After a long career in New Mexico at the state and local
level, Michelle Lujan Grisham won election to the United
States House of Representatives in 2012. During her three
terms in Congress, Lujan Grisham focused on expanding
access to health care, investing federal resources into local
communities, and working to find bipartisan solutions.
Lujan Grisham’s extended family had been involved in the
state’s politics for years, and after her victory she promised
to carry on that work for New Mexico. “I come from a long
line of leaders in the community,” she said, “and I plan to
make that legacy continue.”1
Michelle Lujan Grisham was born Michelle Lujan in
Los Alamos, New Mexico, on October 24, 1959. Her
father, Buddy, was a dentist, and her mother, Sonja, was a
caregiver. Lujan Grisham’s sister, Kimberly, was diagnosed
with a brain tumor as a child and passed away at the age
of 21. Lujan Grisham graduated from St. Michael’s High
School in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 1977, and earned a
bachelor’s degree from the University of New Mexico in
1981. She later returned to the University of New Mexico
to earn a law degree in 1987. After law school, Lujan
Grisham worked as an attorney and a business executive.
She married Gregory Alan Grisham in 1982 and the couple
raised two daughters: Taylor and Erin. Gregory Grisham
died in 2004.2
In 1987 Lujan Grisham became director of the state bar
of New Mexico’s lawyer referral program for the elderly.
Four years later, in 1991, New Mexico’s Democratic
Governor Bruce King appointed Lujan Grisham director
of New Mexico’s state agency on aging, which grew to a
cabinet-level department under her leadership. In one case,
Lujan Grisham went undercover as a stroke victim at a
senior facility to get a firsthand account of how residents
and patients were treated. After her investigation, she
lobbied for greater regulatory authority.3 Lujan Grisham also
served with King’s successor, Republican Gary Johnson, who
promoted her to secretary of aging and long-term services
from 2002 to 2004. When Democrat Bill Richardson was
elected governor in 2005, he appointed Lujan Grisham as
New Mexico’s secretary of health, where she served for two
years.4
Lujan Grisham resigned as secretary of health in
October 2007 to run for federal office. When incumbent
Representative Heather Wilson announced her campaign
for the Senate, Lujan Grisham entered the race to fill
her seat in the House. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
featured prominently in the race; Congress had spent years
focused on issues overseas, but Lujan Grisham wanted
lawmakers to work on concerns at home. “There’s no
attention to any domestic issues, from education, to health
care reform, to economic security, to job development, to
business development,” she said. “And it has really weakened
this country.”5 Lujan Grisham lost the crowded primary to
Martin Heinrich, the former president of Albuquerque’s city
council, who went on to win the House seat in November.
After the campaign, Lujan Grisham opened a consulting
firm. In 2010 she won a seat on the Bernalillo County
board of commissioners, where she served for two years.6
When New Mexico Senator Jesse Francis (Jeff)
Bingaman Jr. declined to run for re-election in 2012,
Heinrich announced his bid for the Senate, and Lujan
Grisham entered the race to fill Heinrich’s seat in the
House. New Mexico’s First District, which traditionally
voted Republican, encompassed most of Albuquerque
and Bernalillo County, as well as small slices of nearby
areas.7 Lujan Grisham won the Democratic primary with
40 percent of the vote, and faced former Republican state
legislator Janice Arnold-Jones in the general election. “I
think . . . that we have a message that’s resonating with the
middle class that we’re focusing on jobs and the economy,”
she said, pointing to her campaign’s “momentum” following
the primary election.8 Lujan Grisham called for a tax
overhaul, national infrastructure projects, private sector
job creation, comprehensive immigration reform, and
investments in renewable energy. On Election Day, Lujan
Grisham won 59 percent of the vote. She was the third
woman and first woman of Hispano descent to represent
New Mexico in Congress. She won re-election twice with
no less than 58 percent of the vote.9
During her first term in the 113th Congress (2013–2015), Lujan Grisham was assigned to three committees:
Agriculture; Budget; and Oversight and Government
Reform. She left Oversight in the 115th Congress
(2017–2019) but rose to become Ranking Member of the
Agriculture Committee’s Subcommittee on Biotechnology,
Horticulture, and Research—key issues for her district.
Lujan Grisham also served on the Democratic Whip team
and chaired the Congressional Hispanic Caucus during the
115th Congress.10
In the House, Lujan Grisham worked on policy she
knew well, especially health care services for the elderly and
people with disabilities. “Our constituents have lost faith
in us, and we have to look like and be able to relate to the
people who are voting for us,” she said in an interview with
Politico in early 2013. “So as a single mom and a widow and
a caregiver and a small-business owner, I related to those
folks and those hardships, and that’s given me a unique
perspective about how things have to change.”11
In each of her three Congresses, she introduced the
National Care Corps Act, which funded grants for
volunteers who provided services for people in need.12 In
the 115th Congress, Lujan Grisham’s measure was added to
an appropriations bill which became law in October 2018
and provided $5 million for the National Care Corps.13 “As
a caregiver myself, I know how tough it can be to care for a
loved one,” she said, noting that the “caregiving volunteer
program” had been one of her main concerns in the House.
The program, she added, “will help address the increasing
demand of caregiving in New Mexico and the nation.”14
New Mexico is home to large swaths of public land,
and Lujan Grisham regularly worked on land-use issues in
Congress. In 2014 her bill requiring the General Services
Administration to give federal land to an Albuquerque high
school foundation passed the House and later became law
after the Senate passed the same bill introduced by New
Mexico Senator Thomas (Tom) Udall.15 Similarly, in June
2014, her Sandia Pueblo Settlement Technical Amendment
Act—which conveyed 700 acres of federal land to the
Pueblo of Sandia in exchange for a smaller tract and a
conservation easement—became law following the passage
of the Senate’s version of the same bill.16
Lujan Grisham also used the amendment process
during debate to seek funding for certain programs. Amid
consideration of the Justice Department appropriations
bill for the 2015 fiscal year, for instance, Lujan Grisham’s
amendment securing $2 million for mental illness issues
in the court system passed the House. She introduced the
same amendment in the 114th Congress (2015–2017), as
well.17 In 2018 her amendment to another appropriations
bill securing $5 million for development in distressed
neighborhoods also passed the House.18 Additionally,
Lujan Grisham made veterans issues a priority in the
House, sponsoring legislation to improve health care and
accountability in the Veterans Affairs Department.19
In December 2016, not long after winning re-election
to the House, Lujan Grisham announced her candidacy
for governor of New Mexico in 2018.20 Her campaign
focused on New Mexico’s economy; she promised to raise
the minimum wage and to revise a state tax credit for the
movie industry to draw more production companies to
New Mexico.21 She won the Democratic primary easily
with 66 percent of the vote, and faced Republican U.S.
Representative Stevan Pearce in the general election. In
November 2018, Lujan Grisham won with 57 percent of
the vote, becoming the second Hispanic woman to serve as
governor of New Mexico.22
Lujan Grisham resigned from the House on December 31,
2018. She was sworn in as governor on January 1, 2019,
where she continues to serve.23
View Record in the Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
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