- David Dewhurst
-
David Dewhurst Dewhurst in 2009 41st Lieutenant Governor of Texas Incumbent Assumed office
January 21, 2003Governor Rick Perry Preceded by Bill Ratliff 26th Commissioner of the General Land Office In office
1999–2003Governor George W. Bush (1999-2000)
Rick Perry (2000-2003)Preceded by Garry Mauro Succeeded by Jerry E. Patterson Personal details Born August 18, 1945
Houston, TexasPolitical party Republican Spouse(s) (1) Tammy Jo Dewhurst (married 1995, divorced 2000)
(2) Tricia Hamilton Bivins (married 2009)Children Carolyn Dewhurst Residence Houston, Texas Alma mater University of Arizona Profession Rancher Religion Presbyterian Website Official Web Site Military service Service/branch United States Air Force Battles/wars Vietnam War David Dewhurst (born August 18, 1945) is the 41st and current Lieutenant Governor of Texas, serving under Governor Rick Perry since January 21, 2003. A member of the Republican Party, he previously served as Texas Land Commissioner from 1999 to 2003. Dewhurst announced on July 18, 2011, that he was running for the vacant U.S. Senate seat being vacated by the retiring Republican U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison in the upcoming 2012 election.
Contents
Personal life
Dewhurst is a businessman, a rancher, and a community leader in Houston, where he has served on civic and charitable boards. He graduated from Lamar High School in Houston[1] and earned his bachelor's degree and played basketball at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
He was previously an officer in the U.S. Air Force, an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency, and worked in the United States State Department. In 1981, Dewhurst founded Falcon Seaboard, a Texas-based diversified energy and investments company in Houston[2]. He breeds registered Black Angus cattle and rides cutting horses in American Quarter Horse Association and National Cutting Horse Association competitions.
Dewhurst is considered the wealthiest man in Texas politics.[citation needed]
Political career
Land Commissioner
Dewhurst was elected as Commissioner of the General Land Office of Texas in 1998, when the 16-year incumbent, Garry Mauro, waged an unsuccessful campaign for governor against George W. Bush. A self-described "George Bush Republican," he defeated Democratic State Representative Richard Raymond, then of Benavides and thereafter of Laredo. Dewhurst received 2,072,604 votes (57.42 percent) to Raymond's 1,438,378 ballots (39.85 percent). A Libertarian polled the remaining 2.72 percent.
Lieutenant Governor
Electoral history
2002 election
Dewhurst was elected Lieutenant Governor in November 2002, when he defeated former Democratic Comptroller John Sharp of Victoria. He succeeded Bill Ratliff. (Ratliff did not contest the lieutenant governor's position in the primary, opting instead for re-election to his state senate seat.) Dewhurst polled 2,341,875 votes (51.77 percent) to Sharp's 2,082,281 (46.03 percent). (Two minor candidates polled the remaining 2.19 percent.) In that campaign, Dewhurst stressed his interest in public education and opposition to school vouchers.
2006 election
Dewhurst was easily renominated for lieutenant governor in the Republican primary held on March 7, 2006. He defeated Tom Kelly, the same candidate whom he bested for the nomination in 2002. In the November 7, 2006, general election, Dewhurst overwhelmed Democrat Maria Luisa Alvarado, a veterans issues research analyst and the winner of her April 11 runoff primary. He received 2,512,197 votes (58.2 percent) to Alvarado's 1,616,945 (37.4 percent). Libertarian Judy A. Baker polled another 188,956 votes (4.4 percent).
2010 election
Dewhurst filed for Lt. Governor of Texas in the 2010 election.[3] It was widely assumed that he would run for United States Senate if Kay Bailey Hutchison had resigned.[4] He was his party's nominee for a third term as lieutenant governor and faced Democrat Linda Chavez-Thompson,[5] Libertarian Scott Jameson,[6] and Green Party Herb Gonzales, Jr.[7] in the November 2, 2010, general election. He was re-elected to a third term on November 2, 2010, having polled 3,044,770 votes (61.80 percent) to the Democrat Linda Chavez-Thompson's 1,715,735 votes (34.82 percent).
