Mike Fair

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Mike Fair
Member of the South Carolina Senate
from the district
In office
1984-1995
Personal details
Born (1946-06-16) June 16, 1946
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Judy
Profession insurance
Religion Baptist

Michael L. 'Mike' Fair (born June 16, 1946) is an American politician who represents the 6th District in the South Carolina Senate. Fair, who is a Republican has been in the State Senate since 1995.

Personal

Fair is a native and life-long resident of Greenville, where he serves as a deacon at Faith Baptist Church. He graduated from Greenville's Parker High School, where he played baseball, basketball, and football and served as president of the student body. He married his high-school sweetheart, Judy, and the couple has a daughter and three grandchildren.[1] Fair is a graduate of University of South Carolina, where he played quarterback on the Gamecock football team during the mid-1960s.[2] Prior to being elected to the South Carolina General Assembly, Fair served for six years on Greenville County Council.

South Carolina General Assembly

Fair was first elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives in 1984 and served until November 1995 when he was elected to the South Carolina State Senate. As chairman of the Corrections and Penology committee, he was criticized in Atlantic Monthly for not attempting to check mistreatment of mentally ill prisoners in the South Carolina prison system and claiming he had no knowledge of the mistreatment despite having chaired the task force that investigated the abuses.[3] Fair also serves on the Education, Finance and Medical Affairs committees.

Political positions

Fair, a conservative Christian, has been a supporter of abstinence based sex education and has proposed legislation mandating that sex education classes include information that homosexual behavior is "unnatural, unhealthy and illegal." [4]

Fair has also been an outspoken opponent of evolution. In 2008 he introduced a bill that would have specifically allowed public school teachers to critique evolution in their classrooms.[5] The bill died in committee.[6]

In 2011, Fair proposed a bill that would have prohibited Sharia law from being enacted in the state of South Carolina.[7] The following month, Fair unsuccessfully introduced legislation that would have prohibited Common Core educational standards from being imposed on South Carolina public schools.[8]

Legislative pension

Like approximately 40% of South Carolina state senators, Fair has elected to take a yearly lifelong payout of $32,390 in deferred pay from the General Assembly Retirement System rather than his $10,400 salary.[9][10]

References

External links

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