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Dave Obey
Candidate for US Representative, Wisconsin
| Address |
A Lot of People for Dave Obey P.O. Box 1322 Wausau, Wisconsin 54403 |
| Phone | (715) 849-2534 (voice) |
| Online | http://www.daveobeyforcongress.com (web) |
| Hometown | Wausau |
| Occupation | US Representative |
Bio
Dave grew up in Wausau where he and his wife,
Joan, both went to St. James Catholic school.
Both graduated from Wausau East High School
together and both went on to receive Bachelor's
degrees from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. Dave did his graduate work
in Soviet politics at the University of
Wisconsin under a National Defense Education
Act three-year scholarship and fully expected
to be teaching Russian and Chinese politics
before he took a turn toward public
service.
Dave's experiences while
growing up have shaped his convictions and
priorities in the work he does in Congress
today.
Working in his father's floor
covering business for a number of years, Dave
sometimes worked with asbestos products. It was
not until he began his service in the Congress
that he discovered that asbestos caused cancer,
although one of the manufacturers had known
since 1939. That is one of the reasons why Dave
fights for measures to protect worker health
and safety and to give workers and
neighborhoods the right to know what kind of
dangerous chemicals and compounds they are
being exposed to.
When Dave was very
young, his father went to the hospital for an
operation and came back with his arms
paralyzed. "Nobody knew what caused it," Dave
said. "But after a number of months, he slowly
regained the use of his arms. We were scared.
That experience taught me that working families
are often just one paycheck away from economic
disaster. And it showed me first-hand the
importance of every family having access to
good health care."
The month that Dave
went away to Madison to finish his college
education, his father lost his job at 3-M
company (his father often worked at two jobs to
make ends meet). "That scared me," Dave
recalls, "because I had no idea how much help I
would get from home in finishing my education.
And that experience burned into me the
conviction that access to education ought to be
based on how much you are willing to learn and
how hard you are willing to work, not on how
many dollars your family has in their bank
account."
During his college years, Dave
worked summers at a local paper mill where he
gained a healthy respect for how hard some
people have to work in order to make a decent
living for their families.
He also
witnessed some things that he vowed he would
change if he ever had a chance. "I remember
taking our 20-minute lunch breaks and sitting
on the steps on the back porch at the plant and
seeing these huge pipes pour this junk into the
Wisconsin River," Dave recalled. "I vowed at
the time that if I ever had the chance to do
anything to make industry stop using our rivers
and streams as liquid dumps I would do it, and
we have made some great progress through the
years."
"I also remember that every time
I visited my grandmother, who lived on Third
Avenue in Wausau, you had to take a rag and
wipe off the chairs and the porch swing because
the were covered with dust and grime from the
junk that was coming out of the smokestack at
3-M Company. Today, that doesn't happen
anymore, and I am proud to have been able to
play at least a small role in bringing that
progress about."
The same year that Dave
married Joan Lepinski, he ran for the State
Legislature and won. He served three full terms
in the Wisconsin State Assembly, representing
Marathon County, rising to the position of
Assistant Democratic Leader. He played a key
role in creating Wisconsin's modern system of
Technical College Districts, for which he won
national recognition, and in establishing the
state's network of public broadcasting
stations. He also was an early sponsor of
Wisconsin's pioneering Homestead Tax Relief Act
for senior citizens and served on the state
commission that established Wisconsin's first
Medicaid law.
When Dave began his
service in the Congress — succeeding Mel Laird,
who was appointed Secretary of Defense — he was
the youngest Member of Congress in the United
States.
Dave has become a leading
spokesman for political and congressional
reform.
As a junior Member of the House,
he threw his support behind efforts to open
committee hearings to the public (when Dave
first went to Congress, many of those public
hearings were held behind closed doors). In
addition, Dave sponsored and pushed through
rules changes which required powerful
Appropriations Subcommittee chairs to be voted
on by the full Caucus, rather than simply
becoming Chairman, in order to make certain
that they were not arbitrary or out of
touch.
He was appointed by the House
Speaker to chair a commission which wrote a new
Code of Ethics for the House, under which more
than 20 Members have been disciplined. Under
the Obey reforms, for the first time, Members
of Congress were required to provide meaningful
disclosure of their financial affairs in order
to alert the public to any to any potential
conflicts of interest. Those reforms also
placed severe limits on what Members of
Congress could make on the side moonlighting,
again in order to minimize conflicts of
interest. Up until that time, a number of
Members had earned more than $100,000 a year
practicing law on the side — even sometimes
representing lobbyists as clients!
