- William Reynolds Archer, Jr.
Infobox Congressman
name=William Reynolds Archer, Jr.
width=
state=Texas
district=7th
party=Republican
term=January 1971 – January 2001
preceded=George H.W. Bush
succeeded=John Culberson
date of birth=Birth date and age|1928|3|2|mf=y
place of birth=Houston, Texas
date of death=
place of death=
spouse=Sharon Sawyer
current occupation=William Reynolds “Bill” Archer, Jr. (born on
March 2 ,1928 inHouston, Texas ) is a former American lawyer and politician. Archer served two terms, from 1967 to 1971, in theTexas House of Representatives — changing from the Democratic to the Republican party in 1969 — and later represented Texas in the United States House for 30 years, from 1971 until 2001.Background
After graduating from
St. Thomas High School , Archer attendedRice University and then transferred to theUniversity of Texas at Austin where he obtained his bachelor's (B.B.A. ) and law degrees (LL.B. ). At theUniversity of Texas he was a member of the Texas Rho Chapter ofSigma Alpha Epsilon .Upon graduating from law school in 1951, Archer was admitted to the
State Bar of Texas and started up his practice inHouston, Texas . Within months, Archer was drafted and served as a captain in theUnited States Air Force after the onset of theKorean War . Returning from service in 1953, Archer became the president of Uncle Johnny Mills, Inc. and stayed there until 1963.Politics
Meanwhile, Archer started his career as a politician. He served as a councilman and mayor
pro tempore for the city of Hunters Creek Village from 1955 to 1962. Five years later, Archer became director of Heights State Bank. During the same year, he became a member of theTexas House of Representatives and served until he was elected the successor for fellow Republican and future presidentGeorge H.W. Bush as the U.S. Congressman for the 7th District of Texas. He won his first election with 65% of the vote and was reelected 14 times, never facing serious opposition in what had become one of the most Republican districts in Texas. His 1970 victory turned out to be his lowest percentage; in subsequent years he never dropped below 79% of the vote. He even ran unopposed in 1976, 1990, 1992 and 1994 and faced no major-party opposition in 1998.Archer served as the chairman of the
United States House Committee on Ways and Means from 1996 until the end of his political career in 2001. As chairman, he was known to be a "tough fiscal conservative" [http://www.network-democracy.org/social-security/nd/rt/archer.html] Archer believed that the government had been taking too much from the United States citizens, and as the chairman he sought to downsize Washington by reducing the money it takes away from the people (in reference to taxes).Archer was not a candidate for re-election to the
107th United States Congress and subsequently retired from politics onJanuary 2 ,2001 .Archer has taken a politically and socially conservative stance on a variety of issues; among other stances, he supports the
death penalty , opposesgay adoption , and has called for cuts in welfare funding. [http://ontheissues.org/TX/Bill_Archer.htm]In 1999, Archer was instrumental in giving temporary
MFN status toChina , with the support of then-presidentBill Clinton , despite deep concerns overhuman rights issues and thetrade deficit .Life After Politics
After retirement from politics in 2001, Archer remained active in public life. He is the namesake of a distinguished fellowship program with the
University of Texas System , the Congressman Bill Archer Fellowship Program (www.archercenter.org). The program brings students from all over the UT System to Washington, D.C. for a full semester of classes and internships in our nation's political center. He is chairman of the International Conservation Caucus Foundation, Senior Policy Analyst atPricewaterhouseCoopers , and occasional guest lecturer.External links
*CongBio|A000215
* [http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/a000215/ Voting record maintained by the Washington Post]
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/archer.html Political Graveyard profile for William Reynolds Archer, Jr.]
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