Liz Krueger


Elizabeth Krueger is a member of the New York State Senate, representing District 28 on the East Side of Manhattan. First elected in a special election in 2002, Krueger is a Democrat.

Background

Krueger was born in 1957 in New York City to Harvey and Constance Krueger. She has two sisters, Abigail and Cathleen. A brother, Peter, died of AIDS in 1988. Her father was a partner in the investment bank, Kuhn, Loeb and served as vice chairman of Lehman Brothers, which merged with Kuhn, Loeb in 1977.
She earned a B.A. from Northwestern University in Social Policy and Human Development, and a master's degree from the University of Chicago's Harris Graduate School of Public Policy.
Prior to elected office, Krueger served for 15 years as associate director of the Community Food Resource Center, and she is the founding director of the New York City Food Bank.
She is married to John E. Seley, a professor of urban planning and geography at The City University of New York Graduate Center and Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public Affairs.

New York Senate

Krueger initially ran for the state Senate in 2000, narrowly losing to Republican Senator Roy M. Goodman by less than a percentage point. Less than two years later, Goodman resigned and Krueger won the special election to replace him. Since then, she has never faced a challenging re-election.
After the Democratic party took the majority in the 2018 elections, Krueger was elected the Chair of the Senate Finance Committee, one of the most powerful committees in the Senate.