Jim Gerlach
| Jim Gerlach | |
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| Assumed office January 7, |
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| Preceded by | |
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| Succeeded by | Incumbent |
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| Born | February 25 1955 |
| Political party | Republican |
| Spouse | Karen Gerlach |
| Children | Katie, Jim, and Rob |
| Religion | Non-denominational |
James "Jim" Gerlach (born February 25 1955) is a
politician from the state of Pennsylvania, currently representing the state's
Education and early career
Gerlach was born in
In 1986, Gerlach moved back to Ellwood City to challenge then-State Rep. Frank LaGrotta, but returned to
In preparation for the 1990 election against long-term Democratic State Rep. Samuel Morris, Gerlach visited 8,600 homes in the
155th District of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives,
building his campaign around what he saw as the incumbent's inattentiveness to suburban sprawl. According to the
Gerlach proposed encouraging open-space preservation by using zoning laws to encourage developers to incorporate open space into development projects, along with the creation of environmental protection authorities.[1]
During the election, Jim Gerlach's Democratic opponents accused the Western Pennsylvania native of moving to
Gerlach was elected to the Pennsylvania House of
Representatives by 23 votes out of 17,000 cast. He won re-election in 1992 with 64% of the vote. He was elected to the
While in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and Pennsylvania Senate, Gerlach worked to sponsor legislation making it
easier for the commonwealth's patchwork of townships to work together to preserve open space.
Gov.
Congressional career
Election and re-election
Gerlach was elected to the United States House of
Representatives in 2002, representing Pennsylvania's 6th Congressional District,
(
Political positions and actions
Gerlach is a member of two moderate political groups, The Republican Main
Street Partnership, which supports embryonic stem-cell research, and
In
Gerlach has strongly supported Schuylkill Valley commuter rail. At one point he said of the Bush administration's plan to cut federal money for construction costs from 80 percent to 50 percent: "There's just not going to be enough state and local funds to do the project. It will be a dead project."[citation needed]
The farmland-preservation and open-space advocacy that Gerlach became known for during his tenure as a state legislator has continued during his congressional career. On Sept. 27, 2006, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a Gerlach-sponsored bill H.R. 5313 that would make federal funds available to municipalities around the country to purchase conservation easements.[5] This bill was never acted on by the Senate, and was re-introduced as H.R. 1152 in March 2007.
Gerlach has advocated the passage of legislation that would expand federal regulation of so-called "puppy mills," and cosponsored medical liability legislation.
Gerlach voted to make the Patriot Act permanent, and for continued intelligence gathering without civil oversight as recommended by the 9/11 Commission.[6]
Gerlach voted against H. Con. Res. 63 (which disapproved of President Bush's decision to send 20,000 troops to Iraq) [1] saying that he opposed the resolution because it was "essentially meaningless", it was "fundamentally vague", and it would undercut troop morale. [2]
He was one of four Pennsylvania Republicans (the others being
Controversies
DeLay's ARMPAC contributions
In his three congressional campaigns Gerlach has received a total of $30,000 in contributions from former House Majority Leader Tom
DeLay's political action committee
Refinery vote
Gerlach cast a controversial vote on HR 3893 in October 2005. HR 3893 provided $2 billion in subsidies to oil companies to build refineries and tax breaks that would cost an additional $3 billion, and weakened environmental protections. Gerlach initially voted against the bill, but the acting majority leader Blunt and DeLay held the vote open for 39 additional minutes, at which point Gerlach changed his vote from No to Yes, allowing the bill to pass.[7]
2006 re-election campaign
In 2006, Gerlach was not opposed in the primary. In the general election, he again faced
Gerlach was the only member of the "Philly Trio" of vulnerable Republican Congressmen to survive the 2006 election. He
overcame a negative political climate that included the war in Iraq, an unpopular president and an extremely well-liked
Democratic governor. Geography also played a factor; similar to the previous two cycles Gerlach carried:
References
- ^ Rellahan, Michael. "James Gerlach seeks office with a drive of a running
back",
Daily Local News , October 30, 1990. - ^ PA-6 Campaign 2004 USAToday.com, accessed October 18th, 2006
- ^ Larry Eichel, GOP Redistricting Gamble Looks Safe. Philadelphia Inquirer, October 16, 2002. Accessed October 18, 2006
- ^ Election 2002 — State Races: Pennsylvania, CNN.com, accessed October 18, 2005
- ^ H.R. 5313
- ^ http://www.issues2000.org/PA/Jim_Gerlach_Homeland_Security.htm#2006-103
- ^ Justin Blum and Jonathan Weisman, GOP Leaders Win on Energy Bill, Washington Post October 8, 2005, accessed November 11, 2006
- ^ Chester County results
- ^ Dave Davies, For Gerlach, Murphy, geography was destiny, Daily News; November 9, 2006
External links
- U.S. Congressman Jim Gerlach official House site
- Jim
Gerlach at the
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress - Federal Election Commission — Jim Gerlach campaign finance reports and data
- On the Issues — Jim Gerlach issue positions and quotes
- OpenSecrets.org — Jim Gerlach campaign contributions
- Project Vote Smart — Representative Jim Gerlach (PA) profile
- SourceWatch Congresspedia — Jim Gerlach profile
- Washington Post — Congress Votes Database: Jim Gerlach voting record
- Jim Gerlach for Congress official campaign site
- Jim Gerlach — OurCampaigns.com Bio
- Associated Press profile, accessed October 18, 2006
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 2003 – present |
Incumbent |
| Pennsylvania's current delegation to the United States Congress | |
|---|---|
| Representative(s) | Bob Brady
(D), |
| All delegations | |
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