Aruna Miller
Official portrait, 2023
10th Lieutenant Governor of Maryland
Assumed office
January 18, 2023
GovernorWes Moore
Preceded byBoyd Rutherford
Member of the Maryland House of Delegates
from the 15th district
In office
December 1, 2010  January 9, 2019
Appointed byMartin O'Malley
Preceded byCraig L. Rice
Succeeded byLily Qi
Personal details
Born
Aruna Katragadda

(1964-11-06) November 6, 1964
Hyderabad, Telangana State, India
CitizenshipIndia (1964–2000)
United States (2000–present)
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
David Miller
(m. 1990)
Children3
EducationMissouri University of Science and Technology (BS)
Signature
WebsiteCampaign website

Aruna Miller (née Katragadda; born November 6, 1964) is an American civil engineer and politician who is serving as the tenth lieutenant governor of Maryland since 2023. Miller, a Democrat, is a former member of the Maryland House of Delegates representing Legislative District 15 in Montgomery County.[1] Miller ran for Congress in 2018 to represent Maryland's 6th congressional district, and lost the Democratic primary to David Trone.[2]

In December 2021, Wes Moore chose Miller as his running mate in the Democratic primary of the 2022 Maryland gubernatorial election.[3] They won the Democratic nomination on July 19, 2022, and defeated Republican nominee Dan Cox and his running mate Gordana Schifanelli on November 8, 2022. Miller is the first South Asian woman elected lieutenant governor in the United States,[4] as well as the first Asian American lieutenant governor and first immigrant to hold statewide office in Maryland, and the second female lieutenant governor after Kathleen Kennedy Townsend.[5]

Early life and education

Miller was born on November 6, 1964, in Hyderabad, India, into a Telugu Hindu family.[6][7][8] Her family came to the United States when she was seven years old. Along with her two siblings and parents, she lived in Poughkeepsie, New York,[7] where IBM employed her father, Rao Katragadda,[9] as a mechanical engineer. She attended public schools in Upstate New York and Ballwin, Missouri. Miller earned a Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering from the Missouri University of Science and Technology.[10]

Career

Miller worked as a transportation engineer for local governments in California, Virginia, and Hawaii. She moved to Maryland in 1990, where she worked for the Montgomery County Department of Transportation.[11] She has overseen programs that advanced access to schools, employment centers, and community facilities that are safe for pedestrians, bicyclists, transit users, and people with differing abilities. In 2015, she retired from Montgomery County to devote her full attention to her service in the Maryland legislature.[12]

Miller became a citizen of the United States in 2000 and voted in the 2000 United States presidential election for Vice President of the United States Al Gore. She became frustrated with the Supreme Court's decision in Bush v. Gore, and subsequently became involved with politics by volunteering to help other candidates get elected.[13][14] During the 2004 United States presidential election, she worked as a precinct-level volunteer for the Democratic Party and nominee John Kerry.[15] In 2006, Miller was appointed to serve as an at-large member of the Montgomery County Democratic Central Committee and served in that position until 2010.[11]

Maryland House of Delegates

An image of a campaign sign for Aruna Miller for Delegate in the window of a local grocery store
Aruna Miller campaign sign, 2010

After state delegate Craig L. Rice announced that he would run for the Montgomery County Council in 2010, activists in the Montgomery County Democratic Party called Miller to ask her to run. She initially declined to run, but changed her mind after talking with her husband.[14] Miller won the election to represent District 15 in the Maryland House of Delegates, but assumed office a month early due to Rice's resignation to take office on the Montgomery County Council. Miller received support from fellow members of the Montgomery County Democratic Central Committee, who voted to recommend that Governor Martin O'Malley appoint her to finish the last month of Rice's term.[16] [17] Miller was the first Indian American woman to be elected to the Maryland Legislature.[18]

In 2012, Miller served as an at-large delegate to the Democratic National Convention, pledged to President Barack Obama.[19]

In her first term (2010–2015), Miller served on the Ways and Means Committee and its Revenue, Transportation, and Education Subcommittees. In her second term (2015–2019), Miller served on the Appropriations Committee, where served as chair of the Oversight of Personnel Subcommittee, vice chair of the Transportation and Environment Subcommittee, and vice chair of the Capital Budget Subcommittee.[20]

