U.S. House of Representatives
in 1985
Elections ;1984 Incumbent Democrat U.S. Congressman
Richard Ottinger of
New York's 20th congressional district decided to retire in 1984. The Democratic leaning district had a sizable minority population in the cities of
Mount Vernon,
Yonkers and
New Rochelle. DioGuardi decided to run as a Republican and defeated Oren Teicher 50%-48%. ;1986 DioGuardi won re-election to a second term, defeating former U.S. Congresswoman
Bella Abzug, who had relocated from Greenwich Village in Manhattan to Mount Vernon, 54%-45%. ;1988 DioGuardi ran for re-election to a third term but lost to
Nita Lowey, the Assistant
Secretary of State of New York, 50%-47%. ;Controversy During the campaign, the
Gannett-owned
Gannett Suburban Newspapers accused one of the Westchester area's largest car dealers, Crabtree Automotive, of skirting federal election laws by funneling into DioGuardi's campaign. The
New York Times reported: "Several employees explained in interviews that they were given $2,000 each in company checks and were asked to deposit them into their own bank accounts and then write personal checks for the same amount to the DioGuardi campaign. Joseph Crabtree, the company's chief executive, and his son Robert, the company's president, served on the campaign's finance committee." The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission and Mr. Crabtree resigned from the campaign. DioGuardi steadfastly denied the charges and his campaign also filed its own complaint with the State Board of Elections that argued, contrary to his opponent's commercial, that the employees in question put funds in a separate "People For DioGuardi" campaign account as required by law. ;1992 After redistricting, Lowey decided to run in the newly redrawn
New York's 18th congressional district. DioGuardi challenged her in a rematch and lost again, this time 56%-44%. ;1994 Incumbent Republican U.S. Congressman
Hamilton Fish IV of the neighboring
New York's 19th congressional district decided to retire in 1994. DioGuardi ran in the crowded six-candidate Republican primary, which was won by
Sue W. Kelly 23%-20%. DioGuardi then ran again in the general election as the
Conservative Party nominee. Kelly won the general election with 52% of the vote.
Hamilton Fish V, the Democratic nominee, ranked second with 37%, DioGuardi ranked third with 10%, and Catherine Portman-Laux ranked last with 1% of the vote. ;1996 DioGuardi challenged Kelly in a rematch in 1996 and lost again 53%-42%. He ran in the general election on the lines of the Conservative Party and the Right-to-Life Party. He got 12% in third place, while Kelly won re-election with 46% of the vote. ;2000 (U.S. Senate) In 2000 DioGuardi launched a bid to run as the
Conservative Party challenger for the
2000 Senate race as a consequence of
Rudy Giuliani not running on the line. Giuliani was asked to renounce his
Liberal Party endorsement, which he refused to do, hence the decision of Conservative Party Chairman
Mike Long to initiate DioGuardi's campaign. DioGuardi ended this bid after Giuliani ended his campaign, and the Conservative line was given to Congressman
Rick Lazio, the new Republican candidate. ;2008 After Democrat
John Hall defeated Kelly in 2006, DioGuardi decided to run against Hall in 2008. In May 2008, Republicans held a convention in
Mahopac, New York, with delegates from each of the five counties to endorse a candidate and nominate their candidate.
Kieran Michael Lalor won the convention vote with 46% of the vote, while DioGuardi finished last with 13% of the vote.
Tenure Dioguardi voted against the
Abandoned Shipwrecks Act of 1987. The Act asserts United States title to certain abandoned shipwrecks located on or embedded in submerged lands under state jurisdiction, and transfers title to the respective state, thereby empowering states to manage these cultural and historical resources more efficiently, with the goal of preventing
treasure hunters and salvagers from damaging them. Despite his vote against it, President
Ronald Reagan signed it into law on April 28, 1988. He was the original author of the Chief Financial Officer and Federal Financial Reform Act (
CFO Act), signed by President
George H. W. Bush in 1990. The act mandated the assignment of a
chief financial officer to each major department and agency of the U.S. government. Former
Comptroller General of the United States Charles Bowsher later said in testimony before the U.S. Senate that since the enactment of the bill, "We have seen important progress in directly confronting serious financial management weaknesses." Of the 1.55 million Black American military servicemen, not one had received the
Medal of Honor. DioGuardi and Democratic Congressman
Mickey Leland initiated legislation to confer the honor on Black World War I and World War II military heroes who had been recommended for, but had not received, the medal. Nine Medals of Honor have since been awarded.
Committee assignments DioGuardi was an active member of the executive committee of the
Congressional Human Rights Caucus (CHRC) and worked with Caucus founder
Tom Lantos (D-CA) on
apartheid in
South Africa, and on the repression of Jews in the Soviet Union and the
Tibetan people and monks in China.
Caucus memberships He founded and co-chaired the Congressional Long Island Sound and Hudson River Caucuses, which secured substantial increases in federal support. ==Albanian American Civic League==