- Joseph M. McDade
Infobox_Congressman
name = Joe McDade
date of birth = birth date and age|1931|9|29
place of birth =Scranton, Pennsylvania
death_date =
death_place =
state =Pennsylvania
district = 10th
term_start =January 3 ,1963
term_end =January 3 ,1999
preceded =William Scranton
succeeded =Don Sherwood
party = Republican
spouse =
religion =Joseph Michael "Joe" McDade (born
September 29 ,1931 ) is a former member of theUnited States House of Representatives , having representedPennsylvania's 10th congressional district .Biography
Life and career
McDade was born in
Scranton, Pennsylvania and attended a privateCatholic school. He graduated from theUniversity of Notre Dame in 1953, earning hisLL.B. McDade served a clerkship in the office ofJohn W. Murphy , chief federal judge for the Middle District of Pennsylvania. He opened his own law practice in 1957. McDade was elected Scranton City Solicitor in 1962.However, just after taking office as city solicitor, he was elected to Congress as a Republican. He barely held onto his seat in 1964 amid
Lyndon Johnson 's gigantic landslide that year, winning by just over 2,800 votes. However, he would never face another contest nearly that close, and even ran unopposed in 1990.McDade was a longtime member of the
House Appropriations Committee . After the Republicans gained control of the House in 1994, he served as vice-chairman of the full committee, chairman of the Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development and vice chairman of the Appropriations Subcommittee on National Security.Unlike most Republicans, McDade had strong ties to organized labor. This served him well, since 60% of the 10th's vote was cast in the heavily Democratic and thoroughly unionized city of Scranton.
McDade was conservative on social issues. He was a member of the
National Rifle Association and cosponsored several bills attempting to ban abortion and flag burning. He was also a strong supporter of tax and welfare reform, but also was an opponent of free trade agreements.Regionally, McDade was the principal advocate for the Tobyhanna Army Depot and was instrumental in establishing the Delaware Water Gap Recreation Area, the Steamtown National Historic Site, and the National Fishery Laboratory in Wellsboro.
McDade retired from the House in 1999. He suffers from
Parkinson's disease . [Rosa Yum,WNEP-TV , [http://www.wnep.com/Global/story.asp?S=6087013 "McDade Facing Charges"] , February 14, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2007.]Landmarks Named in Honor of Congressman McDade
McDade Park:The Lackawanna Valley was scarred by coal mine surface “strippings”, and one such surface mine was the Old Continental in the Keyser Valley.
Congressman McDade secured funding and support to reclaim the Old Continental strip mine and convert it to a recreational park. The park has served as an environmental laboratory to learn more about how such reclamation work could be done. In 1978, McDade Park was dedicated and became the flagship of the Lackawana County’s park system.
McDade Airport Terminal
In 2006 the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport Terminal building was named in honor of Congressman McDade. What few know is that Congressman McDade's father played a key role in helping the Airport open. Specificially, in 1941, John B. McDade, the congressman's father and president of the Heidelberg Coal Co., donated 122 acres on which part of the Airport now sits. John B. McDade donated this land to "help the national defense in time of war." Thanks to land donated by John McDade, and purchased from others, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Airport opened June 1, 1947.
In the 1990s the Airport infrastructure needed updating. Congressman McDade secured federal budgets and grants to accomplish this task.
University of Scranton McDade Center for Literary and Performing Arts
The University of Scranton honored Congressman McDade by naming its Center for Literary and Performing Arts after him and by creating the McDade Center for Technology Transfer.
Legal Challenges
Indictment, Acquital and the "McDade Amendment"
In 1992, McDade was indicted on bribery charges. He was charged with racketeering and conspiracy after allegedly accepting gifts and trips in exchange for alledegly diverting government contracts to specific groups. He was acquitted after a jury trial in 1996.
Time Magazine , [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,985482-8,00.html "Pennsylvania"] , Nov. 04, 1996. Retrieved February 19, 2007.] [CNN , [http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1996/news/9608/01/mcdade/index.shtml "Rep. McDade Acquitted Of Bribery, Racketeering"] , Aug. 1, 1996. Retrieved February 19, 2007.] Nevertheless, the indictment resulted in him being passed over for the chairmanship of the Appropriations Committee in 1995, even though he was the committee's most senior member.Following his acquittal, Congressman McDade sought to restrict the DOJ’s attempts to set its own standards for ex parte contacts of represented persons and parties. He also objected to DoJ's view that its attorneys should be exempt from the ex parte contact rules of the states in which they are licensed and in which they practice. See generally Charles A. Weiss, Lawyers Bypassing Lawyers, 28 Litigation, Winter 2002, at 42.
McDade was successful in his efforts to ensure DOJ attorneys adhere to state bar ethics standards. The text of the statutory change he authored, commonly referred to as the "McDade Amendment," is as follows:
(a) An attorney for the Government shall be subject to State laws and rules, and local Federal court rules, governing attorneys in each State where such attorneyengages in that attorney’s duties, to the same extent and in the same manner asother attorneys in that State.(b) The Attorney General shall make and amend rules of the Department of Jus-tice to assure compliance with this section.(c) As used in this section, the term “attorney for the Government” includes any attorney described in section 77.2(a) of part 77 of title 28 of the Code of Federal Regulations and also includes any independent counsel, or employee of such a counsel, appointed under chapter 40.
For the codified text of this law see 28 U.S.C. § 530B (2000). To see the implementing regulations, see 28 C.F.R. § 77.2 (2006).
The McDade Amendment principally applies to DOJ lawyers but is also applicable to attorneys from other federal government departments and agencies working with the DOJ. See Memorandum for Command Counsels, Officce of Command Counsel Newsletter (U.S. Army Material Command, Office of the Command Counsel, Ft. Belvoir, Va.), Dec. 1999, at 52–53.
References
*Political Graveyard:] [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/mccullogh-mcdade.html The Political Graveyard]
*Library of Congress:] [http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?j105:I06833:j105McCARTHY.html| Voting Record from the Library of Congress]ources
*CongBio|M000399
*Political Graveyard:] [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/mccullogh-mcdade.html The Political Graveyard]
*Library of Congress:] [http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?j105:I06833:j105McCARTHY.html| Voting Record from the Library of Congress]
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