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As
a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives, minority leader
of the Oklahoma Senate, mayor of Tulsa, congressman from Oklahoma's
First Congressional District, to his present role as Oklahoma's
senior U.S. Senator, Jim has served Oklahomans with pride and honor.
Simply put, no one consistently represents common sense,
conservative Oklahoma values more than Jim.
Jim considers one of his unique qualifications for office to be
the 30 years he's spent in the business community being over
regulated by the federal bureaucracy. Throughout his political
career, Jim has been a strong advocate for the principles of limited
government, individual liberty, and personal responsibility. He
believes that the federal government works best when it returns
dollars, decisions, and freedom to our local communities and
families.
During his tenure in Congress, Jim has forged a distinguished
legislative record on a diverse range of issues: surface
transportation and highway funding; environmental regulation and
land management; strengthening and supporting America's national
defense; rural education funding; and improving America's energy
independence. In addition, Jim has sponsored legislation to reduce
taxes and reform the tax code; reign in out of control federal
bureaucracies; promote fiscal responsibility; and reform the way
Congress works.
As chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee, Jim
played a key role in passage of last year's Highway Bill,
shepherding the important legislation through the U.S. Senate. By
doing so, he ended Oklahoma's status as a ‘donor state' as
Oklahoma will now receive more money than it sends to Washington in
federal highway funding. This historic legislation also lessened the
federal bureaucracy over highway trust funds by returning the
decision-making process back to the states. Jim has also been a
champion for restoring common sense and sound science to important
environmental and regulatory issues like clean air mandates,
wetlands, and endangered species.
From his post as the second ranking member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, Jim has gained a reputation as an expert on
defense and national security issues. Not only is Jim a strong
supporter of Oklahoma's defense industry and military community, he
has also been a tireless advocate for providing greater resources,
the necessary equipment, and proper training to our military
personnel fighting the War on Terror and combating global threats to
our nation's security. Jim has been to Iraq and Afghanistan as much
as any other member of Congress since the beginning of the War on
Terror.
Jim is a reform-minded leader whose efforts to change the House
of Representatives' arcane discharge petition rule brought him
national attention and praise. The rule change eliminated much of
the secrecy in the legislative process and prevented Congressional
leaders from keeping popular bills bottled up in committee. Jim has
taken that same approach to shine light on the workings of the
United States Senate, by sponsoring legislation to end a Senator's
ability to anonymously and indefinitely obstruct the Senate's
consideration of nominations and legislation.
Jim was recently voted the "Most Outstanding Conservative
U.S. Senator" by Human Events Newspaper and the American
Conservative Union. He repeatedly receives various awards and
recognitions, including the "Lifetime Service Award" from
the Oklahoma Independent Petroleum Association, the National
Taxpayers Association's "Friends of the Taxpayer" Award,
the "Hero of the Taxpayer Award" from Americans for Tax
Reform, the American Farm Bureau's "Friend of the Farm
Bureau" Award, the Center for Security Policy's "Keeper of
the Flame" Award, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's "Spirit
of Enterprise" Award, and an "A+" rating from the
National Rifle Association.
Jim is a lifelong Oklahoman who grew up in Tulsa and graduated
from the University of Tulsa with a degree in economics. He served
in the U.S. Army and has been a small businessman working in
aviation, real estate, and insurance for over 30 years. He was
elected to the United States Senate in 1994 to complete the
unexpired term of Senator David Boren, who resigned to become
president of the University of Oklahoma. Jim was re-elected in 1996
and again in 2002.
Inhofe has been married 47 years to his wife, Kay, and has four
grown children and twelve grandchildren. During his service in
Washington, he commutes back home to Oklahoma almost every weekend. |