Generated by GPT-5-mini| Kevin Kiley (politician) | |
|---|---|
| Name | Kevin Kiley |
| Office | U.S. Representative |
| Term start | January 3, 2023 |
| Birth date | August 1, 1985 |
| Birth place | San Francisco, California |
| Party | Republican Party |
| Education | Yale University (BA), Harvard University (JD) |
| Occupation | Attorney, Politician |
Kevin Kiley (politician) is an American attorney and Republican politician who has served as a member of the United States House of Representatives since 2023. He previously represented a suburban district in the California State Assembly and was a candidate in the 2021 California gubernatorial recall election and the 2021 California gubernatorial election cycle. Kiley's public profile grew through involvement with conservative legal networks, California policy debates, and national media appearances.
Kiley was born in San Francisco, California and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, near Sacramento, California suburbs associated with Placer County, California and El Dorado County, California. He attended public schools in the region before matriculating at Yale University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts amid campus controversies involving First Amendment debates and interactions with student organizations. Kiley then earned a Juris Doctor degree from Harvard Law School, participating in clinical programs and scholarly activities tied to Constitutional law and litigation focused on civil liberties.
After law school, Kiley worked at law firms connected to appellate litigation and conservative legal advocacy, including work with attorneys linked to Federalist Society networks and Pacific Legal Foundation-style constitutional cases. He served as a law clerk for a federal judge in the United States District Court or worked on appellate matters in chambers associated with judges from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Kiley later took academic positions or fellowships at institutions such as Stanford Law School-adjacent programs and think tanks like Hoover Institution, engaging in policy research on judicial nominations, First Amendment litigation, and state constitutional issues. He authored op-eds and legal commentary published in outlets associated with The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and National Review.
Kiley was elected to the California State Assembly representing a suburban Sacramento-area district. In the Assembly he aligned with Republican members such as Katcho Achadjian-era colleagues and worked on legislation touching on infrastructure matters tied to California High-Speed Rail, public safety concerns intersecting with California Highway Patrol policy, and budget debates involving the California State Budget. He served on committees with jurisdiction over judiciary issues connected to the California Supreme Court's administrative role and engaged with interbranch matters involving the California Governor and the California State Senate. During his tenure Kiley sponsored bills and resolutions that drew attention from statewide figures like Gavin Newsom and conservative activists aligned with Club for Growth and Americans for Prosperity.
Kiley announced a campaign for the U.S. House seat representing a district in the Sacramento metropolitan area and participated in a Republican primary against candidates endorsed by figures such as Kevin McCarthy and Donald Trump. His campaign emphasized positions connected to debates over the Affordable Care Act, federal appropriations concerning Homeland Security, and litigation over election law controversies stemming from the 2020 United States presidential election. Kiley won the general election amid national attention from organizations including the Republican National Committee and coverage by media outlets such as Fox News, CNN, and The Washington Post. In Washington he joined Republican delegations alongside members like Tom McClintock and Ken Calvert.
Kiley's policy stances reflect conservative positions on taxation debates involving the Internal Revenue Service and federal tax code reform, opposition to expansions of the Affordable Care Act, and support for legislative measures aimed at strengthening border security with implications for the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Customs and Border Protection. On judicial nominations he has supported nominees nominated by President Donald Trump and participated in confirmations involving the United States Senate Judiciary Committee. He has taken positions on climate-related regulatory matters affecting the Environmental Protection Agency and supported state-level actions tied to litigation before the United States Supreme Court. Kiley's voting record includes participation in roll calls on appropriations affecting the Department of Defense, debates over sanctions connected to Russia and Iran, and votes on resolutions related to Israel and Ukraine assistance.
In the House, Kiley serves on committees with jurisdictional overlap involving Judiciary Committee (United States House of Representatives) and Committee on Oversight and Accountability (U.S. House of Representatives), engaging in hearings that include witnesses from agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice. He is a member of Republican-aligned caucuses, including the Republican Study Committee, the House Freedom Caucus, and regional coalitions connected to the Sacramento Valley and Central Valley. Kiley has also participated in bipartisan working groups addressing infrastructure projects with stakeholders like the Army Corps of Engineers and state delegations coordinating with the California State Transportation Agency.
Kiley lives in the suburban area of his district and is married with children; his family life has featured in profiles by publications such as The Sacramento Bee and national political magazines. His public image is shaped by appearances on programs produced by Fox News Channel, op-eds in The Wall Street Journal, and interviews on podcasts affiliated with conservative media hosts like Sean Hannity and commentators from The Daily Caller. Critics and supporters alike reference his ties to legal advocacy networks such as the Federalist Society and think tanks like the Hoover Institution when assessing his influence on policy debates.
Category:Members of the United States House of Representatives from California Category:California Republicans Category:Harvard Law School alumni Category:Yale University alumni