Dale Ford
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Robert Dale Ford (born July 6, 1942) is a Tennessee politician and a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives representing the 6th district, which is composed of parts of Washington County and Hawkins County. He is a member of the Agriculture and Transportation Committees. [1]
He was born and lives in Jonesborough, Tennessee with his wife Joyce. He has 5 children. He is an Army veteran. [2]
[edit] MLB Umpire Career
Dale Ford was a Major League Baseball umpire from 1974 until 1999 when he along with several other umpires were not retained by Major League Baseball following the umpires' strike. He was actually given retirement in 2001. He was well known as being behind the plate in the Buckner error of the 1986 World Series, tossing Baltimore Orioles Manager Earl Weaver out of a game during the National Anthem, and tossing Reggie Jackson from a game only to have Jackson begin tossing all the contents of the dugout onto the playing field. [3] In 1998, he was rated the 5th Worst Umpire in the American League by players, coaches, and managers. [4] He was often criticized by players, coaches, and managers. [5] When looking back on his MLB service, Rep. Ford says, "For an old country boy with no particular brains and definitely not good looking, I felt like that was OK." [6]
During his umpiring career, he brought a lawsuit against New York Yankee manager, Billy Martin, when Martin stated that Dale Ford was a "stone liar, someone I'll bet $100 doesn't know how to read." [7] Dale Ford later sued the Texas Rangers after he fell while leaving the Arlington Stadium. [8] Dale Ford also sued Major League Baseball for retirement pay and interest. Dale was one of the umpires who resigned during the Umpire's Strike. He was one of those who were not rehired. [9]
[edit] Political Career
In 2002, Ford ran in the Republican Primary for Tennessee State Representative District 6 against an incumbent, David Davis. Davis edged Ford out 3783-3524.[10] Following his defeat, Ford said, "I really don't have a desire in pursuing it again. The way the political system is in this country, it's hard to get anything done." [11]
In 2006, after Davis announced he would not run again, but he would seek the US House District 1 seat for Tennessee, Ford again ran for State Representative. This time he ran against Joshua Arrowood, Ethan Flynn, Patti Jarrett, Michael Malone, and Lee Sowers in the Republican Primary. The results were[12]:
Joshua Arrowood: 403 Ethan Flynn : 1830 Dale Ford : 2304 Patti Jarrett : 2271 Michael Malone : 151 Lee Sowers : 599
There was no opposition in the General Election.
[edit] Political Philosophy
He is pro-life. Fiscally, he claims to be interested in increasing the state budget tremendously for Education, Emergency Preparedness, Law Enforcement, Health Care, and Welfare. He is also for increasing taxes on alcohol and tobacco. He also seeks a tax on internet sales. He supports the limits of contributions that can be given to candidates, though many claim that this goes against 1st Amendment rights and is a protection for incumbents. He hopes to end 'working the polls' by candidates and their workers. He supports increased pensions for lawmakers. He is a supporter of hate-crime laws. He is for nationalized education and against school choice. He supports minimum wage increases. He supports strong gun laws. [13]
He received an 'A' rating from the NRA, but this contradicts his support for strong gun control laws. [14] He also signed the Americans For Tax Reform Pledge to 'oppose and vote against all efforts to increase taxes.' This contradicts his ideas of increasing the state budget and increasing taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and internet sales. [15]