Raymond A. Jordan
Raymond A. Jordan Jr. was an American politician from Massachusetts. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, representing Springfield from 1975 until 1994.
Early life and education
Raymond A. Jordan Jr. was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, on May 5, 1943. He attended the Springfield Technical High School and later enrolled at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree. and later a MPA from Harvard Kennedy School. Jordan served as director of the Afro-American Cultural Center at American International College in Springfield. During the 1960s, he was arrested on the Springfield City Hall's steps while protesting for civil rights.Political career
In November 1974, Jordan was elected to the newly created 13th Hampden district in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, defeating Republican candidate Benjamin Swan by a margin of 2,043 to 1,548. He was the first African-American from outside Boston to be elected to Massachusetts's legislature. In the 19751976 legislative session, Jordan voted in favor of ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment, against a bill to cut welfare benefits, against an effort to reinstate capital punishment over the governor's veto, in favor of a measure to reauthorize rent control, and against a measure to ban handguns. That session, he received a 91% rating from the Americans for Democratic Action, an 82% rating from the AFL–CIO, and a 0% rating from the Citizens for Limited Taxation.Jordan served as president of the Massachusetts Black Legislative Caucus and as chairman of the House's Committee on Counties. A 1983 column in The Boston Globe described him as "a 40-year-old professional politician with deceptive countrified charm and a taste for inside wheeling and dealing". He served as a delegate to the 1984 Democratic National Convention, supporting Walter Mondale's bid for the presidential nomination and favoring unsuccessful proposed amendments to the party platform that called for reductions in military spending and opposed pre-emptive nuclear strikes. A state campaign finance office concluded in 1994 that Jordan had spent campaign funds renting an apartment, ostensibly in violation of the law; no action was taken against him after he agreed to stop making such payments. He resigned on February 28, 1994, to accept a position in the federal government.