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Missouri District 9
Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R)

Missouri 9th District

Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R)


Little Dixie, the swath of northeast Missouri along the Mississippi River, was settled by Southerners from Kentucky and Virginia. Its most famous native son is Mark Twain, born Samuel Langhorne Clemens in Hannibal, then as now a little town on bluffs overlooking the river. Hannibal was the thinly disguised St. Petersburg of Twain’s classics, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Little Dixie was pro-Confederate during the Civil War, and Callaway County in fact declared its independence from the Union. For many years faithfully Democratic, Little Dixie has reared some notable politicians. One was Champ Clark, speaker of the U.S. House from 1911 to 1919 and a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1912. Another was Clarence Cannon, author of the definitive text on the House’s parliamentary procedures and chairman of the House Appropriations Committee from 1941 to 1964, except for four years of Republican control.

2008 Presidential Vote
McCain 181,181 (55%)
Obama 144,729 (44%)
Cook Partisan Voting Index
R+ 9

The 9th Congressional District of Missouri is the descendant of the Little Dixie districts that elected Clark and Cannon, but slow population growth has expanded it far to the south and into the foothills of the Ozarks. It includes Columbia, home of the University of Missouri, and Fulton, home of Westminster College, where former Prime Minister Winston Churchill, accompanied by President Harry Truman, told the world in 1946: “From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent.” The district includes the western edge of the St. Louis metro area, western St. Charles County, and Franklin County south of the Missouri River. Its grain fields have become a center for ethanol production. Despite its Democratic heritage, the 9th votes mostly Republican now. George W. Bush carried the district with 59% in 2004, and John McCain carried it with 55% in 2008.



Missouri District 9

Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R)



Elected: 2008, 1st term.
Born: May 7, 1952, Jefferson City .
Home: St. Elizabeth.
Education: Lincoln U., B.A. 1974.
Religion: Catholic.
Family: Married (Jackie); 3 children.
Elected office: MO House, 1999-2005.
Professional Career: Loan officer, Bank of St. Elizabeth, 1978-2008; Pres., Luetkemeyer Insurance Agency, 1978-08; Dir., MO division of tourism, 2007-08.

 

The new congressman from the 9th District is Blaine Luetkemeyer, a Republican with Missouri roots that stretch back five generations. He grew up in St. Elizabeth, where his father worked as an insurance agent and then owned a bank. Luetkemeyer (LOOT-ka-myer) was a star high school baseball player, but his tryouts with the Kansas City Royals and Pittsburgh Pirates were unsuccessful. He graduated from Lincoln University, a historically black college in Jefferson City, with a degree in political science. He and his wife settled on his great-grandfather’s farm in St. Elizabeth. In addition to farming, Luetkemeyer became involved in his family’s banking operations and founded the Luetkemeyer Insurance Agency.

 
Election Results:
  2008 General
        Blaine Luetkemeyer (R) 161,031 (50%) ($2,778,724)
        Judy Baker (D) 152,956 (47%) ($1,669,071)
        Tamara Millay (Lib) 8,108 (3%)
  2008 Primary
        Blaine Luetkemeyer (R) 21,543 (40%)
        Bob Onder (R) 15,752 (29%)
        Danielle Moore (R) 10,609 (20%)
        Brock Olivo (R) 5,501 (10%)

In 1999, Luetkemeyer was elected to the Missouri House of Representatives, where he chaired the Financial Services Committee and developed a reputation as a thoughtful legislator. He campaigned for Missouri treasurer in 2004 but lost in the Republican primary. In 2007, Luetkemeyer was appointed director of the Missouri Division of Tourism. Two years later, the 9th District House seat came open when Republican Rep. Kenny Hulshof decided to run for governor to succeed retiring Republican Gov. Matt Blunt. Luetkemeyer entered a five-way GOP primary for Hulshof’s seat. Missouri’s Republican politicos viewed Luetkemeyer as the favorite. The conservative anti-tax group Club for Growth endorsed GOP state Rep. Bob Onder, although Luetkemeyer received a critical endorsement from the anti-abortion group Missouri Right to Life. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the dominant newspaper in the market, complained that no one among the candidates had a good grasp of issues. Still, Luetkemeyer trounced the competition, winning 40% of the vote.

In the general election, Luetkemeyer faced state Rep. Judy Baker, a health care consultant from Columbia. Republicans viewed Baker as an easy mark because they did not think her liberal message would play well in the district’s conservative-leaning rural counties. Luetkemeyer ran as a social conservative opposed to abortion rights and same-sex marriage. He emphasized his farming background to the district’s largely rural constituency. While Baker aligned herself with Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama’s message of change, Luetkemeyer was quick to point to Obama’s campaign comments about small-town Americans. Describing people in small towns where jobs are disappearing, Obama said in April 2008 that they “get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”

Luetkemeyer also questioned Baker’s health care credentials by pointing out that a private health care company she worked for in 2000 and 2001 lost more than $2 million from 1999 to 2001. Baker countered that she had helped to fix the company’s problems even as auditors were discovering them. Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill, who served as the state auditor during that period, also defended Baker’s record.

Luetkemeyer opposed Baker’s support for a Democratic proposal to expand federal funding for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, claiming it would be too costly. Baker criticized Luetkemeyer for sponsoring a bill that would have allowed Missouri insurance companies to offer health policies that did not cover mammograms, maternity benefits, or childhood immunizations. She neglected to note that Luetkemeyer eventually withdrew those controversial provisions from the bill. He also stressed his support for increased offshore drilling, a position that Baker tepidly supported. He was endorsed by the influential Missouri Farm Bureau. Luetkemeyer raised $2.8 million, two-thirds of it his own money; Baker raised $1.7 million. In the election, Baker managed to carry populous Boone County, but Luetkemeyer prevailed in the rural counties and those west of St. Louis in winning 50% to 47.5%.


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Population
Population 2007 656,371
Change since 2000 5.6%
Urban 45.8%
Area size 14,082 sq mi
Work
Private 74.9%
Government 17.5%
Self-employed 7.4%
Blue collar 26.5%
White collar 56.2%
Khaki collar 0.1%
Other 17.2%
Median income $42,822
Median home value $121,100
Age
Median age 36.0 yrs
Over 65 13.0%
Under 18 23.9%
Education
High school degree 84.7%
College degree 23.0%
Graduate degree 9.0%
Race/Ethnicity
White 91.7%
Black 3.9%
Hispanic 1.5%
Asian 1.1%
Native Am. 0.3%
Hawaiian 0.0%
Two+ 1.4%
Ancestry
German 26.1%
Irish 12.3%
English 9.3%
USA 8.6%
French 3.1%
Military veterans
% of pop. 11.4%
Office Information

State Offices

Columbia, 573-886-8929; Hannibal, 573-231-1012; Washington, 636-239-2276.

DC Office

1118 LHOB, 20515, 202-225-2956

Fax

202-225-5712

Web site

 http://luetkemeyer.house.gov

Committees
House Agriculture Committee (15th of 18 R): Conservation, Credit, Energy & Research; General Farm Commodities & Risk Management.
House Small Business Committee (9th of 12 R): Finance & Tax; Rural Development, Entrepreneurship & Trade (Ranking minority member).

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