Judy Biggert


Judith Borg Biggert is an American politician and attorney. She is the former U.S. Representative for, serving from 1999 to 2013. She is a member of the Republican Party.
Biggert was defeated in her 2012 re-election bid by former US Congressman Bill Foster. Due to redistricting, she ran in the reconfigured 11th congressional district.

Early life, education and career

Biggert was born Judith Gail Borg in Chicago on August 15, 1937, the second of four children of Alvin Andrew Borg and Marjorie Virginia Borg. Her father worked for the Chicago-based Walgreen Co., the largest drugstore chain in the United States, for 41 years from 1928 to 1969, and served as its president from 1963 to 1969, succeeding Charles R. Walgreen Jr. and succeeded by Charles R. Walgreen III. Her paternal grandparents immigrated from Finland and her maternal family is of English descent.
She grew up in Wilmette, Illinois, a North Shore Chicago suburb, and graduated from New Trier High School in 1955, then went to Stanford University, where she received a B.A. in international relations in 1959, then worked for a year in a women's apparel store. She then attended Northwestern University School of Law where she was an editor of the Northwestern University Law Review from 1961 to 1963, earned a J.D. in 1963, then clerked for federal judge Luther Merritt Swygert of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit from 1963 to 1964.
Biggert left her federal court law clerkship to have her children, but later did some legal work from her home for family and friends on wills, trusts, and real estate. She served on numerous boards of voluntary and civic organizations.

Early political career

Biggert was elected to the Hinsdale Township High School District 86 Board of Education in 1978 and was a board member until 1985, serving as president from 1983 to 1985. She served as chairman of the Hinsdale Plan Commission from 1989 to 1993.
In 1992, Biggert was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives to serve the redrawn 81st District. She was re-elected in 1994 and 1996 before running for Congress in 1998.

U.S. House of Representatives

Committee assignments

Interest group ratings

ACLUACUADAAFL-CIOAFSCMEChCCfGConFRCITICLCVNTLC*NTUUSCC
19996030111621315996
20005068200060594267056100
2001562017102161100
20025384151105058100387359100
2003601013132559100
200430643513061100187060100
200560201306154225389
2006416430210540100335993
20076830421867556585
20082784352014653571386394
20098020132277297395

* NTLC – National Tax-Limitation Committee

Key votes

107th Congress -

108th Congress -

109th Congress -

110th Congress -

111th Congress, 1st Session -

111th Congress, 2nd Session -

Political positions

Judy Biggert is a moderate Republican. She was a member of The Republican Main Street Partnership and Republicans for Choice.

Abortion and Reproductive issues

Biggert supports abortion rights. She supports embryonic stem-cell research. She was given a 50% rating from NARAL Pro-Choice America and a 67% rating from Planned Parenthood, which both support legal abortion, a 100% rating from Population Connection, an anti-abortion organization which supports voluntary family planning, and a 50% rating from the anti-abortion National Right to Life Committee which opposes access to legal abortion.

Taxes

Biggert was one of 171 of the 178 Republican U.S. House members in the 111th Congress to have signed Grover Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform Taxpayer Protection Pledge:
Biggert supported making all of the Bush tax cuts permanent, regardless of income.

Social security, healthcare, and Medicaid

Biggert supported the partial privatization of Social Security, in which individuals could choose to voluntarily divert 2% of their Social Security tax payments from paying Social Security beneficiaries into individual private accounts which they could invest in the stock market and which they could pass on to their heirs.
Biggert supported the repeal of the 2010 Democratic health care reform and its replacement with Republican health care reform.
Biggert opposed allowing individuals less than 65 years of age to buy into Medicare.

Illegal immigration

Biggert opposed any comprehensive immigration reform that provides a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants and supports efforts against illegal immigration..

Campaign finance

Biggert opposed public financing of federal election campaigns, and supported the elimination of all limits on campaign contributions with immediate and full disclosure of contributions.

Same-sex marriage and LGBT issues

Biggert voted against the 2006 Federal Marriage Amendment, a proposed constitutional amendment intended to ban gay marriage. She supported repealing the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, but opposed repealing the Defense of Marriage Act which prohibited federal recognition of same-sex marriages. In 2012, she was given a 70% rating from the Human Rights Campaign, a political action committee which supports same-sex marriage and other gay rights, and she was given a 100% rating by PFLAG, or Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.

Political campaigns

1998

In 1998, Biggert narrowly defeated conservative state Senator Peter Roskam in the Republican primary, the real contest in this ancestrally Republican district. Biggert earned 61% of the vote to win the seat opened up by the retirement of U. S. Representative Harris Fawell. In 2006, Roskam was elected to Congress from another district.

2006

In 2006, Biggert's share of the vote in the general election fell below 60% for the first time in her Congressional career.

