Everything about Thomas M Davis totally explained
Thomas M. "Tom" Davis III (born
January 5 1949 in
Minot,
North Dakota) is a
Republican member of the
United States House of Representatives, representing
Virginia's 11th congressional district in
Northern Virginia. Davis was considering a run for the
U.S. Senate seat being vacated by five-term incumbent and fellow Republican
John Warner in the
2008 election, but decided against it. He announced by January 30, 2008, that he won't seek reelection to an eighth term.
Early years and initial political career
Davis moved to
Fairfax County at an early age. He was a
U.S. Senate Page and graduated as president of Fairfax high school class. He is a graduate of
Amherst College, in
political science, and the
University of Virginia, in law. He attended
Officer Candidate School of the U.S. Army, served on active duty, and spent eight years with the
Virginia National Guard and the
U.S. Army Reserve.
Davis was a member of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors from 1980 to 1994, serving as chairman of the Board of Supervisors from 1991 until his election to the House. During his service as board chairman, Fairfax County was ranked first financially by
City and State magazine in their list of Top 50 Counties.
As a congressman
Davis won election to the House in 1994, the year of the Republican
Contract with America. Davis defeated one-term incumbent
Leslie Byrne. The Contract with America called for citizen-legislators who would retire after 12 years, instead of career politicians. Davis signed the
Contract
and voted in favor of the Citizens Legislature Act; however, the bill didn't achieve support from the 2/3 majority needed for the
amendment to pass.
Davis sought and won re-election in 2006, and has begun fundraising for a Senate race in 2008. In his 2004 term, on what the
Washington Post deems to be most recent "key votes", Davis voted 10 times out of the last 13 times (77 percent) for the Republican party position. Since 2003 on all 1,700 votes, Davis voted over 89 percent in favor of the Republican position.. Nevertheless, Davis is sometimes described as a
moderate; he supports some
abortion rights and voting rights for the
District of Columbia, and opposes the state car tax phase-out as he expressed in the
Washingtonian in 2006.
Davis was chairman of the
National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) from 1998 to 2002. According to
The Federal Paper, he then sought the chairmanship of the
House Government Oversight and Reform Committee. Davis had less seniority than the other contenders for this chairmanship, but some Republicans wanted to reward him for his work as NRCC chairman, including his supervision of a $160 million fundraising effort. Davis's deputy on the NRCC,
Tom Reynolds of
New York, became the next NRCC chairman.
House Committee on Government Reform
Davis chaired the
House Government Reform Committee from 1998 to 2007 when
Democrats became the majority and
Henry Waxman became chair. Davis had renamed the committee, removing "Oversight" from the title; one of Waxman's first acts as Chair was to reinstitute the name as the
House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. The Committee is the chief investigative and oversight committee of the House, and has been granted broad jurisdiction. This committee was very active during the
Clinton administration. It issued 1,052
subpoenas to probe alleged misconduct by the administration and the Democratic Party between 1997 and 2002. By contrast, Davis and the majority has permitted three subpoenas to the
George W. Bush administration, including one to the
Defense Department over documents related to
Hurricane Katrina.
Walter Reed Army Medical Center
The
Washington Post revived a
story in 2007
from
Salon magazine published in 2004
about conditions at
Walter Reed Army Medical Center that deteriorated rapidly when the operations were transferred to the private contractor
IAP. Committee members told
Congressional Quarterly they didn't want to "embarrass" the
Army by publicizing the matter.
ICG government
Davis' second wife,
Jeannemarie Devolites-Davis, was one of the first hires (as a part-time consultant) for
ICG, a firm that assists businesses in obtaining government contracts. Their financial relationship, along with financial ties that benefit family members of 64 of the 435 voting members of Congress, was highlighted in the June 2007 ethics report,
"Family Affair"
by the
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.
At the time of her hire at ICG, Davis was her mentor and campaign manager. After being hired, Devolites married Davis. On
July 28,
2006, the
Washington Post reported that the
Defense Information Systems Agency had reviewed its satellite contract with Artel, Inc., and the agency had preliminarily determined that the contract was ineffective and expensive. Artel then hired ICG for
lobbying services. ICG drafted a letter Davis signed to the agency threatening an investigation by his committee if the contract wasn't awarded. After the
Post articles appeared, Davis sought an opinion from the
House Ethics Committee. They advised him to be careful to avoid the appearance of any conflict in this matter.
