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Mike Conaway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mike Conaway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mike Conaway
Mike Conaway

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 11th district
In office
2005–present
Preceded by Chet Edwards

Born June 11, 1948 (1948-06-11) (age 60)
Borger, Texas
Political party Republican
Spouse Suzanne Conaway
Religion Southern Baptist

K. Michael Conaway, usually known as Mike Conaway, is a Republican from Texas who represents that state's 11th congressional district (map). The district is located in West Texas and includes Midland, Odessa, San Angelo, and Brownwood.

Contents

[edit] Political Career

He was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 2004. He was born June 11, 1948, in Borger, Texas, and graduated from Permian High School of Odessa, Texas in 1966. He is a 1970 graduate of East Texas State University (now Texas A&M University-Commerce). He is married to Suzanne Conaway and has four children.

Prior to his election to the United States Congress, Conaway served in the United States Army from 1970 to 1972,[1] was an accountant, a chief financial officer at a bank and at an oil and gas exploration firm operated by George W. Bush. From 1981 until 1986, Conaway was the chief financial officer of Bush's failed Arbusto Energy Inc. He has long been friends with Bush, and the two mixed in many of the same social circles in Midland. He also served on the Midland Independent School District Board from 1985 to 1988.

Soon after Bush was elected governor of Texas, he appointed Conaway to the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy, which regulates accountancy in Texas. He served on the board as a volunteer for seven years, the last five as chairman.

His first run for elective office came in 2003, when he ran in a special election for the 19th Congressional District, which came open after 18-year Republican incumbent Larry Combest stepped down shortly after winning a 10th term. Conaway lost by 587 votes to fellow Republican Randy Neugebauer. A few months later, the Texas Legislature redrew the state's districts in an effort engineered by then-House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Three brand-new districts were created, one of them being the 11th, which was based in Midland. Previously, Midland had been part of the Lubbock-based 19th District. DeLay was particularly keen to draw a district based in Midland, Odessa and the oil-rich Permian Basin in part because Texas House Speaker Tom Craddick was from that area. This district is heavily Republican — by some accounts, the most Republican district in Texas (Glasscock County had voted 93.1 percent for Bush in 2000, the highest percentage of any county in the nation) — and the race was essentially over when Conaway announced his candidacy. He won in November with 77 percent of the vote, one of the largest percentages by anyone facing major-party opposition. He was reelected unopposed in 2006.

Conaway is one of the few Certified Public Accountants in Congress. Conaway endorsed former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney for president in 2008.

[edit] Agriculture Committee

From 2003 through 2005, $14.7 billion in crop subsidies went to the congressional districts of members on the House Committee on Agriculture, an analysis by the non-partisan Environmental Working Group found. That was 42.4% of the total subsidies. Conaway is reported to have brought $322 million to his district.[2]

[edit] NRCC fraud scandal

In January 2007, Conaway began chairing the three-member audit committee for the National Republican Congressional Committee. By January 28, 2008, Conaway had uncovered a fraud, where hundreds of thousands of dollars were missing from NRCC bank accounts, and supposed annual audits on the NRCC books had actually not been performed since 2001.[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Chet Edwards
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 11th congressional district

2005–Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent


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