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Kevin Cramer

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Preceded by
  
Rick Berg

Religion
  
Pentecostal

Preceded by
  
Leo M. Reinbold

Name
  
Kevin Cramer


Succeeded by
  
Julie Fedorchak

Spouse
  
Kris Cramer

Political party
  
Republican

Kevin Cramer 509ae932c9fd0preview620jpg

Full Name
  
Kevin John Cramer

Born
  
January 21, 1961 (age 63) Rolette, North Dakota (
1961-01-21
)

Role
  
United States Representative

Office
  
Representative (ND At-large District) since 2013

Residence
  
Bismarck, North Dakota, United States

Children
  
Ian Cramer, Abel Cramer, Rachel Cramer, Isaac Cramer, Annie Cramer

Education
  
University of Mary (2003), Concordia College (1983)

Profiles


Member of congress start date
  
January 3, 2013

Congressman kevin cramer r nd introduces first bill as congressman


Kevin John Cramer (born January 21, 1961) is an American politician who has been the United States Representative for North Dakota's At-large congressional district since 2013. Cramer was previously the Chairman of the North Dakota Republican Party (1991–1993), State Tourism Director (1993–1997), Economic Development Director (1997–2000) and on the North Dakota Public Service Commission (2003–2012).

Contents

Kevin Cramer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In Congress, Cramer serves on the House Energy and Commerce Committee with subcommittee assignments on Energy, Environment, and Communications & Technology subcommittees.

Kevin Cramer Rep Kevin Cramer The US oil export vote Learning from

Congressman kevin cramer r nd speaks on house floor following ndsu national championship victory


Personal life

Kevin Cramer Kevin Cramer North Dakota Congressman Ties School

In 2010, Cramer and his wife, Kris, became "interveners" in the matter of a child whose mother, a former girlfriend of one of their sons, was beaten to death by her current boyfriend. Police investigation as reported by local media indicated that both the child's mother and her boyfriend were involved with drugs. The baby's father lived out of state. Although not related to the child, the Cramers were able to have themselves made temporary guardians of the child. Previously authorities had briefly placed the child with its maternal grandmother, and also are stated in court records as having "misplaced" contact information for the baby's father. As a result, the baby's father was not notified of court hearings and did not participate in proceedings resulting in placing the child with the Cramers, and his parental rights were legally terminated. On December 3, 2010, the state supreme court heard arguments with regard to an appeal of the termination by the baby's father.

Kevin Cramer Kevin Cramer Keeping His Paycheck While Refusing to Do His

He is married to Kris, and has five children.

Early life and education

Kevin Cramer Commissioner Kevin Cramer Public Service Commission

Cramer was born in Rolette, North Dakota, the first of the five children of Richard and Clarice Cramer. He was raised in Kindred, North Dakota in Cass County. He graduated from Kindred High School. He received a B.A. degree from Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota in 1983. He earned a master's degree in management from the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota in 2003.

Early political career

After college, Cramer campaigned for an unsuccessful Republican tax commissioner candidate in 1984. In 1986, he campaigned for U.S. Senator Mark Andrews’ bid for re-election. Andrews lost to North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party U.S. Senator Kent Conrad. Conrad's party is the North Dakota affiliate of the Democratic Party. Cramer went on to work for the state Republican Party.

He was the Chairman of the North Dakota Republican Party from 1991 to 1993. At age 30, he was the youngest person to be named state party chairman.

In 1993, Republican Governor Ed Schafer appointed him to be State Tourism Director and served that position until he was appointed to become Economic Development Director in 1997.

In 1996, House Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas, a North Dakota native, persuaded Cramer to challenge Democratic U.S. Congressman Earl Pomeroy in North Dakota's At-large congressional district. Pomeroy defeated him 55%–43%. In 1998, Cramer ran against him in a rematch. Pomeroy defeated him again by a wider margin of 56%–41%.

Following his stint as Director of Economic Development, he became Director of the Harold Schafer Leadership Foundation. He served that position until he was appointed to the Public Service Commission by Republican Governor John Hoeven. He was elected to a six-year term in 2004 when he defeated NPL nominee Ron Gumeringer 65%–35%.

Cramer serves as the co-chairman of the Roughrider Honor Flight program. This program gives World War Two veterans the chance to visit the World War Two memorial in Washington, D.C. Cramer has worked to locate veterans and raise money for them to take part in the program.

On January 14, 2010, he announced he would run for the North Dakota seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2010 elections. Cramer was very visible in early 2010 at North Dakota town hall meetings fighting against health care legislation passed by the US House in late 2009. Cramer has attended numerous Tea Party rallies in North Dakota, where he speaks about energy, taxes, jobs and the Constitution. He was unsuccessful in receiving the nomination at the state Republican Party convention in March 2010, losing to former House Majority Leader Rick Berg.