His
reforms also ended the ability of Members of
Congress to put campaign fund surpluses into
their own pockets when they
retired.
Dave's support for reform is
undiminished today.
Dave is the only
Democratic Member of the House to have served
on the three major economic committees in the
Congress:
The Budget Committee, on which
his six-year service included chairing the Task
Force on Worker Productivity.
The Joint
Economic Committee, which conducts long-term
analysis of trends in the economy. Dave has
served two terms as Chair of the Committee.
During that time, he and Senator Paul Sarbanes
co-edited a book, The Changing American
Economy, which was a result of a
Committee-sponsored symposium on the occasion
of the 40th anniversary of the passage of the
Full Employment Act of 1946.
The
Committee on Appropriations, which makes
funding decisions on every discretionary
program in the federal budget. Dave is the
senior Democrat on the Committee. In that
capacity, he serves as a member of all thirteen
Appropriations Subcommittees.
As Ranking
Minority Member, Dave is the Democratic
spokesman on appropriations issues.
Dave
has established good working relationships and
strong personal friendships with his Republican
counterparts on the Committee, including
Republican Chairman Bill Young. "I have an
obligation to fight and to fight hard for what
I believe in and for the progressive principles
that we are supposed to defend," Dave stated.
"But that doesn't mean that you have to dislike
people you disagree with and it doesn't mean
you shouldn't be able to have bipartisan
friendships in this place. Life's too short to
have it any other way."
Education is a
key priority for Dave, and he is one of the two
House leaders in strengthening federal
investments in education. Dave believes our
children deserve to be taught in smaller
classes by well-trained teachers in safe,
modern buildings. He also believes that every
student willing to work should be able to get a
college education.
A second priority is
health care. Dave is a House leader in doubling
federal investments in medical research and in
expanding access to affordable health care. He
believes every American should be covered by
affordable health insurance, that managed care
patients need a Bill of Rights, and that
Medicare should provide affordable prescription
drug coverage for seniors.
Dave fought
tirelessly for years against unsound policies
that created exploding deficits in the
1980's.
Dave believes in affordable tax
cuts fairly distributed to all taxpayers. But
he opposes tax cuts needlessly paid for with
borrowed dollars, especially if the lion's
share of those tax cuts are targeted to the
most well-off one percent of Americans – who
need help the least. Tax cuts for the most
well-off that are financed by borrowing money
from Social Security and Medicare are
irresponsible. They cripple our efforts to
bring down the national debt and stop us from
making key investments in education and science
to keep the economy strong. They also foolishly
guarantee that we won't have the money to keep
Social Security and Medicare
strong.
Dave also believes passionately
that agriculture policy should help family
dairy farmers, rather large corporate farm
operations. Dave has worked tirelessly to
reform outmoded milk marketing order policy and
to provide supplemental payments to dairy
farmers who have been hard hit by collapsing
milk prices.
A protégé and disciple of
Wisconsin U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson, the
founder of Earth Day, Dave also has a strong
commitment to the environment. He has been at
the forefront of efforts to prevent
anti-environmental riders threatening our air,
waters, and resources from being attached to
appropriations bills. Recently, a Midwestern
environmental leader said of his efforts,
"Without Dave Obey, the anti-environmental
forces in Congress would be riding roughshod
over our public lands, and clean air and water
protections. He has been the guardian at the
environmental gate."
Dave has been a key
leader in responding to the events of September
11. Within a week after the attack, Dave and
Congressman Bill Young (R-FL) pushed through
the House a bipartisan $40 billion emergency
response package. He followed that up with
action to increased investments above the
President's request in homeland security
activities to provide greater security on our
borders, in our ports, in rail and air
transportation, in securing the safety of our
food supply, in mounting an aggressive effort
to help local public health agencies to be
better prepared against the possibility of
chemical or biological attacks, and by
increasing the resources available to modernize
the FBI computer system and to increase the
ability of intelligence in the law enforcement
agencies to better communicate with one
another.
Dave enjoys playing the
harmonica and performs with his two sons and
some friends in a bluegrass band, "The Capitol
Offenses", which has recorded three albums.
