Election and re-elections In September 1974, Solarz defeated incumbent Democrat
Bertram L. Podell in the Democratic primary for the New York 13th District. At the time, Podell was under federal indictment; he was later convicted. In the 1980s, he chaired the Asian and Pacific Affairs Subcommittee of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee, an area of growing interest to America in that decade. He is remembered for his leadership on the
Philippines, and had departed
Manila just as
Benigno S. Aquino Jr. was coming home to challenge
dictator President Ferdinand E. Marcos. After
Aquino's assassination, Solarz immediately returned with his wife to Manila for the wake and funeral, then began pushing President Reagan’s administration to distance itself from the
Marcos government. Shortly after Marcos had fled to exile in
Hawaiʻi after his ouster in the
1986 People Power Revolution, Solarz visited
Malacañang Palace and publicized
First Lady Imelda Marcos's massive shoe collection. He then worked closely with Aquino's widow and the new President,
Corazon, who dubbed Solarz the "
Lafayette of the Philippines." Solarz also had strong ties to
India and was held in high esteem by Indian leaders across the political spectrum. His motivations were partly driven by the presence of prosperous
Indian Americans in his district. He visited India dozens of times during and after his Congressional term, once receiving a standing ovation on the floor of the
Indian Parliament as has happened to only a few other Westerners such as Presidents
Bill Clinton and
John F. Kennedy. He received bipartisan credit for having helped set the stage for substantial improvements in
U.S.-India relations since the 1990s. In 1982 and 1986, Solarz met with
Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein. In 1998, he co-signed, along with several
neoconservative intellectuals, an open letter sent to President Clinton, declaring that Saddam still held chemical and biological weapons and had no intention to give them up. The open letter went on to urge President Clinton to use military force to overthrow Saddam.
1992 primary loss The round of redistricting following the
1990 Census divided his district into six pieces, reflecting his cold relations with many state lawmakers in
Albany. After conducting extensive polling, Solarz decided that rather than challenge Democratic incumbent
Ted Weiss or Republican incumbent
S. William Green, he would seek election to the open seat in the heavily-Hispanic 12th congressional district. Solarz entered the race damaged by the
House banking scandal, having written 743 overdrafts; he was not charged, but his wife pleaded guilty to two criminal charges of writing bad checks on their joint account. Solarz was defeated in the Democratic primary by
Nydia Velazquez. Neither Weiss nor Green were re-elected, as Weiss died before the election and was replaced on the ballot by
Jerrold Nadler, while Green was defeated by Democrat
Carolyn Maloney. ==Post-Congressional career==