Jim Inhofe
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Jim Inhofe | |
Senior Senator, Oklahoma
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Incumbent | |
Assumed office 1994 Serving with Tom Coburn |
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Preceded by | David L. Boren |
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Succeeded by | Incumbent (2009) |
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Born | November 17, 1934 Des Moines, Iowa |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Kay Inhofe |
Religion | Presbyterian |
James Mountain "Jim" Inhofe (born November 17, 1934) is an American politician from Oklahoma. A member of the Republican Party, he currently serves as the senior United States Senator from Oklahoma.
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[edit] Early life
Inhofe was born in Des Moines, Iowa and moved with his family to Tulsa when he was a child. According to his official biography, he served as a private in the United States Army from 1955 to 1956 and ended as a specialist fourth class.[1][2]
In 1959, Inhofe married Kay Kirkpatrick, with whom he has four children.
Inhofe received a B.A. degree from the University of Tulsa in 1973, at the age of 38.
In his business career, Inhofe was a real estate developer and became president of the Quaker Life Insurance Company. That company went into receivership while he managed it; it was liquidated in 1986, and despite a two year investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission into accounting irregularities connected with the failure, Inhofe was never charged with any criminal offenses, and has since denied any wrongdoing.[3]
[edit] Political career
Inhofe became active in Oklahoma Republican politics in the mid-1960s.
He was a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives from 1967 to 1969, and a member of the Oklahoma Senate from 1969 until 1977, the last four of those years as minority leader. During his time in the state senate, he ran twice for election to other positions: for Governor of Oklahoma in 1974, losing to Democrat David Boren, and in 1976, losing a race to represent Oklahoma's First Congressional District (which was based in Tulsa) to incumbent Democrat James R. Jones.
Inhofe's political career was revived in 1978 when he was elected mayor of Tulsa, a position he held until 1984.
[edit] House career
In 1986, when Jones retired, Inhofe made another bid for Congress from the First District. This time, he won and he continued to serve in Congress from 1987 until 1994, being handily re-elected every two years in what rapidly became a strongly Republican district. He first came to national attention in 1993, when he led the effort to reform the House's "discharge provision" rule, which the House leadership had long used to bottle up bills in committee.
[edit] Senate career
In 1994, Boren, who had been serving in the Senate since 1979, agreed to become president of the University of Oklahoma and announced he would resign as soon as a successor was elected. Inhofe won the Republican nomination for the special election that November, and swept to victory amid a strong Republican tide that saw the Republicans take both houses of Congress, as well as elect a Republican to the governorship for only the second time ever. He took office shortly after the election, on November 17 (giving him a little bit more Senatorial seniority than the in-coming class of Senators) to serve the last two years of Boren's term and won the seat in his own right in 1996. He was re-elected in 2002.
[edit] Committee Membership
Inhofe is a member of the following committees:
- United States Senate Committee on Armed Services
- Subcommittee on Airland
- Subcommittee on Readiness and Management Support
- Subcommittee on Strategic Forces
- United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works - Chairman
[edit] Political views
Inhofe is one of the most politically conservative members of either house of Congress; among other political stances, he strongly opposes abortion and gay rights. As a member of the Armed Services Committee, he was among the panelists questioning witnesses about the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse. There he made news by claiming he was "outraged by the outrage" over the revelations of abuse, suggesting that shock at the crimes was more offensive than the crimes themselves. He has also criticized the Red Cross as a "bleeding heart." Against the wishes of the Bush administration, the Pentagon, and the American Petroleum Institute, Inhofe has persistently blocked American ratification of the international Convention on the Law of the Sea, claiming that the treaty would infringe on American sovereignty.
[edit] Interrogation of detainees
In 2006, Inhofe was one of only nine senators to vote against Senator John McCain's amendment to the 2006 appropriations bill banning torture on individuals in U.S. Government custody. [4][5][6][7]
[edit] U.S. support for Israel
In a Senate speech, Inhofe said that America should base its Israel policy on the text of the Bible:
I believe very strongly that we ought to support Israel; that it has a right to the land. This is the most important reason: Because God said so. As I said a minute ago, look it up in the book of Genesis. It is right up there on the desk. In Genesis 13:14-17, the Bible says: The Lord said to Abram, "Lift up now your eyes, and look from the place where you are northward, and southward, and eastward and westward: for all the land which you see, to you will I give it, and to your seed forever. . . . Arise, walk through the land in the length of it and in the breadth of it; for I will give it to thee." That is God talking. The Bible says that Abram removed his tent and came and dwelt in the plain of Mamre, which is in Hebron, and built there an altar before the Lord. Hebron is in the West Bank. It is at this place where God appeared to Abram and said, "I am giving you this land,--the West Bank". This is not a political battle at all. It is a contest over whether or not the word of God is true.
