Everything about John Boehner totally explained
John Andrew Boehner (̩), born
November 17,
1949, is an
American politician of the
Republican Party who is currently serving as the
House Minority Leader in the 110th Congress, and a
U.S. Representative from, which includes portions of the
Cincinnati and
Dayton suburbs, as well as a small portion of Dayton itself.
On
February 2,
2006, Boehner was elected
House Majority Leader after
Tom DeLay was forced to resign from the post after a criminal indictment. On
November 17,
2006, after the Republican defeat in the
2006 elections, Boehner was elected
House Minority Leader for the
110th Congress.
Boehner has firmly supported the
Iraq War and the
Bush Administration his entire time in Congress. On
May 25,
2007 he appeared emotional while praising an Iraq war funding bill lacking benchmarks for pullout.
Background and personal life
Boehner was born in
Reading, Ohio, into a large German Roman Catholic family, and has 11 siblings. He attended
Moeller High School. During the
Vietnam War, he enlisted in the
United States Navy. He was discharged after eight weeks of training because of a bad back.
He received a bachelor’s degree in business from
Xavier University in Cincinnati in 1977, and then worked as a businessman.
He lives in the
Wetherington section of
West Chester Township, Butler County, Ohio. He and his wife Debbie have two daughters, Lindsay and Tricia.
Political career
In 1981 Boehner served on the board of trustees of
Union Township, Butler County, Ohio. In 1984, he served as president of that board.
Boehner served as an
Ohio state representative from 1985 to 1990. In 1990, when U.S. Rep.
Donald "Buz" Lukens (
R-
Ohio) was caught in a sex scandal involving a minor, Boehner challenged Lukens in the Republican primary and defeated the incumbent, also defeating the district's former Representative,
Tom Kindness. Boehner then won the
November 1990 general election and became a member of the U.S. House of Representatives in the
102nd Congress. He was a member of the
Gang of Seven, a group of freshman conservatives who publicly criticized Congressional perks.
From 1995 to 1999, Boehner was the
House Republican Conference Chairman. He was the chairman of the
House Education and the Workforce Committee from 2001 until 2006, when he resigned to become
House Majority Leader.
Boehner is widely credited with championing the 1994
Contract With America, the
Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996, and the passage of "
No Child Left Behind Act." He was also alleged to be one of the key figures in the failed 1998 coup to replace House Speaker
Newt Gingrich with Buffalo, New York congressman
Bill Paxon.
In 2002, Boehner and
Steve Chabot advocated teaching
intelligent design alongside the
theory of evolution by
natural selection in Ohio high schools.
Boehner has also been actively involved in maintaining good relations with his constituency. He has appeared in a photo-op for Wayne Nirode, a calculus teacher from
Troy High School (Troy, Ohio) who won the Milken National Educator Award in 2003. He has also recently visited the same high school at the request of an A.P. Government student to talk with students and answer politically informed questions such as "Would rising gas prices help the U.S. economy?" and "Can't we just change the immigration policy without either weakening it our strengthening it?"
Congressional leadership
Boehner was elected House Majority Leader on
February 2 2006, following
Tom DeLay's departure after DeLay was indicted on criminal charges.
There was brief controversy on the first ballot for Majority Leader. The first count showed more votes cast than Republicans present at the Conference meeting. However, this turned out to be due to a misunderstanding as to whether Resident Commissioner
Luis Fortuño of Puerto Rico was allowed to vote or not.
Boehner campaigned as a reform candidate who could help the House Republicans cleanse and recover from the political damage caused by charges of ethics violations, corruption, and money laundering leveled against prominent conservatives such as DeLay and disgraced
lobbyist Jack Abramoff. He bested Majority Whip
Roy Blunt of
Missouri and Representative
John Shadegg of
Arizona, even though he was considered an underdog candidate to Blunt.
It was the most contested election among House Republicans since 1998. Shadegg dropped out of the race after finishing third in the first round of voting. In the second round, Boehner received 122 votes compared to 109 for Blunt. Blunt kept his previous position as
Majority Whip, the No. 3 leadership position in the House.
Boehner has a strong pro-business reputation, but the social conservatives in the GOP questioned his commitment to their values. According to the
Washington Post: "From illegal immigration to sanctions on China to an overhaul of the pension system, Boehner, as chairman of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, took ardently pro-business positions that were contrary to those of many in his party. Religious conservatives — examining his voting record — see him as a policymaker driven by small-government economic concerns, not theirs… [Heopposes] a tough illegal immigration bill that passed in December [2005] with overwhelming Republican support over Boehner's opposition. One provision in the bill would mandate that every business verify the legality of every employee through the federal terrorism watch list and a database of Social Security numbers. For the bill's authors, the measure is central to choking off illegal immigrants' employment opportunities. To business groups and Boehner, it's unworkable."