Committees and commissions

Members of the Women Legislators of Maryland with Governor Martin O'Malley in 2014
Miller (left) was a member of the Women Legislators of Maryland from 2011 to 2019.
  • President, Women Legislators of Maryland, Maryland General Assembly, 2016–2017
  • Chair, House Appropriations Oversight of Personnel Subcommittee, 2015–2019
  • Vice-chair, House Appropriations Transportation and Environment Subcommittee, 2015–2019
  • Vice-chair, House Appropriations Capital Budget Subcommittee, 2016–2019
  • Member, Maryland Advisory Council for Virtual Learning, 2012–2015
  • Commissioner, Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin, 2013–2019
  • Member, Business Climate Work Group, Maryland General Assembly, 2013–2014
  • Member, Joint Committee on Cybersecurity, Information Technology, and Biotechnology, 2015–2019
  • Member, Joint Committee on Fair Practices and State Personnel Oversight, 2015–2019
  • Founding Member, Maryland Legislative Asian-American, and Pacific-Islander Caucus 2015–2019
  • Member, Maryland Sexual Assault Evidence Kit Policy and Funding Committee, 2017–2019
  • Commissioner, 21st Century School Facilities Commission, 2016–2017
  • Member, Maryland State Ethics Commission, 2019–2020

2018 congressional election

In May 2017, Miller told The Baltimore Sun that she would run for Congress in Maryland's 6th congressional district if John Delaney decided to pursue a campaign for governor.[21] On July 28, 2017, Miller announced her candidacy in the United States House of Representatives election to replace Delaney, who said he would not run for re-election to instead run for president in 2020.[22] In April 2018, Miller won a straw poll of Democratic activists in Western Maryland.[23] During the election, she was endorsed by the National Education Association,[24] the Sierra Club,[25] EMILY's List,[26] 314 Action,[27] and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand,[28] Rep. Pramila Jayapal, and then County Executive Ike Leggett,[29] among others.[30]

Despite having received the most individual donations out of her Democratic opponents,[31] Miller was outspent in the primary 13:1[32] by David Trone, the largest self-funding congressional candidate in U.S. history,[33] and lost the primary to Trone by 9.3%, with 30.7% of the vote compared to Trone's 40.0%, and consequently did not advance to the general election.[34] She won Montgomery County but this was the only voting district she won outright.[35] Had she been elected, Miller would have been the only woman in Maryland's congressional delegation.[36]

Post-legislative career

Aruna Miller standing at a podium with a sign for the Maryland Democratic Party on its front side
Miller speaking in 2019

In February 2019, Miller was named the new executive director of Indian American Impact.[37]

In January 2021, Miller filed paperwork to run for Congress again had Trone decided against running for a third-term.[38][39][40] After Trone launched his re-election bid on May 7, Miller declined to comment on her 2022 plans.[41]

Lieutenant Governor of Maryland

Elections

2022

In December 2021, Wes Moore selected Miller as his running mate in the Democratic primary of the 2022 Maryland gubernatorial election.[3] The Moore-Miller ticket won the Democratic primary election on July 19, 2022.[42]

The ticket defeated Republican nominees Dan Cox and Gordana Schifanelli in the general election on November 8, 2022. Miller is the first South Asian woman elected lieutenant governor in the United States,[4] and the first Asian American lieutenant governor and first immigrant to hold statewide office in Maryland.[5] Miller served as the chair of the transition team for Governor-elect Moore.[43]

Tenure

Miller was sworn in on January 18, 2023.[44] She took the oath of office on the Bhagavad Gita, making her first lieutenant governor to do so.[45]

During her tenure, Miller has worked on issues involving transportation issues, including mass transit projects like the Red Line and Purple Line, and in promoting STEM education.[15][46] In April 2023, following a car crash that killed six highway workers, she was named by Governor Moore to chair the Work Zone Safety Work Group,[47] which developed policy recommendations on how to prevent future work zone accidents.[48]

In February 2023, Miller became the first woman of color to chair the Maryland Board of Public Works meeting after Governor Moore recused himself from a vote related to a contract between the Maryland Department of Health and Under Armour, a company he has financial holdings in.[49]

Alleged ties to Hindutva

Jesse Singh and Sajid Tarar (left) campaign for Moore and Miller (right)