2008

In 2008, Biggert received less than 54% of the vote overall in winning reelection to her sixth term in Congress in her first general election campaign against a financially competitive opponent, businessman Scott Harper. In 2008, Democratic U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin was reelected with 60% of the vote and Democrat Barack Obama won 54% of the vote in the 13th Congressional District, with even Biggert's Republican predecessor, Fawell, supporting Obama.

2010

Biggert won re-election.

2012

In the redistricting following the 2010 census, the Democratic-controlled state legislature significantly altered Illinois's congressional map, splitting Biggert's district. Her district was renumbered as the 11th District, and made significantly more Democratic even though it contains 50 percent of Biggert's former territory. A portion of her former district that included Biggert's home in Hinsdale was combined with the heavily Democratic Chicago North Side-based 5th District. Biggert opted to run in the new 11th against the Democratic nominee, former 14th District Congressman Bill Foster.

Electoral history

Illinois House, 81st Representative District (1992–1996)

  • 1992 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 5,284
  • * James P. McCarthy – 3,498
  • * Todd Vandermyde – 1,861
  • * Andrew J. Clark – 1,758
  • * John Curry – 1,684
  • 1992 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 28,655
  • * David M. Briggs – 12,918
  • 1994 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 6,100
  • * James P. McCarthy – 5,219
  • 1994 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 22,227
  • * Bill Chalberg – 6,085
  • 1996 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 14,142
  • 1996 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 28,597
  • * Dave Brockway – 11,573

    U.S. House, Illinois 13th Congressional District (1998– )

  • 1998 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 24,482
  • * Peter Roskam – 21,784
  • * David J. Shestokas – 2,574
  • * Michael J. Krzyston – 2,566
  • * Andrew J. Clark – 1,926
  • * Walter Marksym – 1,035
  • 1998 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 121,889 $1,294,853*
  • * Susan W. Hynes – 77,878 $222,656*
  • 2000 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 39,121
  • 2000 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 193,250 $381,623*
  • * Thomas Mason – 98,768
  • 2002 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 70,691
  • 2002 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 139,456 $464,054*
  • * Tom Mason – 59,069
  • 2004 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 46,861
  • * Bob Hart – 231
  • 2004 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 200,472 $542,733*
  • * Gloria Schor Andersen – 107,836 $42,129*
  • * Mark Alan Mastrogiovanni – 4
  • 2006 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 52,900
  • * Bob Hart – 13,564
  • 2006 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 119,720 $1,014,819*
  • * Joseph Shannon – 85,507 $225,842*
  • * Mark Alan Mastrogiovanni – 7
  • 2008 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 58,533
  • * Sean O'Kane – 17,206
  • 2008 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – 180,888 $1,585,536*
  • * Scott Harper – 147,430 $1,070,201*
  • * Steve Alesch – 9,402
  • * Theodore Knapp – 51
  • 2010 Republican primary
  • * Judy Biggert – 58,294
  • 2010 general election
  • * Judy Biggert – $1,450,000**
  • * Scott Harper – $621,000**
* campaign expenditures

** campaign contributions

Post-congressional career

On April 23, 2015, Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner appointed Biggert to the Education Labor Relations Board, which oversees the negotiation of teacher contracts.

Personal life

On September 21, 1963, she married Rody Patterson Biggert, Jr. Rody and Judy Biggert lived in Chicago, then Wilmette, before moving to Hinsdale in 1971, when Rody's mother sold them her home, the extensively remodeled 1864 mansion of Hinsdale's founder, William Robbins, in the Robbins Park Historic District. The Biggerts have four children: Courtney Caverly, Alison Cabot, Rody Biggert, and Adrienne Morrell, and nine grandchildren.
Since 2004, Biggert's youngest daughter Adrienne Morrell has been a registered lobbyist for Health Net, the sixth largest publicly traded for-profit managed healthcare company; previously Morrell was a lobbyist with America's Health Insurance Plans, the chief health insurance industry lobby, after having served as an aide to former seven-term Illinois 13th District U.S. Rep. Harris Fawell, Biggert's predecessor in Congress.
In 2008, multimillionaire Biggert was the second wealthiest—after U.S. Rep. Bill Foster —in Illinois's 21-member Congressional delegation, and the 82nd wealthiest member in the U.S. House.
Biggert was president of the Junior Board of the Chicago Travelers Aid Society in 1969, and president of the Junior League of Chicago from 1976 to 1978, chairman of board of directors of the Visiting Nurse Association of Chicago in 1978, and president of the Oak School elementary school PTA in Hinsdale from 1976 to 1978. She was a member of the board of directors of the Salt Creek Ballet from 1990 to 1998. She was also a Sunday school teacher at Grace Episcopal Church in Hinsdale from 1974 to 1984, and an American Youth Soccer Organization assistant soccer coach in 1983.
OWIKI.org. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.