Ritchie Torres

Politician

Birthday March 12, 1988

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace The Bronx, New York, U.S.

Age 36 years old

Nationality United States

#11173 Most Popular

1925

At 25 years old, Torres ran to succeed Joel Rivera as the councilmember for the 15th district of the New York city council.

The district includes Allerton, Belmont, Bronx Park, Claremont Village, Crotona Park, Fordham, Mount Eden, Mount Hope, Norwood, Parkchester, Tremont, Van Nest, West Farms and Williamsbridge in the Bronx.

When he won the Democratic nomination for New York city council, Torres became one of the first openly gay political candidates in the Bronx to win a Democratic nomination, and upon victory in the general election became the first openly gay public official in the Bronx.

Torres also served as a deputy leader of the city council.

1988

Ritchie John Torres (born March 12, 1988) is an American politician from New York.

Ritchie Torres was born on March 12, 1988, in the Bronx.

He is Afro-Latino; his father is Afro-Puerto Rican and his mother was born in the Bronx to Puerto Rican parents.

Torres was raised Catholic but says he is not practicing while still believing in God.

Torres was raised by his mother in Throggs Neck Houses, a public housing project in the Throggs Neck neighborhood of the East Bronx, where he was frequently hospitalized for asthma as a result of the mold in their apartment.

Of growing up economically disadvantaged in "slum conditions", Torres has said, "I was raised by a single mother who had to raise three children on minimum wage and I lived in conditions of mold and vermin, lead and leaks."

His mother raised him, his twin brother, and their sister.

2010

According to 2010 United States Census data the South Bronx is among the poorest districts in the nation.

The cooperative is subsidized by the Mitchell-Lama Housing Program, offering "income-restricted rentals and below-market value buy-in for co-ops".

2011

He is one of the nine co-chairs of the Congressional LGBTQ+ Equality Caucus in the 117th United States Congress.

2013

Torres served as the New York City Council member for the 15th district from 2013 to 2020.

He was the first openly gay candidate to be elected to legislative office in the Bronx, and the council's youngest member.

Torres chaired the Committee on Public Housing, and was a deputy majority leader.

As chair of the Oversight and Investigations Committee he focused on taxi medallion predatory loans, and the city's Third Party Transfer Program.

2015

A member of the Democratic Party, Torres is the U.S. representative for New York's 15th congressional district.

The district covers most of the South Bronx.

It is one of the smallest districts by area in the country, covering only a few square miles.

Torres represents the poorest Congressional district in New York State.

(Torres was upset by the $269 million city-subsidized Trump Golf Links built "across the street" in Ferry Point Park rather than housing for struggling New Yorkers; the course was built on a landfill, took 14 years to be developed, and opened in 2015. He vowed then to fight for their well-being.) In junior high, Torres realized he was gay but did not come out, fearing homophobic violence.

He has described being "brutally assaulted" by a bully in the third grade.

Torres attended Herbert H. Lehman High School, served in the inaugural class of the Coro New York Exploring Leadership Program, and later worked as an intern in the offices of the mayor and the attorney general.

He came out while a sophomore "during a schoolwide forum on marriage equality".

Torres is one of a small minority of congressmen who does not hold a college degree.

He enrolled at New York University, but dropped out at the beginning of his sophomore year, as he was suffering from severe depression.

He struggled with suicidal thoughts based on his sexuality.

As he recovered, Torres resumed working for council member James Vacca, eventually becoming Vacca's housing director.

In that role, Torres conducted site inspections and documented conditions, ensuring housing issues were promptly and adequately addressed.

2016

In 2016, Torres was a delegate for the Bernie Sanders campaign.

2019

In July 2019, Torres announced his bid for NY's 15th congressional district, to succeed Representative José E. Serrano.

The district is one of the most Democratic leaning congressional districts in the country.

Torres won the November 2020 general election, and assumed office on January 3, 2021.

This made him and Mondaire Jones the first openly gay Black men elected to Congress.

It also made Torres the first openly gay Afro-Latino elected to Congress.

Upon his election, Torres requested the chairmanship of the council's committee on public housing, tasked with overseeing the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA); as of July 2019, it is the "nation's largest public housing system", which "provides housing to more than 400,000 low-income residents" in "176,000 apartments across 325 complexes".

He made "the living conditions of the city's most underserved residents a signature priority".

In this role he helped secure $3 million for Concourse Village, Inc., a nearly 1,900-unit housing cooperative in the South Bronx.