- Jim Dunnam
Infobox State Representative
name=Jim Dunnam
state_house=Texas
state=Texas
district=57th
term=1996
preceded=Barbara Rusling
succeeded=Incumbent
party=Democratic
date of birth=birth date and age|1963|12|12
place of birth=McLennan County, Texas
date of death=
place of death=
residence=Moody, Texas
spouse=Michelle
alma_mater=Baylor University
profession=attorney
religion=Untied Methodist |James R. (Jim) Dunnam (born
December 12 ,1963 ) is a Democratic member of theTexas House of Representatives , representing the 57th District since 1996.Dunnam is best known for engineering the
Killer Ds walkout toArdmore, Oklahoma to postpone consideration ofTom DeLay 's mid-decade redistricting plan. The walkout is credited with starting serious media inquiry into DeLay's actions as majority leader of theU.S. House of Representatives , which ultimately led to DeLay's resignation in 2006.Dunnam was educated at
Baylor University , where he earned an undergraduate business degree and a law degree. Born inMcLennan County, Texas , Dunnam is the second son of Clyde Vance Dunnam and Elnora Eveline Hohertz, and the grandson ofWilliam Vance Dunnam , who served as a member of the Texas House of Representatives from Coryell County in the 35th Legislature, 1917-1918.Political career
One of just two Democrats to defeat a Republican incumbent in the 1996 elections, Dunnam arrived in Austin marked for potential advancement. At the end of his first session, he had reversed budget cuts to a local college that occurred two years before. At the end of his second session, he was noted as a "comer" and potential top legislator. He fulfilled that prediction in the next session. At the end of the 2001 legislative session, Dunnam was hailed by "
Texas Monthly " as one of Texas's ten best legislators because his "success in the House rested on talent rather than title and [he] could do what [he was] big enough to do. Though he lacked a chairmanship or even a seat on a powerful committee, Jim Dunnam was big enough to pass two of the session's biggest and best bills: charter-school reform and tougher restrictions on open containers of alcohol in cars."As the first leader of a Democratic minority since Reconstruction, Dunnam was charged with shepherding a demoralized caucus through a "highly partisan House." Even observers who disagreed with his tactics continued to recognize his abilities as a legislator. "In mastery of the legislative arts," "Texas Monthly" noted in moving Dunnam from the best to worst list, he "has few peers and fewer superiors."
References
* Paul Burka, et al., "The Best and The Worst Legislators," Texas Monthly (July 1999).
* Paul Burka, et al., "The Best and The Worst Legislators," Texas Monthly (July 2001).
* Paul Burka, et al., "The Best and The Worst Legislators," Texas Monthly (July 2003).
* Michael King, "Ardmore Remembered," Austin Chronicle (May 21, 2004).
* Jeffrey Toobin, "Will Tom DeLay’s Redistricting in Texas Cost Him His Seat?," New Yorker (Mar. 6, 2006).
* Texas Birth Index, 1903-1997
* Tex. Legis. Council, "Members of the Texas Legislature, 1846-1962" 260, 264 (1962).External links
* [http://www.house.state.tx.us/members/dist57/dunnam.htm Texas House of Representatives - Jim Dunnam] official TX House website
* [http://votesmart.org/bio.php?can_id=10055 Project Vote Smart - Representative Jim Dunnam (TX)] profile
*"Follow the Money" - Jim Dunnam
** [http://www.followthemoney.org/database/StateGlance/candidate.phtml?c=80874 2006] [http://www.followthemoney.org/database/StateGlance/candidate.phtml?c=63872 2004] [http://www.followthemoney.org/database/StateGlance/candidate.phtml?c=11794 2002] [http://www.followthemoney.org/database/StateGlance/candidate.phtml?c=52439 2000] [http://www.followthemoney.org/database/StateGlance/candidate.phtml?c=52127 1998] campaign contributions###@@@KEY@@@###TXHouseSuccession box
district = 57
hometown = Waco
before =Barbara Rusling
start = 1997
town_note_marker = (1)s-ref|For the 76th and 77th Legislatures Dunnam’s home city was McGregor
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