- Robert Smith Walker
Infobox_Congressman
name = Robert Smith Walker
width = 150
date of birth = birth date and age|1942|12|23
place of birth =Bradford, Pennsylvania
death_date =
death_place =
state =Pennsylvania
district = 16th
term_start =January 3 ,1977
term_end =January 3 ,1997
preceded = Edwin D. Eshleman
succeeded = Joe Pitts
party = Republican
spouse =
religion =Robert Smith Walker (born
December 23 ,1942 ) was an Americanpolitician who representedPennsylvania in theUnited States House of Representatives as a Republican from1977 to1997 . He was known for his fiery rhetoric and knowledge ofparliamentary procedure .Born in
Bradford, Pennsylvania , Walker graduated from Penn Manor High School. He attended theCollege of William and Mary from1960 to1961 and received his B.S. fromMillersville University of Pennsylvania in1964 . Walker taught high school from1964 to1967 . He took his M.A. from theUniversity of Delaware in1968 and served in the Pennsylvania National Guard from1967 to1973 .Walker became an assistant to Pennsylvania congressman
Edwin Duing Eshleman , working for him from1967 to Eshleman's retirement in1977 . Walker was elected to his seat representing southeastern Pennsylvania, including Lebanon, Lancaster, and Chester Counties.In Congress, Walker was an outspoken conservative and allied himself with fellow conservatives
Newt Gingrich ,Bob Dornan andTrent Lott and theConservative Opportunity Society . Michael Barone andGrant Ujifusa wrote that Walker was "scrappy, good humored, and ready to push his principles forward even at the cost of being mocked." He was a hawk on deficit spending and worked to reduce government spending but at the same time served on the science committee and advocated more spending on the space program, weather research, hydrogen research, andearthquake programs as well as pushing for a cabinet-level department of science.Walker was also responsible for a rare punishment of the Speaker of the House and aiding in the rise of Gingrich. When
C-SPAN began televising the House, Walker, Gingrich, and other conservatives found they could reach a national audience with special order speeches, given at the end of the day after the House finished its legislative program. In these speeches, they assailed the Democrats and their leadership in the House. OnMay 10 ,1984 , Walker gave one such fiery oration that irritated SpeakerTip O'Neill because the cameras did not show Walker was speaking to a deserted chamber. O'Neill ordered Representative Charlie Rose, whose committee oversaw television coverage, to have the cameras pan the chamber and show Walker and his allies were talking to nobody. No notice of this change was given to the Republicans when it was implemented onMay 14 ,1984 . When the Republicans found out what was going on, Walker, who was speaking when the panning began, andRobert H. Michel , the Republican leader, angrily complained on the floor. The next day, Gingrich was speaking and Speaker O'Neill lost his cool, resulting in O'Neill's words being taken down and ruled out of order. No Speaker had been so punished since1795 . These events made Gingrich a household name. Gingrich would later bring Walker into the Republican leadership; Walker was chief deputy whip.Walker was a fierce advocate of stronger drug laws. He proposed that all federal contractors institute programs among their employees with violations to result in the forfeiture of federal contracts — even if as little as one joint were found in a contractor's workplace. Walker also led a campaign against the rewriting of the "
Congressional Record " and had the practice banned in the 104th Congress when Republicans won control of the House."
Congressional Quarterly " would write that "he has raised too many hackles and rubbed too many nerves to be very popular" in the House, but the voters back in Pennsylvania only once gave him less than seventy percent of the vote.In
2001 he was appointed by PresidentGeorge W. Bush to chair theCommission on the Future of the United States Aerospace Industry .His name had been circulated as a possible
NASA administrator following the2004 resignation ofSean O'Keefe . He is currently on the board of directors ofSpaceDev andZero Gravity Company , and chairman of the board of theSpace Foundation .Walker is currently chairman of the Washington lobbying firm, Wexler & Walker Public Policy Associates. [http://www.wexlerwalker.com/walker.htm]
References
*Michael Barone and Grant Ujifusa. "The Almanac of American Politics, 1994".
Washington, D.C. : National Journal,1993 . ISBN 0-89234-058-4
*Congressional Quarterly . "Politics in America, 1992: The 102nd Congress".Washington, D.C. : CQ Press,1991 . ISBN 0-87187-599-3
*United States. Congress. Joint Committee on Printing. "1987–1988 Official Congressional Directory, 100th Congress". Duncan Nystrom, editor.Washington, D.C. :United States Government Printing Office ,1987 .
*United States. Congress. Joint Committee on Printing. "1991–1992 Official Congressional Directory, 102d Congress". Duncan Nystrom, editor. S. Pub. 102–4.Washington, D.C. :United States Government Printing Office ,1991 .On-Line Sources
*CongBio|W000068|Robert S. Walker
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/walker7.html The Political Graveyard]
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