← Back to previous page

Rep. Peter King (R-NY 3rd District)

9th term Republican from New York 3rd District.

Bio

Visit Rep. Peter King's candidate bio page.

Residence: Seaford

Marital Status: Married (Rosemary)

Prev. Occupation: Attorney

Prev. Political Exp.: Hempstead Town Council, 1978-81; Nassau Co. Comptroller, 1981-93

Military: USARNG, 1968-73

Education: BA St. Francis College, 1965; JD University of Notre Dame, 1968

Birthdate: 04/05/1944

Birthplace: Manhattan, NY

Religion: Catholic

Percentage in Last Election: 64%

Major Opponent: Graham Long


Contact

Current Elected Office Contact Information

Contact Rep. Peter King via Web Form.
(You must be logged in to send a message. Login now.)

Website: peteking.house.gov


Washington, D.C. Office:

339 Cannon House Office Building,
District of Columbia 20515-3203
Phone: (202) 225-7896
Fax: (202) 226-2279

Massapequa Park Office: (more district offices)

1003 Park Boulevard
Massapequa Park, New York 11762
Phone: (516) 541-4225
Fax: (516) 541-6602



Committee


Staff

Current Elected Office Staff Members:

  • Chief of Staff: Kevin Fogarty
  • Scheduler: Michele Ingwersen

Votes

 

How are YOUR reps voting?

Sign up for MegaVote for FREE weekly report!

Bills

Current Elected Office Bills:

Here is Rep. Peter King's cosponsorship status on our key legislation. Send Rep. Peter King a message by clicking in the "Send Message" column.

Get involved and take action!


Bill Name Cosponsor? Send Message
H.R.5019 - Home Star Energy Retrofit Act of 2010 No Send Message to Rep. Peter King
 

Letters

Current Elected Office Letters to Leaders:

Recent messages sent to Rep. Peter King by our constituents:


View more Letters to Leaders   View more Letters to Rep. Peter King


PAC

PAC Contributions

2009-2010

2007-2008

2005-2006

2003-2004

 
 

Recent Headlines

This week in activism

Activists have to create a big splash to get noticed in this town, but the strategy can also backfire.

Activists create protest school

Dream University offers illegal immigrants who can't go to college opportunities in more than one way. Classes there double as protest rallies.

Groups redefine gay-rights efforts

Two new advocacy groups are trying to make change happen faster for gays and lesbians, but their tactics have raised tension within the movement.

Directories

Legislation

Issues & Actions

Election


Soapbox

More Resources