Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Bill Heath (politician)

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Preceded by
  
Nathan Dean

Residence
  
Bremen, Georgia, U.S.

Spouse
  
Susan Heath

Preceded by
  
Tom Murphy

Alma mater
  
Southern Tech

Party
  
Republican Party

Political party
  
Republican

Name
  
Bill Heath

Succeeded by
  
Mark Butler

Children
  
William, Sandy

Role
  
Political leader


Bill Heath (politician) wwwsenategagovSiteCollectionImagesHeathBill20jpg

Born
  
October 20, 1959 (age 64) (
1959-10-20
)

Education
  
Southern Polytechnic State University

Bill Heath is a Republican member of the Georgia State Senate serving since 2005. He served as the Senate Floor Leader for Governor Sonny Perdue. Prior to his election to the state senate, Heath served one two-year term in the Georgia House of Representatives.

Political career

Bill Heath's first foray into electoral politics was in 2000, when he challenged Tom Murphy, the Democratic Speaker of the Georgia House of Representatives, for the 18th State House District. Murphy had held the seat since 1960, and had skated to reelection time and again.

Despite the state Republican Party taking no initial interest in the race, a very competitive race would materialize. Heath would raise over $60,000, a very competitive sum for a State House race. Aiding Heath was the ongoing shift in the district's demographics, with the district becoming more suburban and more Republican as Atlanta's outer suburbs had begun bleeding into the district; Republican candidates for other offices had frequently won the district Heath would lose the race by 505 votes, a margin of less than two percentage points.

Heath finally defeated Murphy in 2002, in the final race of Murphy's life. Upon taking his seat in the Georgia House, Heath acquired national attention in 2004, when he added a ban on adult women's ability to choose to get genital piercings onto a bill designed to ban the genital mutilation of children. Adult men would still have been allowed to choose to have their genitals pierced under Heath's amendment. The attention arose from both the difference in the way Heath's amendment treated women and men and from Heath's seeming lack of knowledge regarding the practice he proposed to legislate. The amended bill passed the House 160-0, forcing it back to the Georgia Senate.

References

Bill Heath (politician) Wikipedia