Louie Gohmert

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Louie Gohmert
Louie Gohmert

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 1st district
In office
2005 - present
Preceded by Max Sandlin
Succeeded by Incumbent

Born August 18, 1953 (age 53)
Pittsburg, Texas
Political party Republican
Spouse Kathy Gohmert
Religion Southern Baptist

Louis Buller "Louie" Gohmert, Jr. (born August 18, 1953, in Pittsburg, Texas) is an American politician and current Republican U.S. Representative from Texas's 1st district(map).

Gohmert received his B.A. from Texas A&M University in 1975. At A&M, he was a Brigade Commander of the Corps of Cadets. He later received his Juris Doctor from Baylor University in 1977. Gohmert served in the Judge Advocate General's Corps, U.S. Army, at Fort Benning, Georgia, from 1978 to 1982.

Gohmert was elected as district judge in Smith County, Texas in 1992 and was reelected two times before being appointed as an appeals court judge by Governor Rick Perry for the 12th Circuit, where he served from 2002 to 2003. After Texas' 2003 mid-decade redistricting process, he successfully defeated Democratic incumbent 1st District Congressman Max Sandlin for his seat in Congress; becoming the first Republican since Reconstruction to represent the 1st District of Texas.

The congressman serves on three House committes. Because of his judicial background, Gohmert was appointed to the Judiciary Committee. He also serves on the Committee on Resources and the Small Business Committee. His district sits on top of the East Texas oil field, making the Resources committee important to the region. The district's constituents are also overwhelmingly employed by small business owners.

Gohmert gained notoriety in June 2006 for having said of U.S. Representative John Murtha "...thank God he was not here and prevailed after the bloodbaths at Normandy and in the Pacific or we would be here speaking Japanese or German."

In February 2007, Gohmert again criticized John Murtha and the the entire Democratic majority for being the reason that the Dow Jones Industrial Average and other markets had recently dealt with large losses. From the House floor he stated, "You know, over the last 12 years, the Democrats have been in the minority, Republicans have been in the majority. The economy boomed in the late-90's. We had this tragic event on 9/11. It should have sent this country in a terrible depression, but this Congress, Republican majority, pushed through tax cuts that has allowed the economy to rebound and be robust and provide jobs and better standard of living. And in two months of talking about raising taxes and more regulation and we are not - one committee chairman talking about how he's going to undermine the President's national security policy - two months! - we have this terrible damage to the stock market, to the economy. Unbelievable. They were saying last night on the news that this is the biggest drop since 9/11. In two months of talking about all these new plans, we are going to cost people jobs. I just encourage my friends across the aisle, be careful. We built a great economy. Don't blow it quite so quickly." Gohmert's critics quickly pointed to various articles citing analysts who stated the Chinese stock market, remarks from Alan Greenspan, and fluctuating oil prices as the main causes of the market drop and flatly denied any corrolation to Democrats being in the majority.

Gohmert has become an increasingly visible face of the new Republican minority in the House of Representatives, expressing his reliably conservative opinions on various topics. He is seen as someone who can express sometimes controversial opinions due to his overwhelmingly safe Republican district in East Texas.

[edit] Washington, D.C.

While speaking in the House regarding the DC Fair and Equal House Voting Rights Act of 2006 (H.R. 1433), Gohmert said, "I would submit to you that Washington, D.C. is also the only city in the entire country that every Senator and every Member of Congress has a vested interest in seeing that it works properly, that water works, sewer works, and no other city in America has that." [1]

In response to Gohmert's speech, the blog DCist sarcastically encouraged residents of the District of Columbia to contact Gohmert's office about such constituent services as filling potholes and collecting trash. [2]

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Max Sandlin (D)
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 1st congressional district

2005 – present
Incumbent
Texas's current delegation to the United States Congress
Senators: Kay Bailey Hutchison (R), John Cornyn (R)

Representative(s): Louie Gohmert (R), Ted Poe (R), Sam Johnson (R), Ralph Hall (R), Jeb Hensarling (R), Joe Barton (R), John Culberson (R), Kevin Brady (R), Al Green (D), Michael McCaul (R), Mike Conaway (R), Kay Granger (R), Mac Thornberry (R), Ron Paul (R), Rubén Hinojosa (D), Silvestre Reyes (D), Chet Edwards (D), Sheila Jackson-Lee (D), Randy Neugebauer (R), Charlie Gonzalez (D), Lamar Smith (R), Nick Lampson (D), Ciro D. Rodriguez (D), Kenny Marchant (R), Lloyd Doggett (D), Michael Burgess (R), Solomon Ortiz (D), Henry Cuellar (D), Gene Green (D), Eddie Bernice Johnson (D), John Carter (R), Pete Sessions (R)


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