Delia Garcia

Delia Garcia (born May 13, 1977) is an American official who formerly served as the Kansas Secretary of Labor. Garcia perviously served as a Democratic member of the Kansas House of Representatives, representing the 103rd district.[1] She served from 2005 to 2010, and was a member of the Kansas Democratic Hispanic Caucus.

Delia Garcia
Kansas Secretary of Labor
In office
January 14, 2019  June 22, 2020
GovernorLaura Kelly
Preceded byLana Gordon
Succeeded byRyan Wright (acting)
Member of the Kansas House of Representatives for the 103rd District
In office
2005–2010
Succeeded byPonka-We Victors
Personal details
Born (1977-05-13) May 13, 1977
Political partyDemocratic
EducationWichita State University (BA)
St. Mary's University (MA)

Career

Garcia, who has a Bachelor's degree from Wichita State University and a Master's in political science from St. Mary's University, Texas, worked as a professor at Butler Community College, as well as an assistant manager at Connie's Mexico Cafe.[2]

In 2010, rather than run for re-election herself, she helped longtime ally Ponka-We Victors file as the sole candidate in the Democratic primary election. (No Republican had bothered to run in the 103rd district since 1998.)[3] Victors has held the seat ever since.

Committee membership

  • Commerce and Labor
  • Veterans, Military and Homeland Security
  • Local Government (Ranking Member)
  • Elections

Major donors

The top 5 donors to Garcia's 2008 campaign:[4]

  1. Kansans for Lifesaving Cures: $750
  2. Garcia, Delia: $725
  3. Ruffin, Phil: $600
  4. The Kansas Realtor PAC: $500
  5. Comejo, Ronald J: $500
gollark: Also pain toggles and metadata and not just "something hurts now, good luck working out why and also you can't stop it".
gollark: You would probably need more than just brain-level tweaks for that, to provide the data in the first place.
gollark: If you did have a top-down-designed body/brain system, you could have useful features like an immune system which actually provides debug information instead of just mysteriously having you get a fever.
gollark: This reminds me of a paper I vaguely looked at a while ago about abusing human visual processing to do logic gates.
gollark: The decades starting then, I mean.

References

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