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Prior
to his election to Congress, Tom was the chief elected official in
Fairfax County, the eleventh most populous municipality with the
second largest county budget in the United States. In 1993, during
Tom’s tenure as Chairman of the Board of Supervisors, Fairfax
County was recognized as the nation’s best financially managed
county.
Formerly
the Vice President and General Counsel of PRC, Inc., a high
technology and professional services firm headquartered in McLean,
Virginia, Tom moved to the position of Corporate Counsel upon his
election as Chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors.
Before his election to that post, Tom served for 12 years as Mason
District’s representative to the Board. Tom is also a charter
member and past president of the Bailey’s Crossroads Rotary
Club, and he has served on numerous charity boards.
Tom
was born in Minot, North Dakota on January 5, 1949, and moved with
his family to Fairfax County at an early age. He graduated as
president of his class from the United States Capitol Page School
following four years as a U.S. Senate Page. He went on to Amherst
College, graduating with honors in Political Science, and
subsequently earned his law degree from the University of
Virginia. Tom also attended Officer Candidate School, served on
active duty in the U.S. Army, and spent eight years with the
Virginia National Guard and the U.S. Army Reserve.
Tom’s
Legislative Accomplishments:
Tom’s
list of legislative accomplishments began almost as soon as he
took office, when he was given control of the Government Reform
Committee’s Subcommittee on the District of Columbia. During his
first year in Congress, Tom authored and co-sponsored several
important bills that were enacted into law, including the D.C.
Financial Control Board Act; the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995; the Federal Acquisition Reform Act; and the Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Tom quickly earned a reputation
among his constituents, colleagues and the media as a strong
advocate of federal employees and contractors, and as an expert in
federal procurement policy.
Tom
also serves as one of four co-chairs of the Information Technology
Working Group, a group he founded to promote a better
understanding of issues important to the computer and technology
industries. In May 1999 he sponsored the Y2K Act, legislation
which ensured that businesses spent their money on Y2K compliance
rather than saving it for costly lawsuits that might have
otherwise arisen. Tom was the recipient of the Electronic Industry
Alliance’s 1999 Congressional Technology Policy Award and was
inducted into the American Electronics Association’s High Tech
Hall of Fame in Spring 2000.
Tom
has been a leader in reforming Congress’ lobbying and gift rules
and was recognized as a "True Blue Reformer" by the
advocacy group Public Citizen for his consistently strong support
of political and ethics reforms. Tom has earned a "Deficit
Hawk" Award and the highest score in Virginia from the
Concord Coalition, a bipartisan citizen’s council dedicated to
deficit reduction. Tom has also received awards from Americans for
Tax Reform, the National Federation of Independent Businesses, the
Information Technology Association of America, and the Information
Technology Industry Council for his legislative accomplishments.
In
September 1997, National Republican Congressional Committee
Chairman John Linder named Tom to be his chief recruiter. When the
rules were changed in 1998, making the NRCC chairmanship an
elected rather than appointed post, Tom won the chairmanship by a
convincing margin. After defying the pundits by maintaining the
GOP’s majority in the House in November 2000, Tom was easily
re-elected to again lead the NRCC through 2002.
Tom
stepped down as chair of the D.C. subcommittee at the end of 2000
after a string of legislative wins. Tom backed 1997 legislation
granting control of nine city agencies to the Control Board, and
in the process secured the closing of Lorton Prison by the end of
2001. In February 1999, Tom sponsored a bill restoring full
management powers to the District government; that bill became the
first legislation signed into law that year. Perhaps his biggest
accomplishment as committee chair came with passage of the D.C.
College Access Act, which, for the first time ever, will allow
high school graduates in the District to attend public colleges in
Maryland and Virginia at in-state rates. In the 107th Congress,
Tom continued to serve on the D.C. Subcommittee, as he continues
to believe that ensuring the strength and solvency of the
Nation’s Capitol is a key to promoting the growth of the entire
region.
Tom
continues to fight for those issues most important to Northern
Virginians, including securing more federal dollars for
transportation projects and seeing to it that federal education
funding can be spent as local school districts see fit. Tom was
instrumental in securing the final $900 million for a new Woodrow
Wilson Bridge in 2000, which raised the federal government’s
contribution to the new span to $1.5 billion.
In
January 2001, Tom was named chairman of the newly formed
Government Reform Subcommittee on Technology and Procurement
Policy. He also reclaimed his seat on the Energy and Commerce
Committee, with a spot on the Subcommittee on Telecommunications
and the Internet. Both posts are critical to Northern Virginia’s
high tech community. In just two years, Tom successfully passed
several important bills through Congress, including the Digital
Tech Corps Act, the E-Gov Act of 2002, the Federal Information
Security Act, and the Critical Infrastructure Information Act.
And, in keeping with his belief that the top source of waste in
government can be found in spending on goods and services, Tom’s
vigilant oversight of large dollar federal contracts resulted in
hundreds of millions of dollars saved for the taxpayers.
Tom’s
strong tenure as NRCC Chairman reached an end after the fall 2002
elections, in which House Republicans made history: only three
times since the Civil War has the President’s party added House
seats during the midterm elections.
Tom’s
legislative accomplishments were recognized in January 2003, when
he was elected to chair the House Government Reform Committee for
the 108th Congress. |