Later in 2010, Cramer won re-election to a second term to the Public Service Commission, defeating Democratic candidate Brad Crabtree 61%–35%.

2012

In 2012, incumbent U.S. Representative Rick Berg decided to retire to run for the U.S. Senate. Cramer decided to run for the seat a fourth time.

Various national conservative groups, include FreedomWorks and the Club for Growth, endorsed Cramer, while Berg endorsed Cramer's rival, fellow Public Service Commissioner Brian Kalk. In the Republican primary election in June 2012, Cramer won 54,405 votes (54%) to Kalk's 45,415 votes (45%).

In the November 2012 general election, Cramer went on to defeat Democratic-NPL State Representative Pam Gulleson in the general election, with Cramer receiving 173,585 votes (55%) to Gulleson's 131,870 votes (42%). (The Libertarian candidate, Eric Olson, received about 3% of the vote).

Cramer was sworn in on January 3, 2013.

2014

In 2014, Cramer ran for reelection, running unopposed for renomination as the Republican candidate.

Cramer won with 55% of the vote, defeating Democratic-NPL nominee George B. Sinner, who received 38%. A Libertarian candidate, Jack Seaman, received slightly under 6%.

2016

In 2016, Cramer sought election to a third term in Congress. He ran unopposed in the primary election and defeated Democratic-NPL nominee Chase Iron Eyes, a Native American activist, in the general election,.

Positions and tenure

Cramer opposes abortion. He is a critic of Planned Parenthood and has called for cutting off public funding of the group.

In 2013, during a commencement address at the University of Mary, Cramer condemned the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade and tied the legalization of abortion to "why our culture sees school shootings so often." This remark attracted controversy and criticism. In the same speech, Crame stated of U.S. society: "We've normalized perversion and perverted God's natural law."

An opponent of the Affordable Care Act health care reform legislation, he has voted to repeal it. He also opposes same-sex marriage and condemned the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Obergefell v. Hodges.

Cramer voted to repeal the estate tax.

Cramer does not accept the scientific consensus on climate change. Cramer acknowledges that climate change is occurring, but questions the degree to which humans contribute to it, and opposes regulations to address the issue. Cramer nevertheless has said that he would support a small carbon tax if the revenue went to research and development on clean fuel.

Cramer has been described by Reuters as "one of America's most ardent drilling advocates." Cramer supports an increase in oil and gas drilling on public lands and supports cutting taxes for energy producers. He is opposed to what he characterizes as overreach by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In May 2016, Donald Trump asked Cramer to draft his campaign's energy policy. He wrote Trump's energy plan, which focuses heavily on promoting fossil fuels and weakening environmental regulation. The plan also vows to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement and repeal U.S. regulations aims at controlling the carbon emissions which cause climate change. Cramer was "one of a handful of early Trump endorsers" among House Republicans.

Cramer opposes recent gun regulation proposals.

In 2013, at a forum on the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), Cramer engaged in "a testy exchange with Native American victim assistance leaders." Cramer later issued a statement apologizing for his "tone and rhetoric" during the exchange. Cramer voted to reauthorize the VAWA, but opposed language in the act that would allow tribal courts to prosecute non-Natives "for abusing or assaulting Native American women on Indian land." Cramer stated "How could a non-Native man get a fair trial on a reservation?" and questioned the constitutionality of the provision. He voted for an amendment to repeal the provision in question.

Cramer supports cuts in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly the Food Stamp Program), and attracted controversy in 2013 when he cited a biblical quotation several times in support of Republicans' efforts to cut some $40 billion from the program over a ten-year period.

Cramer supported President Donald Trump's 2017 executive order to impose a temporary ban on entry to the U.S. to citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries. He stated that "I think what Donald Trump is doing is he’s pulling America’s head out of the sand and facing the reality that we have not been kept very safe by current immigration and refugee policies."

Committee assignments

  • Committee on Energy and Commerce
  • Subcommittee on Communications and Technology
  • Subcommittee on Environment and the Economy
  • Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
  • Controversy

    In February 2017, Cramer drew controversy when he mocked the clothing of Democratic congresswomen during President Donald Trump’s first address to a joint session of Congress. Cramer said that several Democratic congresswomen dressed "poorly" and remarked, “It is a syndrome. There is no question, there is a disease associated with the notion that a bunch of women would wear bad-looking white pantsuits in solidarity with Hillary Clinton to celebrate her loss. You cannot get that weird.”

    References

    Kevin Cramer Wikipedia