John Yarmuth

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John Yarmuth
John Yarmuth

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 3rd district
Incumbent
Assumed office 
January 4, 2007
Preceded by Anne Northup

Born November 4, 1947 (1947-11-04) (age 60)
Louisville, Kentucky
Political party Democratic
Spouse Catherine Yarmuth
Religion Jewish

John Yarmuth (born November 4, 1947) is the U.S. Representative for Kentucky's 3rd congressional district. He is a former independent newspaper publisher. A Louisville native who graduated from Atherton High School in 1965, he graduated from Yale University, majoring in American Studies. After working for U.S. Senator Marlow Cook from 1971 to 1975, he returned to Louisville to begin his publishing career when he founded the Louisville Today magazine (1976–1982). He later worked as a vice-president of University Relations at the University of Louisville.

Prior to his election to Congress, Yarmuth was best known for founding the weekly paper, Louisville Eccentric Observer (LEO), in 1990 and for writing a progressive-oriented weekly political column that was featured on the first page of most issues.

Yarmuth sold LEO in 2003 to a company owned by Times Publishing Company of Pennsylvania, owner of the Erie Times-News, though Yarmuth remained on board as a columnist and consultant until January 2006, when he declared he was running for Congress and his column was put on hold. He is Kentucky's first Jewish congressman.

Contents

[edit] Congressional career

[edit] 2006

Yarmuth filed candidacy papers on January 31, 2006 to represent Kentucky's 3rd congressional district. Having won the Democratic primary on May 16, defeating Andrew Horne, Burrell Charles Farnsley and James W. Moore, he defeated incumbent Anne Northup (R) in November of that year.

In June 2006 a college student who had volunteered for the Yarmuth campaign went to Northup's campaign headquarters with a fake name to become a volunteer. The intern was found to be a Yarmuth volunteer when a Northup campaign member thought he looked familiar and found his picture on a website for Yarmuth supporters. The Yarmuth campaign denied any knowledge of his actions, and he was no longer allowed to volunteer for them after his prank was discovered.[1]

On August 7, 2006, The Courier-Journal reported that The Hill revealed a week before that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had earmarked $51.5 million for television advertising in 32 congressional districts across the nation, but none for Yarmuth's challenge in the Third Congressional District.[2]

On October 20, a Courier-Journal article stated that a WHAS11/SurveyUSA poll revealed the race had tightened dramatically, with Yarmuth leading Northup 48 to 47 percent. Another poll a month earlier had Northup leading by 6 points.[3] A WHAS11/SurveyUSA poll released on November 2 showed Yarmuth leading Northup 52 to 44 percent.[4]

On October 26, Yarmuth told Courier-Journal reporter Kay Stewart that he would donate his congressional salary — which would be $168,500 in 2007 — to local charity.[5]

Because polls close early in Kentucky, many analysts saw this race as a key indicator and it immediately became one of the most watched House races in the nation.

Yarmuth defeated Northup in the general election. He garnered 122,139 votes (51%) to Northup's 116,157 votes (48%). Independent candidates garnered 2,896 votes (1%).

Following his first year in Congress, Yarmuth donated his entire post-tax congressional salary of just over $120,000 to various charities in Louisville. [6]

[edit] 2008

Yarmuth ran unopposed in the primary will face Anne Northup in a rematch the 2008 General Election.[7][8]

On February 8, 2008 Yarmuth endorsed Barack Obama in his bid for the Democratic Party nomination for President of the United States.[9]

[edit] Committee assignments

  • Committee on Education and Labor
    • Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities
    • Subcommittee on Higher Education, Lifelong Learning, and Competitiveness
  • Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
    • Information Policy, Census and National Archives Subcommittee
    • National Security and Foreign Affairs Subcommittee
  • At Large Whip

[edit] Television

In 2003, Yarmuth and former WHAS-AM radio talk show host John Ziegler debated political issues on the weekly WAVE program Yarmuth & Ziegler, with Yarmuth taking the liberal side and Ziegler, the conservative side. On a successor program, Hot Button, which ran from September 2004 to December 2005, he faced off with conservative Jim Milliman.

Yarmuth appeared on the March 8, 2007 episode of The Colbert Report in the show's "Better Know a District" series. In a parody of his old Yarmuth & Ziegler debate series, he was prodded to do a point/counterpoint debate against Stephen Colbert. After agreeing to the "debate," Colbert forced him to defend the shredding of kittens in woodchippers.[10]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Anne Northup
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 3rd congressional district

2007 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Tony Miller
Democratic nominee for Kentucky's 3rd congressional district
2006 – present
Incumbent
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