Tom Birmingham

Thomas Francis Birmingham (born August 4, 1949) is the former President of the Massachusetts Senate. He is widely credited, along with Mark Roosevelt, with passage of a sweeping education bill, the Education Reform Act of 1993. He is a graduate of Austin Preparatory School, Phillips Exeter Academy, Harvard College, and Harvard Law School, and he received a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford University after his 1972 graduation from Harvard College. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for Massachusetts governor in 2002, despite impressive fundraising. An avid cyclist, Birmingham biked across the state of Massachusetts in 2001.[1][2]

Tom Birmingham
Tom Birmingham at a roundtable organized by the Rappaport Center for Law and Public Service at Suffolk University on 30 January 2009.
President of the Massachusetts Senate
In office
January 1996  December 2002
Preceded byWilliam M. Bulger
Succeeded byRobert Travaglini
Member of the Massachusetts Senate
from the Middlesex, Suffolk and Essex district
In office
January 1991  December 2002
Preceded byFrancis D. Doris
Succeeded byJarrett Barrios
Personal details
Born
Thomas Francis Birmingham

(1949-08-04) August 4, 1949
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Selma Botman
Children2
Alma materHarvard, Harvard Law

In 1999, his proposal to keep the home stadium of The New England Patriots in Massachusetts was accepted by Patriots owner Robert Kraft and passed by the state legislature.

Birmingham served as Senior Counsel at the law firm of Edwards Wildman Palmer, taught state and local government at Tufts University and education policy at Northeastern University in Boston. In March 2014, he joined Citizen Schools Massachusetts as Executive Director.[3] In early 2015, he left Citizen Schools Massachusetts to become a distinguished senior fellow in education at Pioneer Institute.[4] His is listed as a notable holder of the Birmingham coat of arms. His wife, Selma Botman, has a Ph.D. in Middle Eastern Studies from Harvard University and served as the President of the University of Southern Maine. They have two daughters, Erica and Megan.[5]

See also

References

Political offices
Preceded by
Patricia McGovern
Chairman of the Massachusetts Senate Ways and Means Committee
1993–1996
Succeeded by
Stan Rosenberg


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