| Tim Murphy | |
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| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office January 3, 2003 |
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| Preceded by | Mike Doyle |
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| In office January 7, 1997 – January 3, 2003 |
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| Preceded by | D. Michael Fisher |
| Succeeded by | John Pippy |
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| Political party | Republican |
| Spouse(s) | Nanette Missig |
| Residence | Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania |
| Alma mater | Wheeling Jesuit University, Cleveland State University, University of Pittsburgh |
| Occupation | psychologist |
| Religion | Roman Catholic |
Timothy "Tim" F. Murphy (born September 11, 1952, Cleveland, Ohio) is an American politician who currently serves in the House of Representatives for the 18th Congressional District of Pennsylvania (map). The district includes several wealthy suburbs south of Pittsburgh. It includes parts of Allegheny, Washington, and Westmoreland counties.
A Republican, Murphy was first elected to the U.S. Congress in 2002. Prior to being elected to Congress, Murphy was in the Pennsylvania State Senate.
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Early years, education, and career
Murphy was born into a middle class family in Cleveland, Ohio. After graduating from Walsh Jesuit High School, he received a Bachelor of Science from Wheeling Jesuit University, a MA from Cleveland State University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh.
Upon leaving school, he became a practicing psychologist and a professor at the University of Pittsburgh. He also made regular appearances on KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh from 1979 to 1995 as a health care expert. Murphy is known by many as Dr. Tim, and refers to himself as such on his official website.
State senate
Elected to the Pennsylvania State Senate in 1996, Murphy served as chair of the Pennsylvania Committee on Aging and Youth and wrote the Pennsylvania Patient Bill of Rights. Despite his stance as a fiscal conservative, he pushed for increased public funding for medical research. In 2002, the political website PoliticsPA named him to the list of "Smartest Legislators."[1] He resigned his senate seat on January 3, 2003.
U.S. Congress
Murphy lives in Upper St. Clair, a suburb of Pittsburgh. However, he is listed on the official House roll as "R-Pittsburgh," even though his district does not include any portion of Pittsburgh itself. The likely reason for this is that many areas of his district (including his district office) have Pittsburgh addresses despite not actually being within the city limits. The district is drawn in such a way that in several locations, one side of the street is in Murphy's district while the other is in the neighboring 14th District (represented by Democrat Mike Doyle).
Committee assignments
House Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans - Full Committee Membership
House Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans - Subcommittees
2002 election
In a 2002 PoliticsPA Feature story designating politicians with yearbook superlatives, he was named the "Most Ambitious"[2]
Murphy ran for the newly redrawn 18th Congressional District in southwestern Pennsylvania in 2002. The district had previously been the 20th, represented by four-term Democrat Frank Mascara. However, the legislature re-drew the district after the 2000 Census in such a way that a large portion of Mascara's district ended up in the neighboring Johnstown-based 12th District, represented by 28-year incumbent John Murtha, while Mascara's house in Charleroi remained in the newly drawn 18th district -- even though most of the town of Charleroi (including nearly all of his neighborhood) was drawn into the 12th district.
After a legal battle, the courts largely upheld Pennsylvania's redistricting plan after some minor modifications. Murphy was a member of the committee that redrew Pennsylvania's congressional map, and rumors abounded that he'd reconfigured the district for himself, even though numerous Democrats were also on the committee. Mascara made an unsuccessful primary challenge to Murtha, since he'd represented more of the newly drawn 12th than Murtha had.
This removed a significant barrier to Murphy, and he ran against Democrat Jack Machek in the November election. Even though Democrats outnumbered Republicans by 70,000 registered voters, it was somewhat friendlier to Republicans than the old 20th had been. Murphy's high name recognition as a State Senator and former KDKA consultant enabled him to win the election by 20 percentage points.
2004 re-election
Murphy was reelected in 2004 by a similar margin over Democratic challenger Mark Boles.
2006 re-election
Murphy faced Democrat Chad Kluko, a telecommunications executive, in the November 2006 general election. Murphy won reelection with 58% of the vote to Kluko's 42%.
2008 re-election
Murphy's opponent was Democrat Steve O'Donnell, a Monroeville health care executive. Murphy won with 64% of the vote.[3]
Traffic accident in Iraq
On November 26, 2005, Murphy was injured during a traffic accident in Iraq while riding in a van along with fellow congressmen Jim Marshall and Ike Skelton. The van swerved off the road to avoid an oncoming vehicle and overturned, injuring Murphy and Skelton. The two were airlifted to Ibn Sina hospital in Baghdad. The driver of Murphy's bus suspected a car riding alongside the bus was a suicide bomber, and drove off the road on purpose.
After an MRI indicated head and neck injuries, Murphy was flown to the US Military's Landstuhl Medical Center in Germany for further tests. These tests indicated no permanent damage. After wearing a neck brace for a brief period, Murphy made a full recovery.[4][5]
Other
Murphy is a member of the Energy and Commerce Committee. He previously served on the Veterans Affairs and Government Reform committees. In April 2006, it was reported that in the three-plus years that Murphy had been in the House, he had four press secretaries, two chiefs of staff, three legislative directors, and a high turnover among other staff positions.[6] A former employee so upset with Murphy's mistreatment of the staff turned over evidence of possible criminal behavior in 2006 (see below); she was fired on Election Day in November 2006.