In March 2002, Inhofe also made a speech before the U.S. Senate which included the explicit suggestion that the 9/11 attacks were a form of divine retribution against the U.S. for failing to defend Israel. In his words: "One of the reasons I believe the spiritual door was opened for an attack against the United States of America is that the policy of our Government has been to ask the Israelis, and demand it with pressure, not to retaliate in a significant way against the terrorist strikes that have been launched against them." [8]
[edit] Labor
Inhofe outraged some federal employees on the day of the Oklahoma City bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building by stating on national television that there probably weren't very many casualties because federal employees wouldn't be at their desks at 9 a.m. and that they would instead be off having coffee somewhere. The American Federation of Government Employees responded that maybe that was how Inhofe ran his office.[citation needed]
[edit] Environment
Inhofe, chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, is a strong critic of the scientific consensus that climate change is occurring as a result of human activities. In a July 28, 2003 Senate speech, he said that he had "offered compelling evidence that catastrophic global warming is a hoax. That conclusion is supported by the painstaking work of the nation's top climate scientists." He cited as support for this the 1992 Heidelberg Appeal and the Oregon Petition (1999), as well the opinions of numerous individual scientists that he named (although most climate scientists, as represented by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), now believe that climate change is an existing phenomenon). In his speech, Inhofe also claimed that, "satellite data, confirmed by NOAA balloon measurements, confirms that no meaningful warming has occurred over the last century."[9] However the satellite temperature record corroborates the well-documented warming trend noted in surface temperature measurements.[10] Also, the satellite record begins in 1979 and the balloon record effectively in 1958, so it is unclear what Inhofe means by "last century".
In a 2006 interview with the Tulsa World newspaper, Inhofe compared environmentalists to Nazis. He said, "It kind of reminds... I could use the Third Reich, the Big Lie... You say something over and over and over and over again, and people will believe it, and that's their [the environmentalists'] strategy... A hot summer has nothing to do with global warming. Let's keep in mind it was just three weeks ago that people were saying, 'Wait a minute; it is unusually cool...." He then said, "Everything on which they [the environmentalists] based their story, in terms of the facts, has been refuted scientifically."[11] Inhofe had previously compared the Environmental Protection Agency to the Gestapo.[12]
Inhofe, claiming uncertainties related to climate science and the adverse impact that mandatory emissions reductions would have on the U.S. economy, voted on June 22, 2005 to reject an amendment to an energy bill that would have forced reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases and created a mandatory emissions trading scheme. "Global warming is still considered to be a theory and has not come close to being sufficiently proven," he said.
Inhofe has similarly criticized predictions of ozone depletion, particularly in relation to the Arctic.[13]
On September 25, 2006, Inhofe gave a speech on the Senate floor in which he argued that the threat of global warming was exaggerated by "the media, Hollywood elites and our pop culture." Inhofe claimed that "From the late 1920s until the 1960s they [the media] warned of global warming. From the 1950s until the 1970s they warned us again of a coming ice age. This makes modern global warming the fourth estate's fourth attempt to promote opposing climate change fears during the last 100 years." He also accused the media of ignoring scientists such as Roger A. Pielke and William Gray who, Inhofe claims, disagree with global warming.[14]
Inhofe was briefly shown in the 2006 movie An Inconvenient Truth.
Only Texas senator John Cornyn received more campaign donations from the oil and gas industry in the 2004 election cycle. [15] The contributions Inhofe has received from the energy and natural resource sector since taking office have exceeded one million dollars.[16]
[edit] Homosexuality
On June 6, 2006, in a speech on the Senate floor about the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment, Inhofe said, pointing at a large photograph of his family:
... my wife and I have been married 47 years. We have 20 kids and grandkids. I'm really proud to say that in the recorded history of our family, we've never had a divorce or any kind of homosexual relationship."[17]
He also said:
The homosexual marriage lobby, as well as the polygamist lobby, they share the same goal of essentially breaking down all state-regulated marriage requirements to just one, and that one is consent. In doing so, they're paving the way for illegal protection of such practices as homosexual marriage, unrestricted sexual conduct between adults and children, group marriage, incest, and, you know, if it feels good, do it."[17]
[edit] Immigration
Inhofe wrote the Inhofe Amendment (to the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006) which was debated in Congress in May of 2006. The amendment would make English the national language of the United States and require that new citizens take an English proficiency test. The amendment was passed on May 18, 2006 with mostly Democrats dissenting.
