George Nethercutt

Lawyer

Birthday October 7, 1944

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Spokane, Washington, U.S.

Age 79 years old

Nationality United States

#33754 Most Popular

1862

This marked the first time a sitting Speaker of the House was unseated since 1862, and was part of a massive national Republican landslide that saw the GOP take control of the House for the first time in 40 years.

In Congress, he sat on the House Appropriations Committee and the House Science Committee.

1928

Washington has not elected a senator from east of the Cascades since Clarence Dill in 1928.

Other important issues included national security and the war in Iraq.

Nethercutt supported the invasion of Iraq, while Murray opposed it.

Nethercutt was a heavy underdog, and his campaign never gained much traction.

In November, he lost by 12 points, receiving 43 percent of the vote to Murray's 55 percent.

While he dominated the eastern portion of the state, including his own congressional district, he only won two counties west of the Cascades, Clark County and Lewis County.

1944

George Rector Nethercutt Jr. (born October 7, 1944) is an American lawyer, author, and politician.

1967

Born in Spokane, Washington, and a graduate of North Central High School, Nethercutt earned a B.A. in English from Washington State University in 1967 and a J.D. degree from Gonzaga University in 1971.

He worked as a clerk for Alaskan federal Judge Raymond Plummer.

1972

Nethercutt then served as staff counsel and later chief of staff to Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK) from 1972 to 1977 before returning to private practice in Washington State.

He formerly served as a town attorney for the communities of Reardan, Creston and Almira.

He is a former chair of the Spokane County Republican Party.

He is the co-founder of the Vanessa Behan Crisis Nursery.

1980

The district had been growing more conservative since the early 1980s, but Foley had held on mainly by running up his totals in Democratic-leaning Spokane.

1992

In 1992, Washington state voters approved a ballot measure limiting the terms of Washington officials, including federal officials such as U.S. Representatives.

Foley brought suit contesting the constitutionality of this limit and won in court.

Nethercutt repeatedly cited the caption of Foley's lawsuit – "Foley against the People of the State of Washington."

He also promised to serve no more than three terms (six years) in the House.

1994

Nethercutt was first elected to Congress in 1994 in a dramatic election in which he unseated the Speaker of the House, Tom Foley.

It was the first time he had run for office.

In the 1994 election, however, Nethercutt ran up his totals in the more rural areas of the district while holding Foley to a margin of only 9,000 votes in Spokane and 3,000 in Spokane County, which allowed him to prevail by 4,000 votes.

Like most Republicans elected in the 1994 wave, he had a strongly conservative voting record.

Nethercutt's campaign against Foley, a 30-year incumbent, included significant attention to Foley's opposition to term limits.

1995

He was a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 2005, representing Washington's 5th congressional district.

1996

In the 1996 elections, the Democrats mounted a serious bid to regain the seat, but Nethercutt won by an unexpectedly large 12-point margin even as Bill Clinton narrowly carried the district.

1998

He was handily reelected in 1998.

2000

In 2000, when his self-imposed three-term limit would have kicked in, Nethercutt changed his mind and announced his intention to run again, infuriating term-limits supporters.

Nethercutt was nevertheless re-elected without much difficulty in 2000 and 2002.

Nethercutt's congressional papers are held at Gonzaga University.

2004

Rather than running for a sixth term in the House of Representatives, Nethercutt decided to run for U.S. Senate in 2004, hoping to unseat the incumbent, Senator Patty Murray.

Term limits again became an issue in the campaign, as Democrats quickly seized on Nethercutt's broken term-limits pledge.

Nethercutt was also hampered by his lack of name recognition in the more densely populated western part of the state, home to two-thirds of the state's population.

2005

Nethercutt left the House of Representatives at the end of his term in January 2005, but said that he would probably not completely retire from politics.

In 2005, he and two other political veterans (former Interior Department deputy secretary J. Steven Griles and former White House national energy policy director Andrew Lundquist) formed the political lobbying firm Lundquist, Nethercutt & Griles, LLC.

2007

Griles resigned in 2007, after he pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in connection with the Abramoff scandal, the top Bush administration official to do so.

Nethercutt serves as Chairman of Nethercutt Consulting LLC, is of counsel for the law firms of Bluewater Strategies and Lee & Hayes, and is a member of several corporate boards.

He is the author of the book In Tune with America: Our History in Song,.

Hewrites a monthly column for The Pacific Northwest Inlander newspaper, and records radio commentaries for several radio stations.