On
May 25,
2006, with support for Bush and the GOP Congressional candidates lagging in the polls, Boehner issued a fiery statement defending the Republican agenda and attacking his "
Democrat friends" like Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi. He said, regarding national security, that voters "have a choice between a Republican Party that understands the stakes and is dedicated to victory, and a Democrat Party (sic) with a non-existent national security policy that sheepishly dismisses the challenges of a post-9/11 world and is all too willing to concede defeat on the battlefield in Iraq."
Controversies
Connections to lobbyists
In June 1995, Boehner provoked contentions of unethical conduct when he distributed campaign contributions from
tobacco industry lobbyists on the House floor as House members were weighing how to vote on tobacco subsidies. Boehner stopped handing out the checks only "after being questioned about the practice by two freshmen who’d heard about the handoff on the House floor". Rep.
Linda Smith (R-WA) said of Boehner’s actions, "[I]f it isn't illegal, it should be.". This pressure from within his own party forced him to apologize for handing out the checks. He later led the effort to change House rules and prohibit campaign contributions from being distributed on the House floor.
Boehner's PAC has raised $31,500 from four Indian tribes who at one time were associated with lobbyist
Jack Abramoff, who is
currently the central figure in an
unfolding lobbying scandal. Boehner and spokesmen for the Indian tribes say that the contributions were not related to Abramoff's lobbying.
Boehner was the chairman of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce. In October 2004, Rose DiNapoli, a lobbyist for student loan giant
Sallie Mae, held a fundraiser in her Arlington, Va., home for Boehner. At the dinner, 34 Sallie Mae executives — including more than half the senior management team — wrote checks, most for $1,000 apiece, for Boehner's political action committee. In December 2005, Boehner told non-profit lenders that he thought they'd be happy with the final results of the reauthorization of the
Higher Education Act. "Know that I've all of you in my two trusted hands," he said, "I've got enough rabbits up my sleeve to be able to get where we need to." Boehner championed a bill making steep cuts to for-profit lender subsidies in an effort to save more than $13 billion in the
Deficit Reduction Act, though the final package "soften[ed] [proposed] cuts to lenders" and "deal[t] a serious blow to the competing direct-loan program." The direct-loan program gives students access to loans from taxpayers, instead of through private lenders and banks. Supporters of Direct Loans suggest "direct-lending program costs taxpayers much less than extending loans through lenders like Sallie Mae. But the Direct Loan "program hasn't provided savings and is paying out more in interest payments — calculated at about $16.5 billion — than it has received from borrowers since its inception."
Boehner rents a two-bedroom Capitol Hill apartment for $1600 a month. The apartment building is owned by a Washington lobbyist; the
Washington Post evaluated his rent to be about the market rate. Boehner doesn't deny his close ties to
"K Street" lobbyists and says that his relationships are ethical, but that the ties were only for a short period of approximately 2 weeks.
Lawsuit against Congressman McDermott
Boehner has been involved in a lawsuit, first filed in 1998, against fellow Congressman
Jim McDermott of
Washington — the first such case ever between two sitting Congressmen.
Boehner v. McDermott centered on the release by McDermott to the media of and taped conference call between Boehner,
Newt Gingrich, and other Republican Congressional leaders that had been illegally recorded through a radio scanner and given to McDermott by a Florida couple. The call was a discussion of strategy over an investigation of Gingrich by the
House Ethics Committee. Gingrich had publicly pledged not to organize opposition to the probe. The Florida couple were later fined $500 for violating the federal wiretapping law. McDermott was ordered to pay $60,000 to Boehner in addition to attorney fees and costs, which may amount to $500,000 based on his violation of House Ethics rules.
2006 Mark Foley scandal
Republican Leader John Boehner told
The Washington Post that he knew of "contact" between Foley and Congressional pages in the spring, but was unaware of their nature or content. Boehner maintains that he believes he informed Speaker
Dennis Hastert, and that Hastert assured him it had been "taken care of." Boehner says that he was unaware of Foley's e-mails and instant messages until the messages were released to ABC News and other sources.
2006 re-election campaign
In the
November 2006 election, Boehner defeated
U.S. Air Force veteran Mort Meier 64% to 36%.
Footnotes
Further Information
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