Sam Johnson

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Sam Johnson
Sam Johnson

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 3rd district
In office
1991–present
Preceded by Steve Bartlett
Succeeded by Incumbent

Born October 11, 1930 (1930-10-11) (age 77)
Dallas, Texas
Political party Republican
Spouse Shirley Johnson
Religion Methodist

Samuel Robert "Sam" Johnson (born October 11, 1930) is an American politician. He currently is a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from the 3rd District of Texas (map). The district includes much of northeastern Dallas, as well as Plano, where he lives.

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Johnson grew up in Dallas and graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School and Southern Methodist University.[1] He served a 29-year career in the United States Air Force, where he served as director of the Air Force Fighter Weapons School and flew with the Air Force Thunderbirds precision flying demonstration team.

He is a veteran of both the Korean and Vietnam Wars as a fighter pilot. In the Korean War, he flew F-86s in 62 combat missions. In the Vietnam War, Johnson flew F-4s.

In 1966, while flying his 25th combat mission in Vietnam, he was shot down over North Vietnam. He was a prisoner of war for seven years, including 42 months in solitary confinement. During this period, he was repeatedly tortured.

Johnson recounted the details of his POW experience in his autobiography, Captive Warriors.

A decorated war hero, Johnson was awarded two Silver Stars, two Legions of Merit, the Distinguished Flying Cross, one Bronze Star with Valor, two Purple Hearts, four Air Medals, and three Outstanding Unit Awards. He walks with a noticeable limp, due to an old war injury.

After his military career, he established a homebuilding business and served in the Texas State Legislature. On May 8, 1991, he was elected to the House in a special election caused by eight-year incumbent Steve Bartlett's resignation to become mayor of Dallas. He won a full term in 1992 and has been reelected seven times. He has never faced substantive opposition in what is arguably the most Republican district in the Metroplex; the 3rd has been in Republican hands since 1968. In fact, the Democrats did not even field a candidate in 1992, 1994, 1998 or 2004.

Johnson is married to the former Shirley L. Melton, of Dallas. They are parents of three children and ten grandchildren.

In the House, Johnson is an ardent conservative. By some views, Johnson had the most conservative record in the House for three consecutive years, opposing pork barrel projects of all kinds, voting for more IRAs and against extending unemployment benefits. However, Citizens Against Government Waste rated him in 2004 as having a much less conservative voting record on fiscal matters, ranking eight other Texas Republicans as 'taxpayer heroes' having higher rankings than Sam Johnson, ranking him as merely 'friendly' to taxpayers.

Johnson is a member of the conservative Republican Study Committee, and was one of three Republicans who refounded it in 1994 after Newt Gingrich yanked its funding.

On the Ways and Means Committee, he was an early advocate and, then, sponsor of the successful repeal in 2000 of the earnings limit for Social Security recipients. He proposed the Good Samaritan Tax Act to permit corporations to take a tax deduction for charitable giving of food. He chairs the Subcommittee on Employer-Employee Relations, where he has encouraged small business owners to expand their pensionand [1] benefits for employees.

Johnson does not believe in global warming, despite the numerous scientific facts and vast majority of the scientific community in stark opposition. He also feels that we are not currently experiencing any sort of energy crisis, and that the Earth will continue to create oil for some time. He has been known to rub his hands together, demonstrating how he believes that the planet creates fossil fuels.

Johnson ran unopposed by the Democratic Party in his district in the 2004 election. Paul Jenkins, an Independent, and James Vessels, a member of the Libertarian Party ran against Johnson. Johnson won overwhelmingly in a highly Republican district. Johnson garnered 86% of the vote (178,099), while Jenkins earned 8% (16,850) and Vessels 6% (13,204).

Johnson ran for re-election in 2006, defeating his Republican opponent Robert Edward Johnson in the Republican primary, 85% to 15%. [2] [3]

In the general election, Johnson faced Democrat Dan Dodd and Libertarian Christopher J. Claytor. Both Dodd and Claytor are West Point graduates. Dodd served two tours of duty in Vietnam [4] and Claytor served in Operation Southern Watch in Kuwait in 1992. [5] It was only the fourth time that Johnson had faced Democratic opposition.

Johnson retained his seat in a decisive victory, taking 62.5% of the vote, while Democrat Dodd received 34.9% and Libertarian Claytor received 2.6%. However, this was far less than in years past, when Johnson won by margins of 80 percent or more.

On February 19, 2005 at a veterans pancake breakfast at Suncreek United Methodist Church in Allen, Texas, Johnson relayed a conversation he had with President George W. Bush in which he claimed the WMDs must still exist, that they were in Syria, and personally volunteered to fly a jet over Syria and drop two nuclear bombs. Eleven days later he clarified his comments to say that he was "kind of joking" about the matter.[6]

Preceded by
Steve Bartlett
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 3rd congressional district

1991–Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Dan Burton (sole chairman)
Chairman of the Republican Study Committee
1994-1998 (alternated with Dan Burton, John Doolittle and Ernest Istook
Succeeded by
David McIntosh
Preceded by
David McIntosh
Chairman of the Republican Study Committee
2000-2001
Succeeded by
John Shaddegg
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