[edit] See also
- United States Senate
- U.S. Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works (Chairman of the committee)
- Politics of Oklahoma
- Oklahoma Republican Party
- American conservatism
- List of U.S. Senators from Oklahoma
- Tom Coburn (the junior U.S. Senator from Oklahoma)
[edit] Notes
- ^ "James Mountain Inhofe, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress"
- ^ "Once a Soldier, Always a Soldier". Assocation of the United States Army
- ^ Hyde Mulvihill APC Lawyers - "Insurers in Liquidation, Rehabilitation and under Conservation/Supervision"
- ^ http://www.phrusa.org/research/torture/mccain_text.html
- ^ http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=McCain_Amendment_No._1977
- ^ http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1497443/posts
- ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/05/AR2005100502062.html
- ^ Crackpot Theology Makes Bad Foreign Policy, The Cato Institute
- ^ 'The Science of Climate Change Senate Floor Statement by U.S. Sen. James M. Inhofe'
- ^ National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate of 2004 Annual Review, section on temperature trends
- ^ Heat wave has senator sticking to beliefs
- ^ National Resources Defense Council: Tops Dogs - James Inhofe
- ^ The Science of Climate Change - Senate Floor Statement by U.S. Sen. James M. Inhofe
- ^ Text of speech by James Inhofe in the Senate on 25 Sept 2006 on global warming. Accessed 28 Sept 2006.
- ^ Opensecrets.org Top 20 Recipients of Oil & Gas contributions, 2002
- ^ Opensecrets.org Contributions to James Inhofe by sector
- ^ a b Inhofe: Unplugged and unhinged
[edit] External links
- Official website
- Congressional biography
- "Catastrophic global warming alarmism not based on objective science" - Monday, July 28, 2003
- “Hot & Cold Media Spin: A Challenge To Journalists Who Cover Global Warming” - Speech on Senate Floor, September 25, 2006
- Criticism of Inhofe's outrage at the outrage regarding torture.
- Voting record maintained by the Washington Post
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Preceded by: Robert J. LaFortune |
Mayor of Tulsa 1978–1984 |
Succeeded by: Terry Young (R) |
Preceded by: James Robert Jones (D) |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Oklahoma's 1st congressional district 1987-1994 |
Succeeded by: Steve Largent (R) |
Preceded by: David L. Boren (D) |
United States Senator (Class 2) from Oklahoma November 17, 1994 – Served alongside: Don Nickles, Tom Coburn |
Incumbent |
Oklahoma's current delegation to the United States Congress |
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Senators: James Inhofe (R), Tom Coburn (R)
Representative(s): John Sullivan (R), Dan Boren (D), Frank Lucas (R), Tom Cole (R), Ernest Istook (R) All delegations: Alabama • Alaska • Arizona • Arkansas • California • Colorado • Connecticut • Delaware • Florida • Georgia • Hawaii • Idaho • Illinois • Indiana • Iowa • Kansas • Kentucky • Louisiana • Maine • Maryland • Massachusetts • Michigan • Minnesota • Mississippi • Missouri • Montana • Nebraska • Nevada • New Hampshire • New Jersey • New Mexico • New York • North Carolina • North Dakota • Ohio • Oklahoma • Oregon • Pennsylvania • Rhode Island • South Carolina • South Dakota • Tennessee • Texas • Utah • Vermont • Virginia • Washington • West Virginia • Wisconsin • Wyoming — American Samoa • District of Columbia • Guam • Puerto Rico • U.S. Virgin Islands |
Current Districts 1st District: McGuire • Davenport • Chandler • Howard • Chandler • Howard • Montomery • Howard • O’Connor • Disney • Schwabe • Belcher • Jones • Inhofe • Largent • Sullivan 2nd District: Fulton • Morgan • Hastings • Robertson • Hastings • Nichols • Stigler • Edmondson • McSpadden • Risenhoover • Synar • Coburn • Carson • D. Boren 3rd District: Davenport • Creager • Davenport • Carter • Cartwright • Stewart • Albert • Watkins • Brewster • Watkins • Lucas 4th District: Carter • Murray • McKeown • Pringey • McKeown • Gassaway • L. Boren • Johnson • Steed • McCurdy • Watts • Cole 5th District: Ferris • Thompson • Harrled • Swank • Stone • Swank • Lee • Hill • Smith • Monroney • Jarman • Edwards • Istook • Fallin Defunct Districts Territorial (1989-1907): Harvey • Flynn • Callahan • Flynn • McGuire 6th District (1913-2003): Murray • Ferris • Gensman • Thomas • Johnson Sr. • Morris • Wickersham • Morris • Wickersham • Johnson Jr. • Smith • Camp • English • Lucas |
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Categories: Articles with unsourced statements | 1934 births | Global warming skeptics | Ozone hole skeptics | Living people | American Veteran Politicians(Republican) | Members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Oklahoma | Oklahoma State Senators | Dominionism | People from Des Moines, Iowa | People from Oklahoma | People from Tulsa, Oklahoma | Presbyterians | United States Senators from Oklahoma