Department of Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta, 1931-2022 |
Norman Mineta, the first Asian American to serve in a Presidential Cabinet, died Tuesday from a heart ailment. He was 90 years old.
"Generations of Asian American leaders, including myself, have looked up to Norm as the perfect example of an outstanding public servant," said Rep. Judy Chu, chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, which Mineta co-founded.
After the war, he graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, with a bachelor’s degree in business administration and serve as an Army intelligence officer in Korea and Japan. After three years with the military, he returned to San Jose to run his father’s Mineta Insurance Agency.
Mineta’s political career begain in 1967, when he was appointed to a vacant seat on the San Jose City Council. He won re-election and served four more years on the council before winning the mayorship in 1971, making him the first Asian American mayor of a major city, which now has an airport that bears his name.
In 2006, he resigned as Transportation Secretary at age 74 after 5 and 1/2 years in his post.
"He was a brilliant legislative strategist. He also helped to ensure that the bilingual ballot provisions of the Voting Rights Act were not only reauthorized but expanded – one of the reasons why so many more Asian Americans are able to vote and so many more Asian Americans are getting elected to office 30 years later, recalled Karen Narasaki, former JACL Washington Representative and former commissioner, U.S. Commission on Civil Rights ... Mineta insisted on taking a strong position supporting the right for same sex couples to marry. His speech is one of the reasons JACL maintained its historic position by a handful of votes. He told me that a good Congressman should be willing to risk losing donors and an election to be on the right side of history. "
"I sat in meetings with him when he was Secretary of Transportation, after 9/11, with members of the South Asian, Middle Eastern, and Muslim communities, experiencing discrimination at airports where he committed to reminding the airlines of their obligations not to discriminate and am certain that Mineta is one of the reasons that President Bush made an early visit to a mosque to try to stem the backlash," Narasaki continued.
"As my Secretary of Transportation, he showed great leadership in helping prevent further attacks on and after 9/11," George W. Bush wrote. "As I said when presenting him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Norm has given his country a lifetime of service, and he's given his fellow citizens an example of leadership, devotion to duty, and personal character."Survivors included two sons from his previous marriage, David Mineta of San Jose and Stuart Mineta of Redwood City, Calif.; two stepsons, Robert Brantner of West River, Md., and Mark Brantner of Johnson City, Tenn.; and 11 grandchildren.
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