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Revision as of 18:34, 22 August 2006 by BadgerFan (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Chris Gabrieli is a Hungarian-American Massachusetts businessman and American politician. He was the Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts in 2002. He announced his candidacy for governor of Massachusetts in April 2006. (see Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 2006). The son of Hungarian immigrants, Gabrieli grew-up in Buffalo, New York. He is a graduate of Harvard College and is married with five children (ages five to twelve).
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Chris Gabrieli is Co-Founder and Chairman of Massachusetts 2020, a non-profit foundation aimed at expanding educational and economic opportunities for children and families across Massachusetts. Massachusetts 2020 has shaped public policy at both the state and local level as well as directly helped thousands of children and families across the Commonwealth.
As a leading advocate for after-school programming for children, Chris served as Chairman of Mayor Thomas Menino’s Task Force on After-School Time and was a founding partner and Chairman of Boston’s After-School for All Partnership, the largest public-private partnership ($25 million) dedicated to children in Boston’s history.
In the arena of economic opportunity, Massachusetts 2020 led a pro bono project to help the $30 billion Massachusetts state pension fund (PRIM) evaluate investing some assets along a “double bottom line” strategy to yield both market-rate returns and economic benefits to Massachusetts such as creating new jobs and expanding home ownership. As a result of the study, PRIM adopted a formal policy to commit up to $600 million in this direction.
Chris has also been active in public policy, civic life and politics. From 1996 to 2002 he served as Chairman of MassINC, the state’s leading non-partisan, independent policy think tank. He serves on a number of non-profit Boards including The Boston Foundation, The Boston Plan for Excellence, The Initiative for a Competitive Inner City, the Boston Public Library Foundation, and both the Harvard and the Boston University Schools of Public Health. In 2002, Chris won a three-way primary to become the Democratic nominee for Lt. Governor of Massachusetts.
A successful entrepreneur, Chris was a founder of GMIS, Inc., a company providing clinical software tools to the healthcare industry. Subsequently he spent 15 years as a General Partner at Bessemer Venture Partners, during which time his firm invested over $1 billion in start-up high-tech and biotech companies creating tens of thousands of new jobs during his tenure.
He is currently a Managing Director of the Ironwood Equity Fund, a Small Business Investment Corporation (SBIC) that provides growth capital to expansion and later stage businesses in the Northeast. Ironwood seeks out investment opportunities in undercapitalized markets that have been overlooked by traditional venture investors and focuses on the healthcare, value-added manufacturing, business services, consumer products and retail industries.
Chris lives in Boston with his wife Hilary and their five children, John Abigail, Polly Lilla and Nicholas. (Source Massachusetts 2020)
== On the Issues: ==
Taxes: Supports Cuts based upon a "responsible" timetable Cape Wind Project: Supports Same Sex Marriage: Supports Stem Cell Research: Supports Death Penalty: Opposes Abortion Rights: Supports
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