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Tom Sawyer (Kansas politician)

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American politician
Tom Sawyer
Minority Leader of the Kansas House of Representatives
In office
January 14, 2019 – January 9, 2023
Preceded byJim Ward
Succeeded byVic Miller
Member of the Kansas House of Representatives
from the 95th district
Assumed office
January 14, 2013
Preceded byBenny Boman
In office
January 13, 2003 – September 2009
Preceded byMelany Barnes
Succeeded byMelany Barnes
In office
January 12, 1987 – January 11, 1999
Preceded byHomer Jarchow
Succeeded byMelany Barnes
Personal details
Born (1958年04月15日) April 15, 1958 (age 66)
Wichita, Kansas, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
EducationWichita State University (BBA)
WebsiteCampaign website

Tom Sawyer (born April 15, 1958) is an American politician who served as the minority leader of the Kansas House of Representatives.[1] A Democrat, Sawyer has represented the 95th district, covering southwest Wichita, since 2013. Sawyer previously represented the same district from 1987 to 1999 and from 2003 to 2009, serving as both Majority Leader and Minority Leader during his first stint in the legislature.

Kansas House career

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Born in Wichita, Kansas, Sawyer graduated from Wichita State University with a BBA in Accounting in 1984.[2] Sawyer was first elected to the Kansas House of Representatives two years later in 1986. He became the party's House Leader, and through his initial 12-year legislative career served as both the Majority Leader and the Minority Leader. He is only the fourth Democrat to ever be elected Majority Leader of the Kansas House and the only Wichitan to hold that position in the last 30 years.

After leaving the legislature for an unsuccessful run for Governor of Kansas in 1998, Sawyer served as State Chairman of the Kansas Democratic Party for four years before being once again elected to the state legislature in 2002. He was re-elected in 2004, 2006 and 2008, and served as chair of the Sedgwick County Legislative Delegation in 2005.[3] He resigned from the House of Representatives in 2009 to serve on the state Parole Board.

Following the election of Republican Governor Sam Brownback in 2010, Sawyer left the Parole Board and in 2012 once again won election to the state House, defeating a Republican incumbent and returning to his position as the representative for the 95th district.

1998 gubernatorial campaign

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In 1998, Sawyer opted to run for Governor of Kansas to prevent controversial Westboro Baptist Church preacher Fred Phelps from obtaining the Democratic nomination. Though he won the primary in a landslide, Sawyer was defeated badly in the general election, losing all 105 counties and winning just 23% of the vote against popular incumbent Republican governor Bill Graves.

