- Jack Fields
Infobox_Congressman
name = Jack Fields
small
birth =February 3 ,1952
place of birth =Humble, Texas
state =Texas
district = 8th
term = 1981–1997
preceded =Bob Eckhardt
succeeded =Kevin Brady
party = Republican
spouse = Lynn Fields
religion=Baptist
alma_mater=Baylor University Jack Milton Fields, Jr. (born
February 3 ,1952 ), is aTexas businessman and a former Republican member of theUnited States House of Representatives from a Houston-based district.Fields was born in Humble in Harris County to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fields, Sr. He graduated from Humble High School in his hometown in 1970. Fields earned both
bachelor of arts andJuris Doctor degrees fromBaptist -affiliatedBaylor University in Waco in 1974 and 1977, respectively. After being admitted to the Texas bar in 1977, Fields worked as a lawyer in private practice and as a vice president of a family-owned business through 1980.Congressional career
In 1980, at the age of twenty-eight, Fields was elected to the U.S. House on the coattails of President
Ronald Reagan 's electoral victory in acongressional district that had elected only Democrats for the preceding eighty-four years. He defeated incumbent RepresentativeBob Eckhardt , a liberal Democrat who had held the seat for seven terms. Fields was sworn in onJanuary 5 ,1981 , and represented the ushr|Texas|8| from 1981 to 1997.When the Republican Party assumed majority control of the House of Representatives in the 1994 elections, Fields was elected chairman of the Subcommittee on Telecommunications and Finance of the House Committee on Commerce. In that role, he was one of the principal authors of the
Private Securities Litigation Reform Act , the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996, and theTelecommunications Act of 1996 .1993 special senate election
In 1993, Fields joined a field of twenty-four candidates in a
special election for the U.S. Senate seat vacated byLloyd Bentsen , when Bentsen was appointed byU.S. President Bill Clinton as the secretary of the treasury. However, Fields failed to win enough votes to advance to a runoff election, in which fellow RepublicanKay Bailey Hutchison of Dallas, won the seat.In the Senate race, Fields divided the pro-life vote with fellow U.S. Representative
Joe Barton of Ennis. The Fields-Barton split propelled Hutchison, who supported theUnited States Supreme Court "Roe v. Wade "abortion decision, into the runoff with appointed incumbent Democratic SenatorRobert Krueger of New Braunfels. Two former governors divided their support between Fields and Barton. John B. Connally, Jr., supported his fellow Houstonian Fields, andBill Clements , endorsed his fellow Dallasite Barton.Post-congressional career
Fields did not run for reelection to the 106th Congress in 1996. Instead, he started two companies, the
21st Century Group, Inc. , a government relations firm based inWashington, D.C. , andTexana Global, Inc. , an international tradecorporation headquartered in Texas. He has served on various corporate and charitable boards. In 2004, the U.S. Post Office in Kingwood was renamed the "Congressman Jack Fields Post Office" in Fields' honor.Fields is married to Lynn Fields and has two daughters, Jordan and Lexi, and a stepson, Josh Hughes.
References
*CongLinks|congbio=F000111
* [http://icreport.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/R?r108:FLD001:H58275 Congressional discussion of bill to name post office after Fields]
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