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TEXAS/
U.S. House 4
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Ralph M. Hall (D)Elected: 1980 (11th term) Hometown: Rockwall Born: May 3, 1923; Fate, Texas Religion: Methodist Family: Wife, Mary Ellen Hall; three children Education: Texas Christian U., attended 1943; U. of Texas, attended 1946-47; Southern Methodist U., LL.B. 1951 Military Service: Navy, 1942-45 Career: Lawyer; aluminum company president Political Highlights: Rockwall County judge, 1951-63; Texas Senate, 1963-73; sought Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor, 1972; U.S. House, 1981-present Committees: Energy and Commerce ( Energy & Air Quality; Health); Science - ranking member ( Research; Space & Aeronautics; Environment, Technology and Standards; Energy) Address: 2221 Rayburn House Office Building, Independence Ave. and S. Capitol St., S.W., Washington, DC, 20515-4304 Phone: (202) 225-6673 Fax: (202) 225-3332 E-mail: rmhall@mail.house.gov Web site: www.house.gov/ralphhall Source: Congressional Quarterly (Updated: June 19, 2000). To suggest updates and corrections: politics.feedback@cq.com
TEXAS 4
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Northeast - Sherman; part of Tyler
The 4th covers a wide swath of the Red River Valley area north and east
of Dallas, which was once represented by former Democratic House Speaker Sam
Rayburn but now is increasingly familiar territory for the GOP. The district
extends from the Oklahoma border to the oil cities of Tyler and Longview to
the east. It has an older, more rural and more blue-collar population than
most other Texas districts, and many residents espouse economic conservatism
and gun rights.
Voters in the 4th elect conservatives of both parties to local and
national offices, but the GOP has made dramatic inroads since the 1980s. The
district gave the 1996 Republican presidential nominee 56 percent of the
vote, 7 points higher than the state average. Although Democrats have held
this seat for decades, experts say the 4th will probably elect a Republican
when Rep. Hall steps down.
Many Rockwall County residents commute to jobs in Dallas, while those in
other counties farm the land for peanuts and other crops that became popular
after the cotton industry's decline. The oil bust in the mid-1980s hurt the
economy near Tyler and Longview, but other areas have rebounded with the
help of several electronics manufacturing plants located in or near the
district. Since the mid-1980s, both the agricultural and manufacturing
sectors have posted large gains, offsetting the oil decline.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company |
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