HYDE PARK, N.Y.—In a packed room at the visitor center of Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, Rep. Pat Ryan (D-N.Y.) vowed to address cost-of-living concerns in his second congressional term.
Public dignitaries such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul attended the Jan. 18 swearing-in ceremony for Ryan, who won a swing Hudson Valley district twice against competitive Republicans.
Last fall, Ryan defeated former New York City police commander and New York lieutenant governor contender Alison Esposito by a 14-percent margin in a district that includes all of Orange County and parts of Ulster and Dutchess counties.
“And where President Franklin Delano Roosevelt guided us through some of the most trying times nearly a century ago.”
As ordinary folks in his district face a challenging economy with an increased cost of living, Ryan said he would make affordability his immediate priority, potentially by shifting more tax burdens from working- and middle-class families to wealthy people and corporations.
He told The Epoch Times that he would also reintroduce his past bills about lowering mortgage rates to ramp up the housing stock, developing a national plan on food costs by conducting a comprehensive analysis of grocery prices, and making generic prescription drugs more available through changes to the patent law.
“We are really focused on each category of where people are feeling that affordability crunch,” he told the publication following the ceremony. “All of these issues are non-partisan issues, and there should be bipartisan consensus to work on them.”
A fifth-generation Hudson Valley native and Kingston High School graduate, Ryan attended West Point and served two combat tours in Iraq, which earned him two Bronze Star medals, before working in the data analysis sector and founding a cybersecurity advisory firm.
After former Rep. Antonio Delgado was tapped to be lieutenant governor in May 2022, Ryan ran and prevailed in a special election for New York’s 19th Congressional District.
Several months later, he ran again in the redistricted 18th Congressional District and won against Republican contender and former state Assemblyman Colin Schmitt by a margin of 1 percent.
New York Attorney General Letitia James, Dutchess County Executive Sue Serino, Dutchess County Sheriff Kirk Imperati, and officials from Orange and Ulster counties also attended Ryan’s swearing-in ceremony.
Ryan lives in Gardiner with his wife and two young sons.