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FLORIDA/
U.S. House 6
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Cliff Stearns (R)Elected: 1988 (7th term) Hometown: Ocala Born: April 16, 1941; Washington, D.C. Religion: Presbyterian Family: Wife, Joan Moore; three children Education: George Washington U., B.S. 1963 Military Service: Air Force, 1963-67 Career: Hotel executive Political Highlights: no previous office; U.S. House, 1989-present Committees: Energy and Commerce ( Telecommunications and the Internet - vice chairman; Oversight & Investigations; Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection - chairman); Veterans' Affairs ( Health - vice chairman) Address: 2227 Rayburn House Office Building, Independence Ave. and S. Capitol St., S.W., Washington, DC, 20515-0906 Phone: (202) 225-5744 Fax: (202) 225-3973 E-mail: www.house.gov/writerep Web site: www.house.gov/stearns Source: Congressional Quarterly (Updated: November 16, 2000). To suggest updates and corrections: politics.feedback@cq.com
FLORIDA 6
:
North Central - Lake and Marion counties; part of Jacksonville
A mostly rural district, the 6th covers North Central Florida from the
Georgia line to Clermont, west of Orlando. Nearly half of the district's
population lives around Ocala, a retirement center known for its horse
farms, and Sumter County, where Interstate 75 and Florida's Turnpike meet.
The remainder of the district is dotted with rolling hills, dozens of lakes
and acres of forest, often passed over by tourists on their way to Tampa and
Orlando.
Home to many blue-collar workers, the 6th went Republican at the
national level in 1994 and has stayed that way despite a voting population
split between the two parties. Much of the 6th had been prime territory for
Southern Democrats, but conservatism has outweighed party allegiance since
the early 1990s.
The district includes parts of nine counties from Jacksonville to near
Gainesville, benefiting from both cities' employers. The southern part of
the 6th saw rapid population growth during the 1980s and '90s, with many of
the newcomers moving into the growing number of trailer parks. The
prevalence of retirees and blue-collar jobs at prisons and factories held
down economic growth during the 1990s. Cecil Field Naval Air Station,
outside Jacksonville, was scheduled to close in 1999, removing about 1,000
civilian jobs at or near the base.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company |
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