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TEXAS/
U.S. House 8
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Kevin Brady (R)Elected: 1996 (3rd term) Hometown: The Woodlands Born: April 11, 1955; Vermillion, S.D. Religion: Roman Catholic Family: Wife, Cathy Brady Education: U. of South Dakota, B.S. 1990 Career: Chamber of commerce executive Political Highlights: Texas House, 1991-96; U.S. House, 1997-present Committees: Ways & Means ( Social Security; Select Revenue Measures) Address: 428 Cannon House Office Building, Independence and New Jersey Aves., S.E., Washington, DC, 20515-4308 Phone: (202) 225-4901 Fax: (202) 225-5524 E-mail: rep.brady@mail.house.gov Web site: www.house.gov/brady Source: Congressional Quarterly (Updated: April 24, 2000). To suggest updates and corrections: politics.feedback@cq.com
TEXAS 8
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Northern Houston suburbs; College Station
A thin strip of land connects the two bulbous portions of the 8th -
suburban areas north of Houston and land surrounding the cities of Bryan and
College Station. Comfortably Republican, the district resembles a lopsided
barbell and contains not only the vast oil fields that characterize much of
Texas, but also dairy farms and Texas A&M U., the state's oldest public
institution of higher education.
Unlike the more liberal U. of Texas, Texas A&M has a conservative
military and agricultural tradition that complements many of the 8th's
values - free market economics and defense hawkishness. As a result, voters
have given Republicans some of their largest margins in the state at every
level. Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole garnered two-thirds of the
vote in 1996, much more than the 49 percent he gathered statewide.
The two land masses of the 8th differ widely in economic character. At
the eastern end, the more populous of the barbell's two ends, the northern
Houston suburbs have planned communities that house executives from the
Houston Advanced Research Center and the region's many medical facilities.
The area nearer to College Station, however, depends more on farming. While
benefiting from Houston's oil and gas industries, the steadying influence of
Texas A&M and the dairy industry help keep the district as a whole healthy.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company |
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