Representing Massachusetts and the 9th District in the United States House of Representatives
 
biography of stephen f. lynch
Congressman Stephen F. Lynch

Congressman Stephen F. Lynch was first sworn in to the United States Congress in October 2001, following the sudden passing of legendary Congressman John Joseph Moakley.

The son of Francis Lynch, an ironworker, and Anne Lynch, a postal clerk, Congressman Lynch was born and raised in the public housing projects of South Boston.

Upon graduation from South Boston High School in 1973, Congressman Lynch entered the Ironworkers Apprenticeship Program and later joined his father as a member of Boston's Ironworkers Local 7. He worked as a structural ironworker for 18 years and was eventually elected to serve as president of The Iron Workers Union, the youngest president in the history of the 2000 member union.

Congressman Lynch continued his education at Wentworth Institute of Technology on nights and weekends, earning a Bachelor's degree in Construction Management. He later received a law degree from Boston College Law School, was admitted to both the Massachusetts and New Hampshire Bar, and continued his advocacy for working people as a labor and employment attorney.

In 1994, Congressman Lynch was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives. After just fourteen months in office, he was elected to the Massachusetts State Senate in a special election. In the Senate, he served as the Chair of the Joint Committee on Commerce and Labor.

In 1999, he earned a Master's Degree in Public Administration from Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

During his career as an ironworker, Congressman Lynch worked at the General Motors Plant in Framingham, Massachusetts, the General Dynamics Shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts and the U.S. Steel Plant in Gary, Indiana, all of which were shut down due to foreign competition and unfavorable trade conditions. Congressman Lynch's first-hand experience in seeing the effects of plant closings on American workers and on local communities has led him to focus on efforts to improve U.S. Trade Policy and protect American jobs.

In the 110th Congress, Congressman Lynch serves on the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Lynch is a member of both the Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs and the Subcommittee on Federal Workforce, Postal Service and the District of Columbia.

Congressman Lynch is a co-founder of the Congressional Labor and Working Families Caucus, which was formed to protect workers rights and educate Members of Congress on issues that impact American families.

Lynch was recently named co-chair of the Task Force on Terrorism and Proliferation Financing , a bipartisan Congressional panel that monitors the status of national and international efforts to track and stop the flow of funds to terrorist groups and works to strengthen our national anti-terrorist finance strategy.

He and his wife Margaret continue to live in their lifelong hometown of South Boston where they are raising their daughter Victoria and niece Crystal.

 

NOTE: This biographical sketch is intended to be used only for background information. Because reading this biography in its entirety would take longer than most of Congressman Lynch's speeches, we don't recommend using it as an introduction. If you are introducing Congressman Lynch at an event and would like suggestions of points to include, please contact his Press Secretary at 617-428-2007.

 

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221 Cannon House Office Building
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Brockton, MA 02301
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