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Timothy Alan "Tim" Huelskamp[1] (born November 11, 1968) is an American politician and member of the Republican Party who has been the U.S. Representative for Kansas's 1st congressional district since 2011. The district, popularly known as the "Big First," spills across a 63-county swath of central and western Kansas—more than half the state. Prior to entering Congress, he represented the 38th District of the Kansas Senate from 1997 until 2011.[2]
Huelskamp was born near and raised on the family farm in Fowler, Kansas. Pioneered by his grandparents Martin and Clara in 1926, the farm operation includes raising corn, cattle, wheat, milo, and soybeans. He attended elementary and high school in Fowler, where he was a Farm Bureau Youth Leader, a member of St. Anthony’s Parish, and active in both 4-H and Future Farmers of America.
After attending seminary for two years in Santa Fe, Huelskamp continued his education at the College of Santa Fe (now Santa Fe University of Art and Design) and received his B.A. in social science education in 1991. He received his Ph.D. in political science, concentrating in agricultural policy from the American University in 1995.[3][4]
Now a politician, Huelskamp has also been a teacher and a budget and legislative analyst.[4][5]
Huelskamp and his wife Angela live in Fowler. They have four adopted children.[6]
In 1996, Huelskamp challenged Republican incumbent state senator Marian Reynolds in the primary and won by a landslide margin, taking 62 percent of the vote to Reynolds' 38 percent.[7] The youngest state senator in 20 years, he then won re-election by wide margins in 2000, 2004, and 2008.
Huelskamp served on the following legislative committees:[8]
A leading conservative, Huelskamp had served on the state's Ways and Means Committee but was forced off due to clashes with the Committee's moderate leadership.[9]
Seven-term Congressman Jerry Moran gave up the Big First seat to make a successful run for the United States Senate. This touched off a free-for-all in the Republican primary—the real contest in this heavily Republican district. Huelskamp finished first in the six-candidate primary field with 34.8 percent of the vote, all but assuring that he would be the district's next representative.[10]
Huelskamp ran against Democratic nominee Alan Jilka and Libertarian nominee Jack W. Warner. Huelskamp was endorsed by The Club for Growth, Mike Huckabee,[11][12] Conservative Leadership PAC, Concerned Women for America Legislative Action Committee,[2] Ron Paul and Ken Blackwell.[13]
As expected, Huelskamp won the seat in a rout, taking 73 percent of the vote.[14]
Huelskamp ran unopposed in the general election.
Unlike the previous election, Huelskamp was challenged by a Republican Alan LaPolice in the primary.[15] Moreover, two Democrats ran for the primary Jim Sherow, a Kansas State University professor, and Bryan Whitney, a 2013 Wichita State University grad. Both LaPolice and Sherow critiqued Huelskamp for his failure to reach compromises with other politicians on issues like the Farm Bill.[16][17] As of July 15, 2014, Huelskamp had raised $538,359 for his campaign.[15]
In early 2012, Huelskamp introduced legislation that would ensure military chaplains could not be “directed, ordered or required to perform any duty, rite, ritual, ceremony, service or function that is contrary to the conscience, moral principles or religious beliefs of the chaplain, or contrary to the moral principles or religious beliefs of the chaplain’s faith group.” The language appeared to be related to permitting same-sex marriages on military bases in states where such unions are permitted.[18]
On February 16, 2012, during a contentious three-hour House Budget Committee hearing with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Huelskamp warned of the looming threat of an economic crisis similar to the one then taking place in Europe. Representative Huelskamp accused Geithner and the entire Obama administration of failing to correct the U.S.'s debt crisis, which he believed would lead the country down the same path. Geithner replied that Huelskamp had an “adolescent perspective on how to think about economic policy.”[19]
After the United States Supreme Court declared the Defense of Marriage Act or DOMA unconstitutional on June 26, 2013,[20] Huelskamp immediately announced that he would introduce a constitutional amendment to restore the Defense of Marriage Act.[21] He then went on The Steve Deace Show, a conservative radio program, to denounce the Supreme Court Justices. “The idea that Jesus Christ himself was degrading and demeaning is what they’ve come down to,” he said. "I can’t even stand to read the decisions because I don’t even think they’d pass law school with decisions like that.”[22]
The House Republican Steering Committee removed Huelskamp from both the Budget Committee and the Agriculture Committee in late 2012 as part of a larger party leadership-caucus shift.[23] At a Heritage Foundation lunch in the immediate wake of the removal, Huelskamp said: "It's petty, it's vindictive, and if you have any conservative principles you will be punished for articulating those."[24] He joined Justin Amash of Michigan and David Schweikert of Arizona in a letter to Speaker of the House John Boehner, demanding to know why they had lost their "plum" committee posts.[25]
Politico and its sourcing of Huelskamp's other colleagues as "jerks" who "made life harder for other Republicans by taking whacks at them in public for supporting the team".[26][27]:p.2
On January 3, 2013, Huelskamp appeared to be counting votes as part of an effort to unseat House Speaker John Boehner when the 113th Congress convened. Huelskamp nominated conservative Jim Jordan to replace Boehner. When asked about the anti-Boehner effort a spokesman for Huelskamp declined to comment.[28]
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