The Post published an extensive article on the issue, the company had to register as a lobbyist, and ICG removed a picture from the front page of its website of Davis speaking to ICG clients.
His wife continues to work for ICG, which paid her $78,000 in 2005 for working 10 to 20 hours a week, primarily at home on her cell phone. She makes $18,000 a year as a Virginia legislator. Her
bio
continues as the only one on the ICG site to name her spouse.. The same
Post writers are continuing the investigation of oversight of contractual influence by the committee and its chair in November and December 2006.
Major League Baseball team in Washington
Davis was accused of threatening
Major League Baseball with an investigation when a consortium that included
George Soros offered to buy the
Washington Nationals.
"I think Major League Baseball understands the stakes", Davis told
Roll Call magazine. "I don't think they want to get involved in the political fights." Davis, who convened the recent congressional hearings on
steroids, added, "I don't think it's the Nats that get hurt. I think it's Major League Baseball that gets hurt. They enjoy all sorts of exemptions from
antitrust laws."
Smart growth development
Davis also appeared at a local
zoning meeting to oppose a
smart growth plan near the
Vienna Metro station. Approval of the project, to build what was called a "mini-city" within walking distance of the Metro, was considered routine. Some of the longest commutes to work in the nation begin in Virginia — second only to
New York City — and in
Prince William County in particular. The project was a key resolution to congestion in the congressional district. Davis' pledge to approve the legislation led several county supervisors to accuse him of meddling in a local land-use issue.
One politician who spoke to Davis says the congressman told him that he opposes Pulte Homes' MetroWest project because "all it does is produce Democrats."
In July 2006, Davis wrote a letter to Virginia Governor
Tim Kaine discouraging the state from constructing an underground Metrorail through Tysons Corner. According to a
July 17,
2006 story in
The Washington Post, Davis said switching to a tunnel in Tysons would require reviews that could delay the rail line by as much as two years. On February 26, 2007,
The Post reported that Davis switched positions.
Jennifer and David Safavian
One of 12 counsels for oversight and investigations on the
House Government Reform Committee is
Jennifer Safavian, wife of
David Safavian, the first person convicted in the
Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal. A former legislative director for Davis submitted a request that he receive no jail time, but the judge ruled Safavian's conduct merited incarceration.
David Safavian had replaced Angela Styles, who was forced from the
General Services Administration after Davis wrote letters to her bosses at the
Office of Management and Budget. He had written to Mitchell E. Daniels Jr. and
Joshua Bolten, Styles' superiors at the Office of Management and Budget, a.
Prior to his GSA job, Safavian had no government contracts experience. He did have connections to Davis, as a lobbyist with
Grover Norquist, head of
Americans for Tax Reform (ATR), he worked closely with the NRCC when Davis was chair, and presented Davis with an ATR award." ATR has been found to have operated as tax-exempt despite not qualifying for
tax-exempt status.
Schiavo subpoena
Among notable
recent controversies involving the committee under Davis was in the
Terri Schiavo case. The committee subpoena, signed by Davis, ordered the appearance of Schiavo, her husband, Michael, and her doctors. The subpoenas specified that the witnesses bring to the hearing "all medical and other equipment that provides nutrition and hydration...in its current and continuing state of operations." Davis issued a
joint statement
with
House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-
Texas) and
Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert (R-
Illinois) that stated: "This inquiry should give hope to Terri, her parents and friends, and the millions of people throughout the world who are praying for her safety. This fight isn't over." Many legal scholars criticized this action as an inappropriate congressional interventions in an ongoing court case that defied the
rule of law and amounted to a
bill of attainder — not against the party the politicians are attempting to aid, but against the party on the other side of the courtroom.
