Jon Tester
From OpenCongress Wiki
| U.S. Senator Jon Tester | ||
|
| ||
| D-MT | ||
|
| ||
| ||
| Leadership: | No leadership position | |
| Committees: | Senate Committee on Appropriations, Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs, Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs | |
| (subcommittees and past assignments) | ||
|
Candidates for the MT-Senate Class I Seat: | ||
| Confirmed: | None so far | |
| Considering: | None so far | |
| Rumored: | None so far | |
| Potential: | None so far | |
| Dropped-out: | None so far | |
| (more info and editing for the MT-Senate Class I Seat) | ||
| ||
| Official website | ||
Jon Tester (born August 21, 1956), a Democrat, has been the Junior Senator from the state of Montana since 2007. He is the first member of the Senate to post his daily schedule online.
| Jon Tester posts daily schedule information online. |
Contents |
Record and controversies
Congressional scorecards
| Click through the score to see the records of other members of Congress and full descriptions of the individual votes.
Want to see someone else's scorecard added to the list? You can do it!
|
Iraq War
Environmental record
For more information on environmental legislation, see the Energy and Environment Policy Portal
Tester posts daily schedule online
With his inauguration in 2007, Tester became the first member of the Senate to post his daily schedule online.[1] It can be found here.
Calls for acting Attorney General to step down
On May 3rd the Washington Post reported that Sen. Tester called for Montana's acting Attorney General William W. Mercer to resign; after a federal judge found that he was "violating a federal law that requires him to live in Montana". Mercer, advocated for the law to be changed. Tester was quoted as saying "Mr. Mercer was operating outside federal law, so he had the law changed. That might work in Alberto Gonzales's Justice Department, but it's not how we do business in Montana."[1]
- Main article: Bush administration U.S. attorney firings controversy
Biography
Born in 1956 near the town of Big Sandy, MT, where he now lives, Tester graduated from the University of Great Falls with a degree in music. He worked as a music teacher after graduation. Tester, a third generation farmer, runs an organic farm; he and wife went organic in the 1980s after they realized they could make more money while avoiding the sicknesses that they got from the pesticides.[2] As a boy Tester lost parts of three fingers on his left hand in a meat grinding accident.
In 1998, he successfully ran for Montana State Senate, and in 2005 was named Senate President. In Montana, State Senators are term-limited after two four-year terms. In 2005, at the end of his second term, Tester decided to run for the U.S. Senate seat occupied by Sen. Conrad Burns. He and his wife Sharla have two children. [3]
2006 Senate race
In the Democratic primary Tester faced State Auditor John Morrison, a well-financed candidate backed by the National Democratic Party. Morrison, with a huge fund raising advantage, was expected to defeat Tester. Tester's popularity and grassroots approach led him to a large margin of victory in the June 6th primary.
Tester has focused his campaign against incumbent Sen. Conrad Burns as one between a Montana farmer and a Senator who has become to tied to the political structure in Washington. Allegations of impropriety in Burns' ties to convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff have helped Tester make this argument. Tester is also a vocal opponent of the Iraq War and "wants Bush to draft a planned exit strategy that would lead to a shift in which Iraqis would be trained to take over their own country."[4]
In a debate Burns attacked Tester for wanting to "weaken the Patriot Act". Tester clarified his position by stating, "I don't want to weaken the Patriot Act, I want to repeal it. What it does, it takes away your freedom ... and when you take away our freedoms, the terrorists have won."[5]
Tester has sounded a populist note on economic issues in the campaign. He has called for fair trade policies and assailed free trade agreements as destructive to Montana farms, agriculture, and quality U.S. jobs. Tester stated that free trade policies "have been hurting Montana workers and Montana farmers, and resulting in the outsourcing of jobs."[6]
Tester defeated Burns by less than 3000 votes, a victory that was instrumental in winning Democrats control of the Senate. [7]
2008 elections
2008 superdelegate
| This information was gathered by volunteer researchers as part of the Superdelegate Transparency Project on the superdelegates for the 2008 Democratic presidential primary. For more info see the Montana superdelegate tracker or visit the STP homepage. |
Before Hillary Clinton conceded the race, Jon Tester, as a superdelegate, had not endorsed a candidate for President.
- See other superdelegates who endorsed Obama, endorsed Clinton, were undeclared or had pledged to support the primary winner (state or national).
- For more information and sources, see the state page for this superdelegate linked to in the blue box above.
Money in politics
This section contains links to – and feeds from – money in politics databases. For specific controversies, see this article's record and controversies section.
| Top Contributors to during the 2008 Election Cycle | |
|---|---|
| Donor | Amount (US Dollars) |
| League of Conservation Voters | $ 144,261 |
| Blackstone Group | $ 61,000 |
| JPMorgan Chase & Co | $ 53,000 |
| Visa Inc | $ 47,400 |
| Thornton & Naumes | $ 46,600 |
| WPP Group | $ 45,600 |
| Council for a Livable World | $ 43,146 |
| Voices for Progress | $ 34,000 |
| Girardi & Keese | $ 31,500 |
| Comcast Corp | $ 31,000 |
| Source: The Center for Responsive Politics' www.OpenSecrets.org site. Note: Contributions are not from the organizations themselves, but are rather from the organization's PAC, employees or owners. Totals include subsidiaries and affiliates. | |
| Links to more campaign contribution information for Jon Tester from the Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org site. |
||
|---|---|---|
| Fundraising profile: | 2008 election cycle | Career totals |
| Top contributors by organization/corporation: | 2008 election cycle | Career totals |
| Top contributors by industry: | 2008 election cycle | Career totals |
- Revolving door profile for Jon Tester from the Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org website.
