Name Todd Tiahrt Spouse Vicki Tiahrt (m. 1976) | Religion Assembly of God | |
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Full Name William Todd Tiahrt Alma mater Evangel UniversityMissouri State University, Springfield Role Former U.S. Representative Similar People Mike Pompeo, Jerry Moran, Dennis Moore, Pat Roberts, Nancy Boyda | ||
Children Luke Tiahrt, John Tiahrt |
Former speaker dennis hastert for todd tiahrt for senate
William Todd Tiahrt ( ; born June 15, 1951) is an American politician who was the U.S. Representative for Kansas's 4th congressional district from 1995 to 2011. He is a member of the Republican Party. The district encompasses 11 counties in the south central region of the state, including the city of Wichita. He was succeeded by Republican Mike Pompeo.
Contents
- Former speaker dennis hastert for todd tiahrt for senate
- Kansans laugh at todd tiahrt s lies
- Early life education and career
- Elections
- Committee assignments
- Leadership roles and Caucus memberships
- Tiahrt Amendment
- Tiahrt Bilbray Bill Fairness for American Students Act
- Abortion
- Local control
- Comments on the TSA
- Stimulus spending
- Personal life
- Electoral history
- References
Tiahrt ran unsuccessfully in 2010 for the United States Senate seat being vacated by Sam Brownback. He lost to fellow Republican U.S. Representative Jerry Moran of Hays, Kansas, 50%–45%. After the primary election, Tiahrt endorsed Moran for the general election.
Tiahrt twice sought to regain his house seat. In 2014 he ran against Mike Pompeo in the Republican primary but was defeated. Then, in 2017, after Pompeo vacated the seat to become President Donald Trump's CIA director, Tiahrt sought the Republican nomination for the special election to fill it, but came in 3rd, losing to Kansas Treasurer Ron Estes.
Tiahrt is a member of the ReFormers Caucus of Issue One.
Kansans laugh at todd tiahrt s lies
Early life, education and career
Tiahrt was born in Vermillion, South Dakota, the son of Marcine (née Steele) and Wilbur E. Tiahrt. He attended and earned a bachelor's degree from Evangel College and received a Master of Business Administration from Missouri State University in Springfield, Missouri. He worked for Boeing, where he worked on numerous government contracts, from 1981 until his election to Congress.
Elections
Tiahrt was elected to the Kansas State Senate in 1992. After only one term, he won the Republican nomination for the 4th Congressional District and was elected in an upset over 18-year Democratic incumbent Dan Glickman.
One factor in the win was the 1990s reapportionment, in which Hutchinson and surrounding Reno County were shifted to the "Big 1st" District. Hutchinson was replaced with more reliably Republican Montgomery County. After a tough reelection bid in 1996, Tiahrt was reelected to the U.S. House six more times with little difficulty, before his unsuccessful U.S. Senate bid in 2010.
Committee assignments
Leadership roles and Caucus memberships
Tiahrt Amendment
Tiahrt is the author of the Tiahrt Amendment which prohibits the National Tracing Center of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) from releasing information from its firearms trace database to anyone other than a law enforcement agency or prosecutor in connection with a criminal investigation. This precludes gun trace data from being used in academic research of gun use in crime.
Additionally, the law blocks any data legally released from being admissible in civil lawsuits against gun sellers or manufacturers. Some groups, including the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Coalition, believe that having further access to the ATF database would help municipal police departments track down sellers of illegal guns and curb crime. These groups are trying to undo the Tiahrt Amendment.
Numerous police organizations oppose the Tiahrt Amendment, such as the Major Cities Chiefs Association (MCCA) and the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP). Conversely, the Tiahrt Amendment is supported by the National Rifle Association, and the Fraternal Order of Police (although it allows municipal police departments only limited access to ATF trace data in any criminal investigation). The National Rifle Association says that undoing the Tiahrt Amendment would lead to a rash of lawsuits against gun dealers.
Tiahrt-Bilbray Bill Fairness for American Students Act
A bill was introduced by Tiahrt and Congressman Brian Bilbray (R-CA) called the Fairness for American Students Act that would close a loophole in current law that several states have used to provide lower-cost college tuition to illegal immigrants compared to tuition rates U.S. citizens from neighboring states have to pay. Kansas and Nebraska are two of the states that currently offer in-state tuition to illegal immigrants.
Abortion
Tiahrt has opposed measures to sanction government-funded abortions. In July 2009, he drew criticism from the Kansas Democratic Party when he suggested that President Barack Obama's mother might have aborted him if she had had access to government-paid abortion services. Tiahrt said tax funding of abortion would "encourage women who are single parents, living below the poverty level, to have the opportunity for a free abortion. If you take that scenario and apply it to many of the great minds we have today, who would we have been deprived of? Our president grew up in those similar circumstances. If that financial incentive was in place, is it possible that his mother may have taken advantage of it?"
Tiahrt also applied the same suggestion to Clarence Thomas, who was born in poverty and reared mainly by his grandfather. "Clarence Thomas, Supreme Court justice, if those circumstances were in place, is it possible that we would be denied his great mind?" Tiahrt said.
Local control
Tiahrt was cited as responsible for preventing the City of Washington D.C., from spending its own disease prevention funds for HIV and Hepatitis C-fighting needle exchange programs from 1998 through 2007.
Comments on the TSA
On November 23, 2010, Tiahrt spoke in Wichita against recent TSA security measures and how they affect citizens' privacy.
Stimulus spending
Tiahrt voted against the 2009 Stimulus Bill in the House and spoke against the stimulus in the House, planning to introduce an act to repeal the stimulus.
Personal life
Tiahrt and his wife Vicki had three children, Jessica, John and Luke. On July 24, 2004, the Tiahrt's youngest child, sixteen year-old Luke, died of an apparent suicide by gunshot at the family home in Virginia.
The family established the Luke Tiahrt Memorial Fund to provide grants to organizations that benefits teenagers.