- Source: Matt Salmon
Matthew James Salmon (born January 21, 1958) is an American politician who served as a U.S. representative from Arizona from 1995 to 2001 and again from 2013 until 2017. A member of the Republican Party, he retired from office after representing Arizona's 5th congressional district. The district is based in Mesa and includes most of the East Valley; he previously represented Arizona's 1st congressional district. In 2002, he lost by less than 1% to Janet Napolitano in a highly competitive gubernatorial race. He regained a congressional seat in the 2012 election.
On February 25, 2016, Salmon announced his retirement from politics. In June 2016, Arizona State University announced that Salmon would join his undergraduate alma mater as vice president for government affairs in the office of government and community engagement. In this position, Salmon oversees the university's local, state and federal relations teams. He also holds a faculty appointment as a professor of practice in public affairs in the ASU College of Public Service & Community Solutions. In April 2020, Salmon was named chairman of the nonprofit American Kratom Association. He was a candidate in the 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election.
Early life and education
Salmon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, to Robert James Salmon and Gloria Aagard Salmon. Salmon's maternal great-grandfather was born in Denmark. Salmon moved to Tempe at age 12 and graduated from Mesa High School in 1976. Salmon is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He lived in Taiwan from 1977 to 1979 as a missionary and speaks fluent Mandarin Chinese. Salmon was also a Sunday School teacher, cubmaster, and gospel doctrine teacher with his church. After graduating from college, Salmon worked as a telecommunications executive at Mountain Bell in 1981, eventually becoming community relations manager with Mountain Bell's successor, US West. Salmon was offered the position of director of public relations with US West in 1990, but declined the position after deciding to run for state senate.
Arizona Senate (1991–1995)
= Elections
=In 1990, he ran for the Arizona Senate in the 21st Senate District based in Mesa, Arizona. In the Republican primary, he defeated incumbent State Senator Jerry Gillespie. In the general election, he defeated Democrat Bill Hegarty 60–40%. In 1992, he won re-election to a second term unopposed.
= Tenure
=In 1992, he was elected assistant majority leader. He served in that position until 1995.
In 1993, he sponsored legislation that created new drug testing programs for employers. That year, he also called for an independent study of the Department of Economic Services' child welfare agency.
= Committee assignments
=Senate Appropriations Committee
Senate Indian Gambling Committee (Co-chairman)
Senate Rules Committee (Chairman)
U.S. House of Representatives (1995–2001)
= Elections
=1994
Incumbent U.S. Representative Sam Coppersmith, a Democrat, decided to retire after one term in what was then the 1st district in order to run for the U.S. Senate. Salmon won the Republican primary with a plurality of 39% in a five-candidate field. During his first congressional campaign, term limits were a high-profile issue. Salmon was one of many candidates nationwide who pledged to serve only three terms in Congress. In the general election, he defeated Democratic State Senator Chuck Blanchard, 56%–39%.
1996
He won re-election to a second term with 60% of the vote.
1998
He won re-election to a third term with 65% of the vote.
2000
He honored his campaign term limits pledge and did not seek re-election to a fourth term in 2000. He was then succeeded by Jeff Flake.
= Tenure
=During the 1994 congressional election, Salmon signed the Contract with America.
In 1999, he unsuccessfully advocated carving Ronald Reagan's face into Mount Rushmore, stating "He's the president that ended the Cold War. You think about 40 years of a major threat, not only to our country but to the world at large, being ended by one man - that's quite an achievement." Salmon's idea garnered support from Reps. Roscoe G. Bartlett (R-Md.) and John R. Kasich (R-Ohio).
Salmon was instrumental in obtaining the January 29, 2000, release of U.S.-based academic researcher Song Yongyi from detention in China on spying charges.
= Committee assignments
=Committee on International Relations
Committee on Science
Committee on Small Business
Committee on Education and the Workforce
Inter-congressional years (2001–2011)
= 2002 gubernatorial election
=Incumbent Republican Arizona Governor Jane Dee Hull was ineligible for re-election in 2002. In the Republican primary, Salmon defeated Arizona Secretary of State Betsy Bayless and Arizona Treasurer Carol Springer 56–30–14%. He won every county in the state. In the general election, he faced Democratic nominee and Arizona Attorney General Janet Napolitano, Libertarian nominee Barry Hess, and former Arizona Secretary of State Richard D. Mahoney (who ran as an independent, but was previously a Democrat). Napolitano defeated Salmon 46.2–45.2%, a difference of 11,819 votes.