K Street Project and NRCC fundraising
As chairman of the NRCC, Davis' chief responsibility was fundraising for members of Congress, and his work overlapped with the financial efforts of the Republican Party's
K Street Project and the fundraising scandals involving Abramoff and DeLay. Davis himself signed an RNCC check for $500,000 in 1999, the largest amount donated by the RNCC, while he was chair of the committee. The RNCC was fined by the
Federal Elections Commission for transferring the funds because it was transferred between
political action committees for the same candidates in violation of contribution limits. The PAC involved, the
U.S. Family Network, is connected with Abramoff,
Bob Ney, and Willie Tan, a businessman in the
Northern Mariana Islands, all currently associated with a
political scandal.
Political positions
Davis' district is in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C. He has been active in recent effort to change federal procurement and contracting practices that make it faster to award contracts but also easier to award
no-bid, "cost-plus" and "share in savings" contracts. These contracts have especially involved the GSA and the
Department of Homeland Security. Critics of the reforms point to the increasing campaign contributions from beneficiaries of the contracts and a reduction in audit and auditors, oversight, and performance by contractors after the changes.
Tom Davis was one of only eleven Republicans to vote against the Contract with America Tax Relief Act
that cut taxes by $189 billion over five years, including lowering the capital gains tax rate and easing the "
marriage penalty," and supported a tax hike referendum to raise sales taxes in northern Virginia by 4.5 to 5%.
Davis supports Virginia's
Right-to-work law, which is opposed by
organized labor.
Davis now opposes
amnesty for
illegal immigrants and supported H.R. 4437, the immigration reform bill sponsored by Rep.
James Sensenbrenner. In
June 2006 his criticism of the immigration response included the same ideas that were key provisions in the House bill he supported four months later.
Davis has voted to support
stem cell research. He is a member of the
Republican Main Street Partnership, a group of Republicans who describe themselves as "mainstream".
In 2007, expressing disapproval with the Democratic Party resolution disapproving of the
Iraq troop surge, Davis nevertheless broke with his party line to vote for the resolution.
Project Vote Smart reports that Davis has high approval ratings from business groups, but significantly lower ratings from groups that support abortion rights,
environmental protection, and
civil liberties.
Davis was supportive of his wife's efforts for harsher gun laws in Virginia.
Legislative activity
Davis was chair of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina. Democrats, who had proposed an independent investigation, objected and didn't officially take part in the committee. The committee proceeded, eventually producing a stinging report critical of government's response to the disaster.
Davis introduced the
Elizabeth Morgan Act, passed in 1996. In 2003, a federal appeals court ruled that the act was an unconstitutional bill of attainder.
Davis has been instrumental in getting federal funding for the replacement of the
Woodrow Wilson Bridge.
Davis sponsored legislation creating a Financial Control Board for Washington, D.C. He was in charge, until 2000, of the Government Reform Committee’s Subcommittee on the District of Columbia, generally favoring allowing the District government more autonomy.
Apparently in a surprise to the
House Judiciary Committee, the Reform Committee passed HR 2043 (the
DC Fair and Equal House Voting Rights Act), a bill Davis introduced to provide the District of Columbia with
voting representation in Congress. This bill differs from other bills that would grant the district the right to elect Representatives. HR 2043 requires the addition of two representatives, one in Washington, D.C., and one in
Utah, by raising the number of Representatives from 435 to 437. Originally, the number of House seats would return to 435 after the
2010 Census, with Washington, D.C. retaining a full vote in the House., but later versions of the bill make the expansion to 437 seats permanent. The bill didn't make it to the House floor, however.
The bill was reintroduced, cosponsored by Davis, as the "District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act of 2007", as H.R. 1433 in the 110th Congress. The bill permanently increases the size of the House by two members. One seat will go to the District of Columbia and the other seat will go to the next state in line to get a congressional seat. Based on the 2000 decennial census and apportionment calculations, Utah will get the second seat until the reapportionment taking place after the 2010 Decennial Census. On March 13, 2007 it passed the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform with a vote of 24-5.
2004 and 2006 election campaigns
Davis' congressional district was
redistricted after the 2000 census, which increased the percentage of Republicans in the district. In 2004, he defeated his relatively unknown Democratic challenger, Ken Longmyer, by a 60 percent to 39 percent margin. In the race, Davis outspent Longmyer, $1,835,000 to $72,000.
