Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Adrian Smith (politician)

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Preceded by
  
Tom Osborne

Name
  
Adrian Smith

Preceded by
  
Joyce Hillman

Role
  
U.S. Representative


Political party
  
Republican

Succeeded by
  
John Harms

Religion
  
Evangelicalism

Adrian Smith (politician) mediawashingtonpostcomwpsrvpoliticscongress

Full Name
  
Adrian Michael Smith

Born
  
December 19, 1970 (age 53) Scottsbluff, Nebraska, U.S. (
1970-12-19
)

Alma mater
  
Liberty University University of Nebraska–Lincoln

Office
  
Representative (R-NE 3rd District) since 2007

Books
  
Integrated Pollution Control: Change and Continuity in the UK Industrial Pollution Policy Network

Education
  
University of Nebraska–Lincoln (1993), Liberty University (1989–1990)

Similar People
  
Jeff Fortenberry, Deb Fischer, Lee Terry, Mike Johanns, Ben Nelson

Profiles


Member of congress start date
  
January 3, 2007

Youth tour remarks by us rep adrian smith 06 18 12


Adrian Michael Smith (born December 19, 1970) is the U.S. Representative for Nebraska's 3rd congressional district, serving since 2007. He is a member of the Republican Party. He previously served in the Nebraska Legislature.

Contents

Congressman adrian smith r ne 3


Early life, education, and early career

Smith was born in Scottsbluff, Nebraska and at a young age his family moved to a rural neighborhood south of Gering, Nebraska. After graduating from Gering High School in 1989, Smith attended Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia. He transferred to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln midway through his second year of college, graduating in 1993. While a student at Nebraska, he interned in the Nebraska Governor’s Office and, later, served as a legislative page in the Nebraska Unicameral. He returned home to Gering after college, and, in 1994, he began serving as a member of the Gering City Council. Smith continues to live in Gering, Nebraska.

Smith has also worked in the private sector. He has been a realtor as well as a marketing specialist for the housing industry.

Elections

In 1998, Smith defeated incumbent State Legislator Joyce Hillman 55%–45%. In 2002, he won re-election to a second term unopposed. Since Nebraska voters passed Initiative Measure 415 in 2001, he was term-limited.

Committee assignments

He sat on the Natural Resources and Building Maintenance committees and was the vice chairperson of the Transportation and Telecommunications committee. Smith served as Vice Chair of the Military and Veterans’ Affairs Committee and as Chairman of the Four State Legislative Conference in 2001.

Elections

2006

Smith ran for the open seat in the 3rd District in the 2006 House elections. Three-term incumbent Tom Osborne gave up the seat to make an unsuccessful run for governor.

Smith won the Republican primary with 39% of the vote in a field of five candidates. He faced Democrat Scott Kleeb, a ranch hand and Yale graduate, in the general election.

Approximately one-third of the funding of his campaign came from members of the Club for Growth, a fiscally conservative group that supports tax cuts, limited government, school choice, and advocates eliminating all agricultural subsidies and the elimination of the US Department of Agriculture.

For a time, Smith was presumed to be a prohibitive favorite in this overwhelmingly Republican district. The 3rd is one of the most Republican districts in the nation; presidential and statewide candidates routinely win it with 70 percent or more of the vote. The 3rd is extremely difficult to campaign in and has few unifying influences. It covers nearly 65,000 square miles (170,000 km2), two time zones, and 68.5 of Nebraska’s 93 counties (one of which, Cherry County, is larger than the entire state of Connecticut). However, Kleeb raised more money than any other Democrat had raised in the district in decades. Overall, the race was the most expensive in the district since it assumed its current configuration in 1963.

As the race become more competitive than expected, it received late national attention from the House campaign committees.

President George W. Bush also made an appearance in the district two days before the election to campaign for Smith—a sign that the national party was very concerned about its chances in what had long been presumed to be a very safe Republican seat.

In the end, Smith won by 10 percentage points, taking 55 percent of the vote to Kleeb's 45 percent. This was the closest a Democrat had come to winning the district in 16 years; in 1990, Republican Bill Barrett only defeated fellow Unicameral member Sandra Scofield by 4,400 votes. Besides Bush's visit two days before the election, Smith likely rode the coattails of Governor Dave Heineman, who won many of the counties in the district with 80 percent or more of the vote in his bid for a full term.

2008

Smith won the primary with 87% of the vote. He won re-election to a second term, defeating Democrat Jay Stoddard 77%–23%.

2010

Smith won the primary with 88% of the vote. He won re-election to a third term, defeating Democrat Rebekah Davis 70%–18%.

2012

He won the Republican primary with 82% of the vote. He won re-election to a fourth term, defeating Democrat Mark Sullivan 74%–26%.

Committee assignments

  • Committee on Ways and Means
  • Subcommittee on Trade
  • Subcommittee on Social Security
  • Caucus memberships

  • Republican Study Committee
  • Tea Party Caucus
  • Congressional Constitution Caucus
  • References

    Adrian Smith (politician) Wikipedia