In October 2022, The Intercept reported that Moore and Miller were honored at a fundraiser hosted by individuals associated with Hindutva, or a Hindu nationalist political ideology. The fundraiser occurred after the Moore campaign added a page to its website highlighting Miller's record on supporting Muslim communities and religious freedom, accompanied by the statement, "There is not one dollar in this campaign that has anything to do with the Hindutva movement or international politics".[50][51] In August 2023, Salon reported that Miller had accepted at least $110,000 in contributions from individuals connected to the Hindutva movement since 2011, but noted the same donors implicated in criticisms of Miller routinely contributed to other Democrats across Maryland, though officials and candidates who are not of Indian descent rarely received criticism for accepting these contributions.[52] In a November 2022 interview with Bethesda Magazine, Miller denied participating in fundraisers with Hindu nationalists, and said that she felt an unfair spotlight had been focused on her because she is Indian-American and grew up in a Hindu-Christian household.[53]

In June 2023, during Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's state visit to the United States, Miller tweeted a statement in support of efforts urging President Joe Biden to press Modi on the issue of human rights.[54] At the invitation of President Biden,[55] she attended a White House dinner hosted in Modi's honor.[56]

In July 2023, a British newspaper The Independent reported that party officials acting on behalf of Miller had retaliated against people who alleged she had ties to Hindutva, including an instance where a Democratic central committee member claimed that he was threatened by the chair to alter his vote supporting Susan Kerin, an activist who alleged Miller had ties to Hindutva. Another activist claimed that in 2018, he lost his job for criticizing Miller, and another claimed they lost their party position. Miller, in statements to The Independent, denied these allegations, and presented evidence disproving one of the claims.[54] The chair of the Montgomery County Democratic Central Committee, Saman Qadeer Ahmad, denied she threatened the committee member on his vote.[57]

Political positions

Education

In 2013, Miller co-sponsored legislation that would require schools to start after Labor Day. In August 2016, Governor Larry Hogan released a statement that included a number of county legislators, including Miller, that supported his decision to move the state's school start date to after Labor Day.[58]

During the 2014 legislative session, Miller introduced legislation that would create a state study to review school start times and how sleep affected academic performance and school activities. The bill passed and was signed into law by Governor O'Malley on April 4.[59] In 2016, Miller introduced legislation that would recognize school systems as "Orange Ribbon Schools" if they had elementary school classes starting after 8am and middle school classes after 8:30am. The bill passed and was signed into law by Governor Hogan.[60]

In 2018, Miller introduced legislation that would require high schools to offer at least one high-quality computer science course and encourages local school districts to integrate computer science into their earlier grades.[61]

Economy

In 2013, Miller was one of ten Maryland lawmakers named to the Maryland Business Climate Work Group designed to make recommendations and develop long-term plans to streamline business regulations, encourage business innovation, and develop public-private partnerships to finance infrastructure[62]

Miller encouraged strengthening economic and cultural development between Maryland and India[63] and accompanied Governor Martin O'Malley on a trade mission to India in 2011, which resulted in nearly $60 million in business deals for the state of Maryland.[64] Delegate Miller took a lead role in working with the Office of the Secretary of State and the Department of Economic Development to coordinate the Governor's arrangements for his first stop to Hyderabad.[65]

During her first term as a state delegate, Miller introduced one of the early Maryland bills for paid family leave.[66]

In her second term, while serving as chair of the Oversight of Personnel Subcommittee, Miller was the floor leader for multiple bills expanding collective bargaining for employees.[67]

Miller stood in opposition to excluding nail salon workers from being eligible to receive unemployment benefits[68][69]

In February 2018, Miller voted for a bill that would provide $5.6 billion in tax incentives to Amazon to build their second headquarters in Montgomery County.[70]

Environment

One of Miller's first actions after being elected to the Maryland General Assembly was to co-sponsor the Marcellus Shale Act of 2011,[71] which laid the groundwork for the eventual passage of Maryland's fracking ban, which she co-sponsored.[72]

In 2013, Governor Martin O'Malley appointed Miller as a commissioner to the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin (ICPRB). The mission is to enhance, protect, and conserve the water and associated land resources of the Potomac River and its tributaries through regional and interstate cooperation. She served on the ICPRB until 2019.

