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CONNECTICUT/
U.S. House 2
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Rob Simmons (R)Elected: 2000 (1st term) Defeated Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D Hometown: Stonington Born: February 11, 1943; New York, N.Y. Religion: Episcopalian Family: Wife, Heidi Simmons; two children Education: Haverford College, B.A. 1965; Harvard U., M.P.A. 1979; U. of Connecticut, attended 1988-92 Military Service: Army, 1965-68; Army Reserve, 1970-present Career: Professor; congressional aide; CIA agent Political Highlights: candidate for Stonington Board of Selectmen, 1985; Stonington Republican Town Committee, 1986-90 (chairman, 1988-92); Conn. House, 1991-01; U.S. House, 2001-present Committees: Armed Services ( Military Personnel; Military Procurement); Transportation & Infrastructure ( Railroads; Highways and Transit; Coast Guard & Maritime Transportation); Veterans' Affairs ( Health) Address: 511 Cannon House Office Building, Independence and New Jersey Aves., S.E., Washington, DC, 20515-0702 Phone: (202) 225-2076 Fax: (202) 225-4977 E-mail: www.house.gov/writerep Source: Congressional Quarterly (Updated: October 27, 2000). To suggest updates and corrections: politics.feedback@cq.com
CONNECTICUT 2
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East - New London
The state's largest and most working-class district, the 2nd runs from
the Groton waterfront north to the Massachusetts border. The district leads
the state in tourism, with attractions such as such as Mystic Seaport - the
nation's largest maritime museum - and the huge American Indian-owned
Foxwoods and Monhegan casinos.
At the beginning of the 1990s, the 2nd's economy was highly dependent on
submarine contracts and other defense work - until the submarine contracts
in New London and Groton were sent to Newport News, Va. By the middle of the
decade, nuclear technicians became blackjack dealers, finding jobs in the
suddenly huge gaming industry along the Interstate 95 corridor. The decade
ended without any dramatic shift in employment levels, although the
stability of union jobs was gone.
If the 1990s economy was hardly placid, the politics of the district
were even more shaken - a political system once built on defense patronage
had to learn a whole new set of rules built around a service economy.
Democrats were quick to respond to the new issues and have held onto their
lock on the 2nd at the local, state and national levels. Still, some
observers say the tension created by the economic shift might crack the door
open to moderate Republican challengers.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company |
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