https://www.huffpost.com/entry/robert-garcia-covid_n_63b5f1d1e4b0ae9de1bb2911
For Incoming Freshman Rep. Robert Garcia, Vaccine Denial Hits Close To Home
After losing his parents to COVID-19, the California Democrat has little
patience for those who downplay it.
Rep.-elect Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) speaks at a Congressional Hispanic Caucus
gathering at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee on Nov. 18.
Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images
As mayor of Long Beach, California, Robert Garcia tried to turn his city into
a model for how to respond to the COVID pandemic in 2020, with lockdowns,
extensive public testing and a quick vaccine rollout. But it wasn’t easy.
Garcia, 45, lost both his mother and stepfather to the coronavirus in 2020,
before vaccines became widely available.
“It’s daunting to be in a situation where your parents are in the hospital,
intubated — and you’re being screamed and yelled at by folks in our
community, people in positions of power, about reopening their golf courses,”
Garcia said in December in a farewell address
<https://www.presstelegram.com/2022/12/12/outgoing-long-beach-mayor-robert-garcia-delivers-farewell-remarks-at-cal-state-long-beach/>.
That experience will guide him as he settles into his new job as the U.S.
representative for California’s 42nd Congressional District, and his new role
as president of the incoming Democratic freshman class.
“What has happened around misinformation, around the encouragement by people
in positions of power, like [Rep.] Marjorie Taylor Greene [R-Ga.] and others
to attack our medical community to discourage vaccinations, is shameful,”
Garcia told HuffPost in a recent interview.
“I don’t know that I can forgive some of these folks for what they’ve done to
this country, and to just the belief in basic medical science,” he said.
Garcia’s fellow freshman Democrats elected him “class president,” a
ceremonial title that is meant to give new members a voice in party
decision-making.
“He was an immigrant. I was an immigrant.”
- Rep.-elect Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), on Superman
As class president, Garcia is poised to be one of the most prominent
lawmakers in the 34-member class — one molded not just by the pandemic but
also by the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
“Many of us in our class are called to serve because of what’s happened these
last few years,” he said. “We are a post-Trump class. We’ve seen the worst in
leadership, the worst in government.”
Being freshman class president is often an early springboard for party
leadership. Garcia has hired Robert Edmonson ― onetime member-office chief of
staff to former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) ― to be his own chief
of staff, which could also be seen as preparation for moving up. Garcia,
however, declined to address this prospect.
“I’m thankful [Edmonson] is coming to work for a freshman,” Garcia said.
Garcia is emblematic of the increasingly diverse face of the national
Democratic Party. He’s an immigrant, brought to America from Peru by his
mother at age 5 and naturalized at 21. He’s also gay.
Both of those aspects of his life factor into his great passion outside of
work: comic books. One of his early tweets
<https://twitter.com/RobertGarcia/status/1591980342273273858?s=20&t=Af3PPhF_jYp-0LeGLwZ-tw>
after he won in November was a picture of the swanky, wood-paneled Library
of Congress reading room for members of Congress.
“Ok y’all I’m freaking out,” he tweeted. “I can pull any comic book from what
is the largest public comic collection in the country and read them here.
Let’s go!”
The post got more than 40,000 likes on Twitter.
Garcia said he fell into comics first as a way to learn English. The
character of Superman, in particular, spoke to him. “He was an immigrant. I
was an immigrant,” he said.
“I think that love of helping others, love of country, being different,
having to hide your identity — I was a closeted gay person for a long time —
those things appealed to me in comics.”
Garcia’s no dilettante: He can talk knowledgeably about Rob Liefeld, the
artist who helped launch the ’90s comic publisher Image, as well as
artist-turned-DC Comics exec Jim Lee and longtime “X-Men” scribe Chris
Claremont.
“I love the Mark Waid Flash run. That’s one of my favorite runs,” he said.
“There’s just periods of time, too, that stand out to me, the Dan Jurgens
Superman stuff. I love that era.”
He’s been to 20 San Diego Comic-Cons, the essential pilgrimage for fans of
sequential art, and been in Hall H, the biggest hall where the splashiest
events are held, about 10 to 12 times, he said.
It’s unclear when Garcia and the rest of his fellow members-elect will be
sworn into office, given the ongoing woes Republicans are having in electing
a speaker
<https://www.huffpost.com/entry/kevin-mccarthy-house-speaker-failed-vote_n_63b5ae8ee4b0b2e15064325a>.
But he’s prepared to take his oath of office as only a comic book geek could.
In a tweet, Garcia announced Tuesday that he plans to take the oath on a copy
of the U.S. Constitution with three items underneath it
<https://twitter.com/RobertGarcia/status/1610396414353313793?s=20&t=mhTgUFUSU4Pu4nhNPmktyQ>:
his citizenship certificate, a photo of his parents and, courtesy of the
Library of Congress, a copy of the first issue of “Superman.”