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "Kansas House Democrats pick Tom Sawyer as leader over Jim Ward". Topeka Capital-Journal. December 3, 2018. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  2. ^ "Tom Sawyer for State Representative". Tom Sawyer for State Representative.
  3. ^ Rep. Tom Sawyer Biography Retrieved June 30, 2009.
[edit ]
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Kansas
1998
Succeeded by
Kansas House of Representatives
Preceded by Minority Leader of the Kansas House of Representatives
2019–2023
Succeeded by
Speaker of the House
Daniel Hawkins (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Blake Carpenter (R)
Majority Leader
Chris Croft (R)
Minority Leader
Brandon Woodard (D)
  1. Dale Helwig (R)
  2. Kenneth Collins (R)
  3. Chuck Smith (R)
  4. Ricky James (R)
  5. Carrie Barth (R)
  6. Samantha Poetter Parshall (R)
  7. Dan Goddard (R)
  8. Chris Croft (R)
  9. Fred Gardner (R)
  10. Suzanne Wikle (D)
  11. Ron Bryce (R)
  12. Doug Blex (R)
  13. Duane Droge (R)
  14. Charlotte Esau (R)
  15. Lauren Bohi (R)
  16. Linda Featherston (D)
  17. Jo Ella Hoye (D)
  18. Cindy Neighbor (D)
  19. Stephanie Clayton (D)
  20. Mari-Lynn Poskin (D)
  21. Jerry Stogsdill (D)
  22. Lindsay Vaughn (D)
  23. Susan Ruiz (D)
  24. Jarrod Ousley (D)
  25. Rui Xu (D)
  26. Chip VanHouden (R)
  27. Sean Tarwater (R)
  28. Carl Turner (R)
  29. Heather Meyer (D)
  30. Laura Williams (R)
  31. Louis Ruiz (D)
  32. Pam Curtis (D)
  33. Mike Thompson (R)
  34. Valdenia Winn (D)
  35. Wanda Brownlee Paige (D)
  36. Lynn Melton (D)
  37. Melissa Oropeza (D)
  38. Timothy H. Johnson (R)
  39. Angela Stiens (R)
  40. David Buehler (R)
  41. Pat Proctor (R)
  42. Lance Neelly (R)
  43. Bill Sutton (R)
  44. Barbara Ballard (D)
  45. Mike Amyx (D)
  46. Brooklynne Mosley (D)
  47. Ronald Ellis (R)
  48. Dan Osman (D)
  49. Nikki McDonald (D)
  50. Kyle McNorton (R)
  51. Megan Steele (R)
  52. Jesse Borjon (R)
  53. Kirk Haskins (D)
  54. Ken Corbet (R)
  55. Tobias Schlingensiepen (D)
  56. Virgil Weigel (D)
  57. John Alcala (D)
  58. Alexis Simmons (D)
  59. Rebecca Schmoe (R)
  60. Mark Schreiber (R)
  61. Francis Awerkamp (R)
  62. Sean Willcott (R)
  63. Allen Reavis (R)
  64. Lewis Bloom (R)
  65. Shawn Chauncey (R)
  66. Sydney Carlin (D)
  67. Angelina Roeser (R)
  68. Nathan Butler (R)
  69. Clarke Sanders (R)
  70. Scott Hill (R)
  71. Steven Howe (R)
  72. Avery Anderson (R)
  73. Rick Wilborn (R)
  74. Mike King (R)
  75. Will Carpenter (R)
  76. Bradley Barrett (R)
  77. Kristey Williams (R)
  78. Robyn Essex (R)
  79. Webster Roth (R)
  80. Bill Rhiley (R)
  81. Blake Carpenter (R)
  82. Leah Howell (R)
  83. Henry Helgerson (D)
  84. Ford Carr (D)
  85. Patrick Penn (R)
  86. Silas Miller (D)
  87. Susan Estes (R)
  88. Sandy Pickert (R)
  89. KC Ohaebosim (D)
  90. Steve Huebert (R)
  91. Emil Bergquist (R)
  92. John Carmichael (D)
  93. Brian Bergkamp (R)
  94. Leo Delperdang (R)
  95. Tom Sawyer (D)
  96. Tom Kessler (R)
  97. Nick Hoheisel (R)
  98. Cyndi Howerton (R)
  99. Susan Humphries (R)
  100. Daniel Hawkins (R)
  101. Joe Seiwert (R)
  102. Kyler Sweely (R)
  103. Angela Martinez (D)
  104. Paul Waggoner (R)
  105. Jill Ward (R)
  106. Lisa Moser (R)
  107. Dawn Wolf (R)
  108. Brandon Woodard (D)
  109. Troy Waymaster (R)
  110. Ken Rahjes (R)
  111. Barb Wasinger (R)
  112. Sherri Brantley (R)
  113. Brett Fairchild (R)
  114. Kevin Schwertfeger (R)
  115. Gary White (R)
  116. Kyle Hoffman (R)
  117. Adam Turk (R)
  118. Jim Minnix (R)
  119. Jason Goetz (R)
  120. Adam Smith (R)
  121. John Resman (R)
  122. Lon Pishny (R)
  123. Bob Lewis (R)
  124. Marty Long (R)
  125. Shannon Francis (R)

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