- 2006 privately funded travel profile for Jon Tester from the Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org website.
- Personal finance profile for Jon Tester from the Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org website.
Committees and Affiliations
Committees
- Senate Committee on Appropriations
- Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
- Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs
- Senate Committee on Indian Affairs
- Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs
Committees in the 110th Congress (2007-2008)
- Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
- Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship
- Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs
- Senate Committee on Indian Affairs
- Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
- Subcommittee on Water and Power
- Subcommittee on Energy
- Subcommittee on National Parks
- Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
- Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance, and Investment
- Subcommittee on Financial Institutions
- Subcommittee on Housing, Transportation, and Community Development
More Background Data
Background information on Conrad Burns, whom Jon Tester challenged in the 2006 congressional elections:
Contact
| DC office |
|---|
|
| District offices |
|
| On the Web |
| Campaign office |
|
Articles and Resources
Resources
- Jon Tester for U.S. Senate, official campaign site.
- Jon Tester/Schedule: The Congresspedia archive of Sen. Tester's schedule.
Local blogs and discussion sites
- The Last Best Place
- 4&20 blackbirds.
- A Chicken Is Not Pillage.
- Intelligent Discontent.
- Left in the West.
- Compare where Jon Tester stands on the issues - whereIstand.com
Articles
- Bob Brigham, "MT-Sen: Jon Tester to Beat Burns," Swing State Project, May 24, 2005.
- Jamie Kelly, "Pearl Jammin' for a Senate seat," Missoulian, July 22, 2005.
- Courtney Lowery, "The “Good Guy” Running for U.S. Senate," New West, August 28, 2005.
- Charles Johnson, "Burns' fundraising nears $5 million; Morrison's hits $1 million," Billings Gazette, February 1, 2006.
- Jonathan Singer, "MyDD Conversation with MT-Sen Candidate Jon Tester," MyDD.com, February 27, 2006.
- Charles Johnson, "Tester, Morrison deadlocked," Helena Independent-Record, May 28, 2006.
- Marie Horrigan , "MT Senate: Race to Take On Embattled Burns Nears Finish," CQ Politics, May 31, 2006.
- John Nichols, "'Tester Time' in Montana," The Nation, June 1, 2006 (post); June 19, 2006 (issue).
- Joe Klein, "The Democrats' New Populism," Time Magazine, July 2, 2006.
- Todd Wilkinson, "Montana GOP Trumpets Hannity Rant Against Tester, Daily Kos and War Protestors," New West, August 2, 2006.
- Marie Horrigan, "Burns’ Edge in Montana Senate Race Goes Up in Smoke," CQ Politics, August 3, 2006.
- Gwen Florio, "Tester: 'Burns sold out'," Great Falls Tribune (Montana), August 6, 2006.
- Charles Johnson, "Iraq center of divide between Burns, Tester," Missoulian, September 17, 2006.
- Matt Gouras, "Tester dismisses Clinton as presidential candidate," Helena Independent-Record, October 13, 2006.
- Matthew Continetti , "How the West Was Won," Weekly Standard, October 30, 2006.
- Timothy Egan, "A Redder Kind of Democrat in a Close Montana Contest," New York Times, November 4, 2006.
- Jeffrey H. Birnbaum, "Democrats' Victory Is Felt On K Street," Washington Post, November 23, 2006.
- Joshua Frank, "Jon Tester's Neopopulism. The Montana Formula," BrickBurner.org, December 1, 2006.
- Noelle Straub, "Baucus, Tester explain war votes," Billings Gazette (Montana), May 18, 2007.
- Matt Singer, "Do Jon and Max Really Think Harry Reid and Russ Feingold Dislike the Troops?" Left in the West, May 18, 2007.
Semantic data (Edit data)
| From the Sunlight Foundation API | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Current Office: U.S. Senate | |||
| Title: Sen | First name: Jon | Middle name: | Last name: Tester |
| Suffix: | Nickname: | ||
| Party: D | State: MT | District:
Junior Seat District short: Junior Seat |
Currently in office? True |
| Gender: M | |||
| Phone: 202-224-2644 | Fax: 202-224-8594 | Website: http://www.tester.senate.gov | Webform email: http://www.tester.senate.gov/Contact/index.cfm Email address: |
| DC office: 706 Hart Senate Office Building | |||
| Bioguide ID: T000464 | Votesmart ID: 20928 | FEC ID: S6MT00162 | Govtrack ID: 412244 |
| CRP ID: N00027605 | Eventful ID: | Old Sunlight ID: | Twitter ID: |
| OpenCongress Wiki URL: http://www.opencongress.org/wiki/Jon_Tester | YouTubeID: http://youtube.com/senatorjontester | Senate class: I | |
| Entered manually within the Template:Politician | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Senate | |||
| 111th Congress | |||
| Leadership Position: |
Committees Chaired: |
Committees, Ranking Member On: |
Caucuses: |
| 110th Congress | |||
| Leadership Position: |
Committees Chaired: |
Committees, Ranking Member On: |
Caucuses: |
| Committees: | |||
| Congressional Career | |||
| First Elected to Current Office: November 7, 2006 |
First Took Current Office: January 3, 2007 |
Next Election: November 6, 2012 |
Term Ends: |
| Freshman Member? Yes |
Previous Political Work? Montana Senate |
Other Party Membership: | |
| District Offices: | |||
| |||
| Campaign Contact: | |||
|
Website: Campaign Offices:
| |||
| Misc: | |||
|
Date of Birth: August 21, 1956 November 7, 2006 | |||
Jon Tester - OpenCongress Wiki
