CAPA21 Congratulates Glen S. Fukushima on Senate Confirmation as Director of SIPC

CAPA21 congratulates our co-founder Glen S. Fukushima on his confirmation by the United States Senate on April 6 as a Director of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SPIC). President Biden nominated Glen to the position in October 2021. Following Glen’s confirmation, President Biden on April 11 designated him as Vice Chair of the SIPC board.

SIPC’s Board of Directors has seven members, five of whom are appointed by the President of the United States and confirmed by the Senate. The U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve each appoint a director. Directors are appointed for a term of three years and may serve until replaced.

Congress created the SIPC under the Securities Investor Protection Act of 1970 and serves an important role in the overall system of investor protection in the United States. Since 1971, through 330 liquidation proceedings, SIPC has distributed more than $140 billion for the benefit of more than 773,000 investors who otherwise might have lost their hard-earned savings.

Glen is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress (CAP), where his research focuses on U.S. relations with Asia. Before joining CAP in 2012, he was based in Asia for 22 years as a senior executive with one European and four American multinational corporations, including AT&T and NCR, and served on several corporate boards.

During this period, he was elected to one term as Vice President and two terms as President of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan. Before his business career, he served as a trade negotiator at the Office of the United States Trade Representative as Director for Japanese Affairs and as Deputy Assistant USTR for Japan and China. During the Clinton Administration, he was appointed as Vice Chair of the Japan-United States Friendship Commission.

A native of California and third-generation American of Japanese ancestry, Glen has been active in promoting Asian American advancement in American society, including co-founding CAPA21. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Global Council of the Asia Society, President’s Leadership Council of the Asia Foundation, Board of Councilors of the U.S.-Japan Council, and Advisory Committee of Harvard University’s Asia Center.
He has taught as a Visiting Professor at Kyoto University and at Waseda University in Japan. He earned his B.A. at Stanford University, M.A. at Harvard University, and J.D. at the Harvard Law School. He also studied at the Harvard Business School and was a Fulbright Fellow at the Faculty of Law, University of Tokyo.

Glen co-founded CAPA21 in 2014 with Dale Minami, Maeley Tom, Ginger Lew, and others. The APA political action committee is today led by Dale, Maeley, Ginger, and Tamlyn Tomita as co-chairs. CAPA21 is descended from one of the country’s very first Asian Pacific American political action committees, the Coalition of Asian Pacific Americans, which was founded in 1988.

CAPA21 is donating to more candidates

On behalf of co-chairs Maeley Tom, Ginger Lew, and Tamlyn Tomita, I’m proud to announce additional donations from CAPA21. These donations are only possible because of all the incredible donors who contributed to our $200,000 fundraising campaign!

  • $5,000 to Stacy Abrams: Supported by AAPIs in Georgia, her election will radically transform a state that could reach majority-minority status by 2028, including almost a half-million AAPIs. Her campaign launched its first TV and digital ad (https://bit.ly/3InKlDN) last week.
  • $5,000 to Rep. Mark Takano: An invaluable member of our AAPI delegation, Mark is also improving the lives of our veterans as Chair of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
  • $5,000 to Rep. Andy Kim: Another critical member of our AAPI delegation in Congress, Andy is being targeted by the GOP; it’s vital we defend this seat.
  • $5,000 to Rep. Josh Harder: Running for re-election in a new Calif. district with significant AAPI electorate.
  • $5,000 to Jay Chen for Congress: Strong challenger to Rep. Michelle Steel (R) in new Calif. District 45.
  • $4,900 to Assemblymember Phil Ting: An AAPI champion in the Calif. Legislature, as budget committee chair, led efforts to appropriate $166 million to combat anti-Asian hate.
  • $4,900 to Assemblymember Evan Low: Another AAPI champion in the Calif. legislature running in a new district.
  • $4,900 to Annie Cho for Calif. State Assembly: Important challenger to Assemblywoman Suzette Valladares (R), her win will help address a critical gap in the Calif. legislature that does not have a single AAPI woman.
  • $4,900 to Stephanie Nguyen for Calif. State Assembly: Running for a vacant seat, her win will also elect another AAPI woman to the legislature.

The new donations expand upon our previous contributions to:
$5,000 to Senator Rafael Warnock in Georgia
$5,000 to Senator Mark Kelly in Arizona
$5,000 to Senator Catherine Cortez Masto in Nevada
$2,000 to Calif. Attorney General Rob Bonta
$5,000 to Georgians Advancing Progress PAC (GAPPAC)
$5,000 to Asian Americans in Action (Orange County, Calif.)
$5,000 to Asian Pacific Islander Political Alliance (Pennsylvania)
$5,000 to One APIA Nevada

And as we mentioned in previous announcements, we are earmarking funds for the Democratic Senate nominees in Wisconsin, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. With the recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions upholding fair redistricting in North Carolina and Pennsylvania, there’s optimism that Republican gerrymandering may not be as successful as once feared.

These contributions are only the first phase of donations we’re making in 2022. There will be more to come, especially after primary season is over and we have a better outlook of races across the country.

Thank you again for your support!
Dale Minami, Co-Chair