Possible violations of House rules
In late October 2006, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported that according to interviews with a half-dozen present and former staffers, Murphy had mixed campaign activities and official government work in a manner that the staffers considered unethical or in violation of House rules.
When presented with the accusations, Murphy neither denied nor confirmed them. Instead, he said he would seek a congressional investigation of his own conduct.[7]
In early November 2006, KDKA News reporter Andy Sheehan confronted the Congressman on camera with evidence of the accusations.[8] The Congressman took some of the documents from Mr. Sheehan claiming that they had been illegally removed from his office. The documents confiscated by the Congressman seemed to indicate that the Congressman's District Office was doing illegal campaign work. The Congressman blamed his staff.
The documents at issue were:
- a document that shows “background research” performed by staff members on constituents who wrote letters to the editor.[9]
- documents that indicate campaign work being handled through Murphy's District Office[10]
- a document showing a planned teleconference with John Braebender, a media consultant for Rick Santorum[11]
Following his reelection, Murphy fired the staffer who had initially reported the alleged violations. Jayne O'Shaughnessy was dismissed for disregarding a staff prohibition against speaking to the press without the consent of the office after she allowed herself to be identified in a Pittsburgh Post-Gazette article detailing the allegations. [12]
Pittsburgh City Paper has also reported that Murphy's background check on the constituents' authoring negative letters to the editor about him returned information including the constituents "addresses, phone numbers, voting record, religion, stances on gun control and abortion, place of business, and supposed support for Democrat Bob Casey."[13] This was also alleged to be done with taxpayers' money.
On December 14, 2006, KDKA-TV reported that federal agents had begun interviewing former Murphy staffers on whether they did political work for the congressman on government time.[14]
On September 16, 2007, the organization Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) released its third annual report on the most corrupt members of Congress entitled "Beyond DeLay: The 22 Most Corrupt Members of Congress (and two to watch)"[15] Murphy was included on the list. CREW issued their analysis of Murphy's alleged ethical lapses[16], together with various exhibits which CREW asserted supports their naming him to their list of the most corrupt members of Congress.[17]
Electoral history
| Year | Democrat | Votes | Pct | Republican | Votes | Pct | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Jack Machek | 79,451 | 40% | Tim Murphy | 119,885 | 60% | * | ||
| 2004 | Mark G. Boles | 117,420 | 37% | Tim Murphy | 197,894 | 63% | |||
| 2006 | Chad Kluko | 105,419 | 42% | Tim Murphy | 144,632 | 58% | * | ||
| 2008 | Steve O'Donnell | 116,446 | 36% | Tim Murphy | 206,916 | 64% |
References
- ^ "Smartest Legislators". PoliticsPA. The Publius Group. 2002. Archived from the original on 2002-01-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20020115192436/politicspa.com/FEATURES/SmartestLegislators.htm.
- ^ "Keystone State Yearbook Committee". PoliticsPA. The Publius Group. 2001. Archived from the original on 2002-08-31. http://web.archive.org/web/20020803170058/www.politicspa.com/yearbookcommittee.htm.
- ^ "Whispers". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. November 9, 2008. http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/opinion/columnists/whispers/s_597426.html.
- ^ "Congressmen involved in Baghdad road accident", Reuters, November 28, 2005
- ^ "Rep. Murphy hurt in Iraq convoy crash", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- ^ "Blind Item Guesses: The Devil Wears a Member's Pin", Wonkette, April 12, 2006
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4], [5]
- ^ [6]
- ^ [7]
- ^ [8]
- ^ [9]
- ^ [10].
- ^ [11]
- ^ [12]
- ^ "Election Statistics". Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives. http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/electionInfo/index.html. Retrieved 2007-08-08.
External links
- Congressman Tim Murphy Official U.S. House website
- Elect Tim Murphy Official campaign website
- Energy Independence for America Murphy's Campaign for Energy Independence
- Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Voting record maintained by The Washington Post
- Campaign finance reports and data at the Federal Election Commission
- Campaign contributions at OpenSecrets.org
- Biography, voting record, and interest group ratings at Project Vote Smart
- Issue positions and quotes at On The Issues
- YouTube Video from KDKA where Congressman Murphy is presented with documents stolen from his office.
- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette article on Murphy's alleged ethics lapses
- 11/23/2006 Pittsburgh City Paper article regarding Murphy's use of staff to research writers of letters to the editor critical of Murphy
| United States House of Representatives | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Michael F. Doyle |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania's 18th congressional district 2003– present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Pennsylvania State Senate | ||
| Preceded by D. Michael Fisher |
Member of the Pennsylvania Senate for the 37th District 1997–2003 |
Succeeded by John Pippy |
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