2003 redistricting
In 2003, Dewhurst assisted the Republican leadership, including then U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, Texas House Speaker Tom Craddick, and Governor Rick Perry, in passing a sweeping congressional redistricting bill that increased the number of Republican U.S. House seats in Texas from fifteen to twenty-one in the 2004 elections. The Republican seats dropped to nineteen in the 2006 elections under a modified court redistricting plan. Minority Democrats retain thirteen U.S. House seats from Texas. In his capacity as the presiding officer of the Texas Senate, Dewhurst, in the third consecutive special session called by the governor, allowed the suspension of the custom that two thirds of the body must vote to consider a bill.
Dewhurst's leadership on redistricting brought him into legal conflict with his former land commissioner opponent, Richard Raymond, the only elected official to have been a plaintiff in the 2006 U.S. Supreme Court review of the constitutionality of the redistricting plan. Dewhurst and Raymond have also sparred over education policy.
Legislation
Childhood legislation
He is known by his "Texas Children First" initiative[citation needed] which is part of cracking down on child sexual predators in Texas and throughout the United States. The initiative includes extending statute of limitations on child sex crimes and leading the passage of Jessica's Law. David Dewhurst is also attempting to pass legislation that would allow for the death penalty to be imposed on second time violent child predators. This bill has received some controversy as it has been asserted by some that the death penalty for anything other than murder is unconstitutional.[citation needed] No one has been executed in the US for a crime other than murder since 1964.[8]
Voter ID bill
Dewhurst used the Senate's rules to help defeat a voter identification bill in 2009.[9]
TSA inspection bill
Dewhurst has been accused by state senator Dan Patrick of helping to stop a bill that would have made the TSA's pat downs of airplane passengers a felony in Texas.[10]
Controversies
Condemnation of play
In March 2010, a student performance of the play Corpus Christi by Terrence McNally, in which Jesus and the disciples are portrayed as being gay, was canceled at Tarleton State University in Stephenville, Texas following a condemnatory statement by Dewhurst. The university had received many complaints about the play's scheduled performance as a class project for a directing class, but in a letter posted on the university's website on March 11, President F. Dominic Dottavio, citing freedom of speech, declared that the play would be performed.[11] The day before the performance, Dewhurst issued his statement saying, "No one should have the right to use government funds or institutions to portray acts that are morally reprehensible to the vast majority of Americans," and the performance was cancelled by the professor, who cited safety concerns. A subsequent statement by Dewhurst praised the university for canceling the performance, whereas the professor claimed to have acted on his own. Dewhurst's statement also claimed that whereas he is "a strong defender of free speech, we must also protect the rights and reasonable expectations of Texas taxpayers and how their money is used. A play that is completely contrary to the standards of decency and moral beliefs of the vast majority of Texans should not be performed using any state resources, especially by an institution of higher learning."[12] [13] [14]
2012 United States Senate race
United States Senate election in Texas, 2012
On July 18, 2011, Dewhurst addressed his supporters in an online video on his campaign website, announcing his candidacy for the vacant U.S. Senate seat for the Republican nomination. He will likely face rivals such as former Mayor of Dallas Tom Leppert, and former Texas Solicitor General Ted Cruz.
