- 1
- 2
- Source: James W. Crawford Jr.
- Automotive Hall of Fame
- Medali Priestley
- Daftar Gubernur Georgia
- Daftar Duta Besar Amerika Serikat untuk Rumania
- Putri Margaret dari Snowdon
- Daftar pemain tenis
- William Few
- Daftar komponis Amerika Serikat
- Daftar pelawak tunggal Amerika Serikat
- Daftar arkeolog
- James W. Crawford Jr.
- Jim Crawford
- James Crawford
- Joan Crawford
- Murder of James Byrd Jr.
- North Carolina Amendment 1
- Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
- George W. Bush
- 1992 North Carolina lieutenant gubernatorial election
- Samuel W. Crawford
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.
James Walker Crawford Jr. (born October 4, 1937) is a former member of the North Carolina General Assembly. A Democrat, he represented the state's thirty-second House district, including constituents in Granville and Vance counties. A retail developer from Oxford, North Carolina, Crawford served fourteen terms in the state House of Representatives. In his last term he served as one of the chairmen of the House Appropriations committee (and the only Democrat to be a chairman in the Republican-majority House).
Crawford earned a degree in Industrial Relations from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. After serving in the United States Navy and as an Oxford city commissioner, Crawford was first elected to the legislature in 1982. He considered a run for Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina in 1988, but dropped out and was re-elected to the House. In 1992, he ran for Lt. Governor, losing in the Democratic primary to Dennis Wicker. Crawford's seat in the House was won by Richard H. Moore. When Moore ran for Congress in 1994, Crawford won the seat back. He was re-elected without opposition in 2006. In 2008 and in 2010, he was opposed by Libertarian Barbara Howe.
In 2012, after supporting the budget passed by the House Republican majority and after supporting the bill that put North Carolina Amendment 1 before the voters, Crawford was defeated in the May 8 Democratic primary by fellow Rep. Winkie Wilkins. The Republican majority had placed both Democratic lawmakers in the new 2nd District during redistricting. Crawford endorsed Republican Pat McCrory in the subsequent general election for Governor. McCrory later appointed Crawford to the state Board of Transportation.
Notes
External links
Project Vote Smart