran's Vietnamese identity. By the end of August, Tran admitted to the Los Angeles Times that he had lost his childhood fluency and had since spoken "broken Vietnamese". Tran's campaign provided a series of video clips in which Tran occasionally spoke Vietnamese on television.
The candidates exchanged accusations of communist sympathies, with some outlets identifying the remarks as red-baiting. Referencing a 2020 The Wall Street Journal report, Tran accused Steel's husband, Shawn Steel, of accepting bribes from the Chinese Communist Party in exchange for information, stating that Steel thus could not be trusted with political office in the United States. He called attention to Michelle Steel's personal loan of a million dollars to her own campaign, asserting this funding was "connected to her husband's dealings with Chinese Communist Party associates". Later, Tran drew controversy by asserting to Punchbowl News that unlike his family who were Vietnamese refugees after the fall of Saigon, Steel misleadingly presented herself as a refugee or victim of communism and instead immigrated "for economic gain." Subsequently, on October 22, the Los Angeles Times reported that Steel's campaign mailed campaign fliers associating Tran with Mao Zedong and the hammer and sickle, warning Tran intended to "take our country back to socialism". Following Tran's disclosure in August of holding cryptocurrencies, Steel also alleged in a mailer that, despite cryptocurrency being banned in China since 2021, Tran owned "thousands of dollars of cryptocurrency linked to China". Steel defended her accusations, asserting that it was provoked by Tran's earlier messaging involving her husband. The mutual accusations caused sixteen Asian American nonprofits to write to the Orange County chairs of both political parties that rhetoric that falsely implied Asian American candidates were "national security threats" should not be used by candidates since it could promote the false narrative of Asian Americans as perpetual foreigners.
The race drew national attention due to its competitiveness, ultimately becoming the most expensive House campaign in the country with at least $46 million spent. In October, Hakeem Jeffries stumped for Tran at a campaign event in Anaheim, stating that the race would be close. Later in the month, Bill Clinton also appeared in Orange County to campaign for Tran and Dave Min.
21 days after the election, Tran held a lead over Steel by 581 votes and had declared victory to LAist. The next day, when the lead had grown by 32 votes, Steel conceded the district's seat to Tran, and the Associated Press called the race for Tran. Altogether, Tran defeated Steel in the general election by just 653 votes out of the nearly 316,000 cast, making the race one of the closest in the 2024 election cycle.
Tenure
Tran was sworn into the 119th United States Congress on January 3, 2025, and appointed to the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Small Business.Following the widescale federal layoffs by the Department of Government Efficiency in 2025, Tran introduced legislation that would reinstate veterans terminated without a reason. The Associated Press observed that while Tran's bill was unlikely to pass due to Republican control of the House, it exemplified "how Democrats are trying to harness public backlash to Trump's efforts to upend the federal government through the Department of Government Efficiency."
In May, Tran was chosen to co-lead the Democratic Party's congressional National Security Task Force alongside Jason Crow, Maggie Goodlander, and Mikie Sherrill. He regarded the Russo-Ukrainian war and the Chinese Communist Party, especially regarding the political status of Taiwan, as pressing issues related to national security.
Committee assignments
For the 119th Congress:- Committee on Armed Services
- * Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations
- * Subcommittee on Readiness
- Committee on Small Business
- * Subcommittee on Contracting and Infrastructure
- * Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and Regulations
Caucus memberships
- Community Health Center Caucus
- Congressional Army Caucus
- Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus
- Congressional Caucus on Vietnam
- Congressional Dads Caucus
- Congressional Equality Caucus
- Congressional Fire Service Caucus
- Congressional Law Enforcement Caucus
- Congressional Library of Congress Caucus
- Congressional Psychedelics Advancing Therapies Caucus
- Congressional Taiwan Caucus
- For Country Caucus
- Friends of Australia Congressional Caucus
- Fusion Energy Caucus
- Future Forum
- Gun Violence Prevention Task Force
- House Baltic Caucus
- House Democratic Caucus National Security Task Force
- Lowering Costs Caucus
- New Democrat Coalition
- * Economic Growth & Cost of Living Working Group
- * Immigration and Border Security Working Group
- Reproductive Freedom Caucus
- Sustainable Energy & Environment Coalition
- Youth ChalleNGe Caucus
Political positions