= Political activism
=After that race, he served as a lobbyist and chairman of the Arizona Republican Party. In 2007, he served as campaign manager to businessman Scott Smith's successful campaign for mayor of Mesa. In 2008, he became president of the Competitive Telecommunications Association, a Washington, D.C.-based trade association.
U.S. House of Representatives (2013–2017)
= Elections
=2012
In April 2011, Salmon announced he would seek his old congressional seat, which was now numbered as the 5th district. His conception of term limits had evolved: in 2011 he stated that they were a flawed concept unless they were applied across the board. His successor in Congress, Jeff Flake, was giving up the seat to run for the United States Senate. He was endorsed by the Club for Growth, Governor Jan Brewer, Senator John Thune, U.S. Representative David Schweikert, U.S. Representative Trent Franks, and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush. In the August 28 Republican primary, he defeated former state house speaker Kirk Adams 52–48%. In the general election, Salmon defeated Democrat Spencer Morgan 65–35%.
2014
Salmon was reelected almost as easily in 2014. However, he announced on February 25, 2016, that he was retiring for good.
= Committee assignments
=Committee on International Relations / Committee on Foreign Affairs
Chair, Subcommittee on Western Hemisphere
Chair, Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific
Committee on Education and the Workforce
= Tenure
=In March 2013, he endorsed the idea of bringing back the Hastert Rule, which is that in order to bring a bill to the floor it must have a majority of the majority party's support.
In 2013, Salmon was one of a few dozen Republicans who attempted to defund the Affordable Care Act by allowing a government shutdown. Salmon indicated the shutdown was intentional.
He also proposed an amendment to the United States Constitution limiting House members to three terms in office and Senators to two.
Abortion
Salmon opposes abortion and has opposed federal funding of abortions as well as family-planning assistance that includes abortions.
Gay rights
Salmon voted to ban gay couples adopting children and opposes gay marriage. Salmon has a son who is gay. Salmon's son led the Arizona Log Cabin Republicans; he left the group to focus on medical school.
Budget
Salmon is a fiscal conservative and has often caused rifts and defections in his own party to oppose increasing the deficit. He has strictly opposed raising the debt limit and any new spending without matching cuts. He believes government agencies and institutions should undergo reform, not expansion, to meet their needs.
Taxation
Salmon signed the Taxpayer Protection Pledge, stating he would never vote for legislation to increase taxes on Americans. He opposes new government spending unless it has a plan to initiate some spending cut that will offset the loss. He has voted to cut various taxes, such as the estate and marriage taxes.
He was a cosponsor of a bill that would prevent political bias causing any discrimination in tax treatment.
In 2011, Salmon signed a pledge sponsored by Americans for Prosperity promising to vote against any climate change legislation that would raise taxes.
2022 Arizona gubernatorial campaign
In June 2021, he declared his candidacy in the 2022 race for Arizona governor, to succeed term limited incumbent Republican Doug Ducey. He was endorsed by Ted Cruz and the Club for Growth, among others. Salmon dropped out of the race on June 28, 2022.
Electoral history
References
Further reading
2002 Arizona Governor's Race USA Today November 11, 2002
Salmon holds vision for Arizona's GOP "Ex-congressman eyes chairman seat" The Arizona Republic November 28, 2004 (subscription required)
External links
Matt Salmon on Twitter
Appearances on C-SPAN
Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
Financial information (federal office) at the Federal Election Commission
Legislation sponsored at the Library of Congress
Profile at Vote Smart
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Subkomite Asia dan Pasifik DPR Amerika Serikat
- Daftar orang Mormon anggota Kongres Amerika Serikat
- Subkomite Kawasan Barat DPR Amerika Serikat
- Resident Evil (film)
- Maxime Bouttier
- Alaska Seas
- Negara
- Daftar film Indonesia
- Daniel Craig
- MasterChef Indonesia (musim 11)
- Matt Salmon
- 2002 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2012 United States House of Representatives elections in Arizona
- 2018 United States Senate election in Arizona
- Kari Lake
- Jeff Flake
- 2016 United States Senate election in Arizona
- Senator Salmon
- Colin Salmon