Texas
District 24
Rep. Kenny Marchant (R)
Texas 24th District
Rep. Kenny Marchant (R)
The gigantic (larger than Manhattan Island) Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport, the third-busiest in the world, bisects the Metroplex and its two adjacent counties with its large terminals and the Texas-sized highway network that feeds them. DFW, as everyone calls it, also has been a focal point for the huge local development in both Dallas and Tarrant counties. “DFW is no longer solely an airport. DFW is our home,” the Fort Worth Star-Telegram wrote. New cities, with as many people as Dallas and Fort Worth had in the 1950s—Grand Prairie and Irving—grew up around the airport during the next two decades in these once-impoverished lands. For years, DFW and its supporters fiercely opposed efforts to repeal the Wright Amendment, which limited the number of cities that can be reached on flights out of the old Love Field in Dallas. In 2006, a political consensus in Texas and in Washington resulted in it being repealed, partly at the behest of locally based airlines seeking to throw off its anticompetitive shackles in a rapidly changing transportation world.
2008 Presidential Vote |
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| McCain | 153,758 | (55%) |
| Obama | 124,128 | (44%) |
| Cook Partisan Voting Index R+11 | ||
North of DFW are newer and more upscale suburbs: Grapevine and Southlake, with huge shopping malls and resort centers, in northeast Tarrant County. Across the International Parkway in northwest Dallas County are Coppell, Farmers Branch and Carrollton. To the north are the fast-growing suburbs and exurbs of Denton County. The Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington Metropolitan Statistical Area has passed Philadelphia as the nation’s fourth-largest MSA. It is 44% African-American, Asian or Hispanic, compared with 30% in the Philadelphia MSA. The MSA has grown 22% since 2000, compared with a rate of 5% or less in the other MSAs in the top five. The area’s job growth from July 2007 to July 2008 was the highest in the nation.
The 24th Congressional District of Texas is based in this area and has three large spokes that reach out from DFW. The largest extends northeast through Dallas County and into Denton County, up to Route 121, including one-third of Irving and almost all of Farmers Branch, Coppell and Carrollton. To the west, another spoke reaches into Tarrant County out to Precinct Line Road and includes Grapevine, Bedford, Colleyville and Southlake. South of the airport it takes in Cedar Hill, part of Irving and almost all of Grand Prairie, where oil and gas drilling is common in residential neighborhoods. About half of the population is in Dallas County, a third is in Tarrant County and the rest is in Denton County. After its transformation by the 2003 redistricting, the new 24th District voted 65% for Bush in 2004 and 55% for GOP presidential nominee John McCain in 2008.
Texas District 24
Rep. Kenny Marchant (R)
Elected: 2004, 3rd term.
Born: Feb. 23, 1951, Bonham .
Home: Coppell.
Education: Southern Nazarene U., B.A. 1973, attended Nazarene Theol. Sem. 1975-76.
Religion: Nazarene.
Family: Married (Donna); 4 children.
Elected office: Carrollton City Cncl., 1980-84; Mayor, 1984-86; TX House of Reps., 1986-2004.
Professional Career: Homebuilder, developer, 1975-2004.
The congressman from the 24th District is Kenny Marchant, a Republican elected in 2004. He graduated from Southern Nazarene University. A local homebuilder and successful developer, Marchant served a quarter-century in elected offices before running for Congress, on the Carrollton City Council, as Carrollton mayor, and then in the state House. He also has been active in private humanitarian projects around the world. The Ken Marchant Foundation funds church loans, mission projects and scholarships. In contrast to other upwardly mobile Republicans in Austin, he enjoyed a reputation on both sides of the aisle as a levelheaded peacemaker. Despite serving in some of the Legislature’s most partisan leadership posts, the mild-mannered and deeply religious Marchant managed to maintain a cool demeanor, even as his colleagues engaged in acrimonious battle. As Texas Monthly magazine wrote: “His role was that of the genial, kindly sheriff in a western who allows the cowboys to gamble, drink and fight—but when they show up at the jail, rope in hand, he stands on the steps and says, ‘Boys, just go on home and cool off.’ ”
| Election Results: | ||||
| 2008 General | ||||
| Kenny Marchant (R) | 151,434 | (56%) | ($644,822) | |
| Tom Love (D) | 111,089 | (41%) | ($21,990) | |
| David Casey (Lib) | 7,972 | (3%) | ||
| 2008 Primary | ||||
| Kenny Marchant (R) | Unopposed | |||
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Prior Winning Percentages: 2006 (60%), 2004 (64%) |
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Marchant had been chairman and floor leader of the Texas House Republican caucus and served on the House Redistricting Committee during the bitter 2003 redistricting battle. Unsurprisingly, the redistricting plan couldn’t have been more favorable to him. In their effort to draw a Dallas-area seat that former Democratic Caucus Chairman Martin Frost could not win, Republicans designed a district where Marchant could not lose. He denied that the new 24th was created specifically for him, but it incorporated nearly his entire state legislative district and was heavily Republican. He campaigned as “a proven leader for George W. Bush,” a reference to his close legislative relationship with the former governor. Marchant drew no serious major-party opposition. In the primary, he defeated three other candidates with 73% of the vote and in the general election won 64%-34%.
In the House, Marchant has a solidly conservative voting record, though he does not have the hard rhetorical edge of a Tom DeLay, the controversial former GOP majority leader from Texas. As the only one of the five House Republicans elected as the result of DeLay’s redistricting plan who had prior legislative experience, Marchant settled comfortably into Congress. He developed a fruitful relationship with Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio, joining the Education and the Workforce Committee that Boehner chaired in 2005 and becoming one of the few Texans to back Boehner in his bid to become majority leader when Republicans still controlled the House.
Marchant’s legislative priorities have been mostly parochial. As the only North Texas Republican on the Transportation Committee, he helped coordinate the eight-year phased repeal of the Wright Amendment. In January 2009, he unsuccessfully sought a seat on the House Ways and Means Committee, but he retained his seat on the Financial Services Committee. Since 2007, he has refused to request spending earmarks for his district. With the big amounts that Washington already is spending, “We felt we did not need to contribute to any more big spending,” he told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in April 2009. Earmarks, which exploded in number and size during the Republican majority, became controversial in recent years as budget hawks in both parties began to focus on them as wasteful, pork-barrel spending.