Healthcare

In January 2012, Miller signed onto an amicus brief in the Supreme Court case of National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius supporting the Affordable Care Act.[73] During her 2018 House of Representatives campaign, Miller said she supported moving toward a single-payer healthcare system.[74]

Gun control

In March 2018, Miller said that the gun control provisions included in Congress's $1.3 trillion spending bill "did not go far enough." That week, she unveiled a gun control plan that included expanded research, universal background checks, an assault weapons ban, and increasing the minimum age to buy a firearm.[75]

Social issues

During the 2012 legislative session, Miller voted for the Civil Marriage Protection Act, a bill to legalize same-sex marriage in Maryland.[76]

In August 2015, Miller called for the resignation of Maryland Housing Secretary Kenneth C. Holt after he claimed without evidence that parents were deliberately exposing their children to lead paint to get free housing.[77]

National politics

Miller endorsed former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for president on April 9, 2016.[78] On April 17, 2019, Miller and the Indian American Impact group endorsed U.S. Senator from California Kamala Harris for president.[79][80]

Opioid crisis

In March 2018, Miller said she supported studying alternative treatments, including ibogaine and marijuana, to help patients wean themselves from opioids.[81]

Personal life

Miller and her husband, David, at the Inaugural Ball in January 2023

Miller is an adherent of Hinduism and swore her oath on the Bhagavad Gita.[45] In 1990, she moved to Montgomery County, Maryland, where she married her college sweetheart, David Miller. Miller has three adult daughters, and her mother lives with the family in Darnestown, Maryland.[7][82] She and her husband are vegetarians.[83]

Miller maintains her activism in community organizations and has served on the boards of Round House Theatre, Montgomery Parks Foundation, Emerge Maryland, Madison House Autism Foundation, BlackRock Center for the Arts and the Montgomery County Public Schools Educational Foundation.

Miller is a graduate of Leadership Montgomery.[84]

Electoral history

Maryland House of Delegates District 15 Democratic Primary Election, 2010[85]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Brian J. Feldman 6,262 31.4
Democratic Kathleen Dumais 6,086 30.6
Democratic Aruna Miller 4,671 23.5
Democratic David Fraser-Hidalgo 1,755 8.8
Democratic Lara Wibeto 1,142 5.7
Maryland House of Delegates District 15 Election, 2010[86]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kathleen Dumais 23,476 20.7
Democratic Brian J. Feldman 23,120 20.4
Democratic Aruna Miller 21,353 18.9
Republican Scott Graham 15,298 13.5
Republican Sylvia J. Darrow 14,490 12.8
Republican Matthew Mockerman 13,477 11.9
Libertarian Arvin Vohra 1,910 1.7
Write-in 54 0.0
Maryland House of Delegates District 15 Election, 2014[87]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kathleen Dumais 19,083 20.6
Democratic Aruna Miller 18,071 19.5
Democratic David Fraser-Hidalgo 17,324 18.7
Republican Ed Edmundson 12,913 13.9
Republican Christine Thron 12,825 13.8
Republican Flynn Ficker 12,355 13.3
Write-in 86 0.1
Maryland's 6th congressional district Democratic primary election, 2018[88]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic David Trone 24,103 40.0
Democratic Aruna Miller 18,524 30.7
Democratic Nadia Hashimi 6,304 10.5
Democratic Roger Manno 6,257 10.4
Democratic Andrew J. Duck 2,949 4.9
Democratic Chris Graves 982 1.6
Democratic George English 650 1.1
Democratic Christopher Hearsey 531 0.9
Maryland gubernatorial Democratic primary, 2022[89]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic
217,524 32.4
Democratic
202,175 30.1
Democratic
141,586 21.1
Democratic
26,594 4.0
Democratic
25,481 3.8
Democratic
24,882 3.7
Democratic
  • Ashwani Jain
  • LaTrece Hawkins Lytes
13,784 2.1
Democratic
  • Jon Baron
  • Natalie Williams
11,880 1.8
Democratic
4,276 0.6
Democratic
  • Ralph Jaffe
  • Mark Greben
2,978 0.4
Maryland gubernatorial election, 2022[90]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic
  • Wes Moore
  • Aruna Miller
1,293,944 64.53 +21.02
Republican
644,000 32.12 -24.23
Libertarian
  • David Lashar
  • Christiana Logansmith
30,101 1.50 +0.93
Working Class
  • David Harding
  • Cathy White
17,154 0.86 N/A
Green
  • Nancy Wallace
  • Patrick Elder
14,580 0.73 +0.25
Write-in 5,444 0.27 +0.19
Total votes 2,005,259 100.0
Democratic gain from Republican

See also

References

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