In the
November 2006 election, Davis defeated Democrat
Andrew Hurst by 11 percentage points. It was the closest and costliest race Davis faced in 12 years. In financing his campaign, Davis outspent Hurst almost 9-to-1, $2,607,125 to $310,561.
Senate campaign
On
September 15, Davis told
WTOP's "Politics Program" that he was running for the Senate seat being vacated by John Warner. He said that he's been assembling money and staff for the contest, but was delaying a formal announcement until November. It had been presumed that he'd face former
Governor Jim Gilmore.
However, Davis announced in October 2007 that he wouldn't be running after all, in part due to the state Republican Party's decision to choose its nominee at a nominating convention rather than in a primary.
Davis argued that a primary would expose the candidates to the kind of environment they'd face in November. It was also thought that a primary would have favored Davis due to his popularity in voter-rich Northern Virginia. In contrast, the delegates at the nominating convention will be made up mostly of party activists; the state's Republican activist base is tilted heavily to the right. Gilmore had argued strongly for a convention, claiming that a primary would leave the winner short of cash--no small consideration, since the presumed Democratic nominee, former Governor
Mark Warner, has the ability to self-finance.
Davis told the
National Press Club that he's considering a challenge to Virginia's other Senator,
Jim Webb, in
2012.
Personal
Davis is a member of the
Christian Science Church.
In 1973, Davis married Margaret "Peggy" Rantz, a medical doctor. They have three children together: Carlton, Pamela, and Shelley. He
divorced her in late 2003 and announced his intention to marry Jeannemarie Devolites, in
February 2004. They married in June of that year. Davis' first public involvement with Devolites was in 1997 when he managed her
fourth campaign, her first successful one, and was her biggest campaign contributor. Over the next decade she moved from being a delegate to a member of the Virginia Senate. Davis' political action committees gave her more than $172,000 by mid-2006.
!|Year
!
!|Democrat
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|Republican
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|3rd Party
!|Party
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|3rd Party
!|Party
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
|-
|
1994
|
| |
| align="right" |84,104
| |45%
|
| |
| align="right" |98,216
| |53%
|
| |Gordon S. Cruickshank
| |
Independent
| align="right" |3,246
| align="right" |2%
| |
*
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|
1996
|
| |
| align="right" |74,701
| |35%
|
| |
Tom Davis
| align="right" |138,758
| |64%
|
| |C. W. Levi Levy
| |
Independent
| align="right" |2,842
| align="right" |1%
| |
*
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|
1998
|
| |
(no candidate)
| align="right" |
| |
|
| |
Tom Davis
| align="right" |91,603
| |82%
|
| |C. W. Levi Levy
| |
Independent
| align="right" |18,807
| align="right" |17%
|
| |
Write-ins
| |
| align="right" |1,701
| align="right" |2%
|
|-
|
2000
|
| |
| align="right" |83,455
| |34%
|
| |
Tom Davis
| align="right" |150,395
| |62%
|
| |Robert K. McBride
| |
Independent
| align="right" |4,774
| align="right" |2%
|
| |C. W. Levi Levy
| |
Independent
| align="right" |4,059
| align="right" |2%
| |
*
|-
|
2002
|
| |
(no candidate)
| align="right" |
| |
|
| |
Tom Davis
| align="right" |135,379
| |83%
|
| |Frank W. Creel
| |
Constitution
| align="right" |26,892
| align="right" |16%
|
| |
Write-ins
| |
| align="right" |1,027
| align="right" |1%
|
|-
|
2004
|
| |
Ken Longmyer
| align="right" |118,305
| |38%
|
| |
Tom Davis
| align="right" |186,299
| |60%
|
| |Joseph P. Oddo
| |
Independent
| align="right" |4,338
| align="right" |1%
| |
*
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|
2006
|
| |
| align="right" |102,511
| |44%
|
| |
Tom Davis
| align="right" |130,468
| |55%
|
| |Ferdinando C. Greco
| |Independent Green
| align="right" |2,042
| align="right" |1%
| |
*
|
|
|
|
|
*Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 1992, write-ins received 145 votes. In 1994, write-ins received 114 votes. In 1996, write-ins received 181 votes. In 2000, write-ins received 285 votes. In 2004, write-ins received 291 votes. In 2006, write-ins received 259 votes.
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