References
- ^ "Distinguished HISD Alumni," Houston Independent School District
- ^ http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/politics/blogs/hutchisons-replacement-will-have-big-anti-environment-shoes-to-fill
- ^ "Lt. Governor | Blog | David Files for Re-election". David Dewhurst. http://www.daviddewhurst.com//blog/comments/david_files_for_re-election. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
- ^ "Attorney General Greg Abbott to seek 3rd term; former Austin City Council member Raul Alvarez files for county commissioner". Statesman.com. http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/attorney-general-greg-abbott-to-seek-3rd-term-144913.html. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
- ^ Peggy Fikac (2010-03-03). "Former labor leader to face Dewhurst for lieutenant governor post". Houston Chronicle. http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/politics/6894407.html. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
- ^ "Libertarian candidates for the November ballot". http://lptexas.org/content/current-candidates. Retrieved 4 October 2010.[dead link]
- ^ "Green Party of Texas". http://txgreens.org/drupan. Retrieved 4 October 2010.[dead link]
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/lawmakers-dig-in-their-heels-as-legislature-reaches-1465103.html
- ^ http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/politics/texas_legislature/article/Patrick-blames-Dewhurst-for-death-of-1396220.php
- ^ Letter by F. Dominic Dottavio posted on Tarleton State website
- ^ Play’s cancellation ‘right thing to do,’ Dewhurst says Ralph K.M. Haurwitz, Austin American-Statesman, March 27, 2010
- ^ Tareleton professor cancels performance by Mitch Mitchell, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, March 27, 2010
- ^ The Gay-Jesus Place Reeve Hamilton The Texas Tribune, March 29, 2010]
External links
- Official Website of the Lieutenant Governor of Texas
- Dewhurst for U.S. Senate campaign Web site
Political offices Preceded by
Bill RatliffLieutenant Governor of Texas
January 21, 2003–presentIncumbent Preceded by
Garry MauroTexas Land Commissioner
1999–2003Succeeded by
Jerry E. PattersonCurrent lieutenant governors U.S. states and territories and next-in-line of succession for states and territories without lieutenant governors or where the office is vacantAL Ivey (R) AK Treadwell (R) AZ Bennett (R)1 AR Darr (R) CA Newsom (D) CO Garcia (D) CT Wyman (D) DE Denn (D) FL Carroll (R) GA Cagle (R) HI Schatz (D) ID Little (R) IL Simon (D) IN Skillman (R) IA Reynolds (R) KS Colyer (R) KY Mongiardo (D) LA Dardenne (R) ME Raye (R)2 MD Brown (D) MA Murray (D) MI Calley (R) MN Solon (D) MS Bryant (R) MO Kinder (R) MT Bohlinger (R) NE Sheehy (R) NV Krolicki (R) NH Bragdon (R)2 NJ Guadagno (R) NM Sanchez (R) NY Duffy (D) NC Dalton (D) ND Wrigley (R) OH Taylor (R) OK Lamb (R) OR Brown (D)1 PA Cawley (R) RI Roberts (D) SC Ard (R) SD Michels (R) TN Ramsey (R)2 TX Dewhurst (R) UT Bell (R) VT Scott (R) VA Bolling (R) WA Owen (D) WV Kessler (D)2 WI Kleefisch (R) WY Maxfield (R)1 DC Brown (D)3
Territories:AS Sunia (D) GU Tenorio (R) MP Inos (C) PR McClintock (D)1 VI Francis (D) Current State Senate Majority Leaders of the United States AK: Kevin Meyer (R-C)
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AR: Robert Thompson (D)
AZ: Scott Bundgaard (R)
CA: Ellen Corbett (D)
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FL: Andy Gardiner (R)
GA: Chip Rogers (R)HI: Brickwood Galuteria (D)
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ID: Bart Davis (R)
IL: James Clayborne, Jr. (D)
IN: Connie Lawson (R)
KS: Jay Emler (R)
KY: Robert Stivers (R)
LA: Glenn Koepp (D)*
MA: Frederick Berry (D)
MD: Robert J. Garagiola (D)ME:: Jonathan Courtney (R)
MI: Randy Richardville (R)
MN: Amy Koch (R)
MO: Tom Dempsey (R)
MS: Billy Hewes (R)*
MT: Jim Peterson (R)
NC: Harry Brown (R)
ND: Vacant
NE: John Wightman (I)*
NH: Jeb Bradley (R)NJ: Barbara Buono (D)
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OK: Mike Schulz (R)
OR: Richard Devlin (D)
PA: Dominic F. Pileggi (R)
RI: Dominick Ruggerio (D)
SC: Harvey S. Peeler, Jr. (R)SD: Russell Olson (R)
TN: Mark Norris (R)
TX: David Dewhurst (R)*
UT: Scott K. Jenkins (R)
VA: Richard Saslaw (D)
VT: William Carris (D)
WA: Lisa J. Brown (D)
WI: Scott L. Fitzgerald (R)
WV: John Unger (D)
WY: Tony Ross (R)*No Majority Leader in this state; closest equivalent listedCategories:- 1945 births
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