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David Vitter

David Bruce Vitter (born May 3, 1961) is an American politician who represented Louisiana in the United States Senate from 2005 to 2017. A member of the Republican Party, Vitter served in the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992 to 1999 and in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1999 to 2005.

David Vitter
Official portrait, 2005
United States Senator
from Louisiana
In office
January 3, 2005 – January 3, 2017
Preceded byJohn Breaux
Succeeded byJohn Kennedy
Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee
In office
January 3, 2015 – January 3, 2017
Preceded byMaria Cantwell
Succeeded byJim Risch
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Louisiana's 1st district
In office
May 29, 1999 – January 3, 2005
Preceded byBob Livingston
Succeeded byBobby Jindal
Member of the Louisiana House of Representatives
from the 81st district
In office
1992–1999
Preceded byDavid Duke
Succeeded byJennifer Sneed Heebe
Personal details
Born
David Bruce Vitter

(1961-05-03) May 3, 1961 (age 62)
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
(m. 1990)
RelationsJeffrey Vitter (brother)
Children4
EducationHarvard University (BA)
Magdalen College, Oxford (BA)
Tulane University (JD)
Signature

Vitter was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 2004. He was the first Republican to represent Louisiana in the Senate since the Reconstruction Era, and the first ever Republican to be popularly elected. In 2007, Vitter admitted to and apologized for past involvement with prostitution as part of a Washington, D.C. escort service which gained much notoriety[1] and while not affecting his 2010 election, is believed to have played a part in his loss of the 2015 gubernatorial election. In 2010, Vitter won a second Senate term by defeating Democratic U.S. Representative Charlie Melançon.

Vitter unsuccessfully ran for governor to succeed the term-limited Bobby Jindal in the 2015 gubernatorial election. He lost the general election to Democrat John Bel Edwards. While conceding defeat to Edwards, Vitter announced that he would not seek reelection to his Senate seat in 2016 and would retire from office at the completion of his term. Following the conclusion of his second Senate term, Vitter became a lobbyist.

Early life and education Edit

 
David Vitter and his family with Vice President Dick Cheney

David Bruce Vitter[2] was born on May 3, 1961[3] in New Orleans, Louisiana. He is the son of Audrey Malvina (née St. Raymond) and Albert Leopold Vitter. Vitter graduated in 1979 from De La Salle High School in New Orleans.[4] While a student at De La Salle, Vitter participated in the Close Up Washington civic education program. He received a Bachelor of Arts from Harvard College in 1983; a second B.A. from Magdalen College, Oxford in 1985, as a Rhodes Scholar; and a Juris Doctor degree in 1988 from the Tulane University Law School in New Orleans. He was a practicing lawyer,[5][6] and adjunct law professor at Tulane and Loyola University New Orleans.[6]

Vitter and his wife Wendy, a former prosecutor,[7][8] have four children. Vitter's brother Jeffrey is a computer scientist who has served as chancellor of the University of Mississippi from January 2016 to January 2019.

Early political career Edit

Louisiana House of Representatives Edit

Vitter was a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992 to 1999.

Vitter has argued for ethics reform and term limits since he was in the Louisiana Legislature in the early 1990s.[9] As a Louisiana state legislator, Vitter successfully pushed through a term limits amendment to the state constitution to oust the largely Democratic legislature.[10][11][12][13] The first election legislators affected by the reform occurred in 2007.[14] In order to leverage the term limits advantage in that election, Vitter formed a Political Action Committee with the goal of winning a legislative Republican majority.[15][16] While the Republicans saw gains, the Democrats maintained majority control.[13]

Vitter opposed gambling during his tenure in the Louisiana House.[17]

United States House of Representatives Edit

Vitter won a special election to Louisiana's 1st congressional district in 1999, succeeding Republican U.S. Representative Bob Livingston, who resigned after disclosure that he had committed adultery. In the initial vote on May 1, 1999,[18] former Congressman and Governor David C. Treen finished first with 36,719 votes (25 percent). Vitter was second, with 31,741 (22 percent), and white nationalist David Duke finished third with 28,055 votes (19 percent). Monica L. Monica, a Republican ophthalmologist, had 16 percent; State Representative Bill Strain, a conservative Democrat, finished fifth with 11 percent; and Rob Couhig, a Republican lawyer and the owner of New Orleans's minor league baseball team, garnered 6 percent.[19] In the runoff, Vitter defeated Treen 51–49 percent.[20]

In 2000 and 2002, Vitter was re-elected with more than 80 percent of the vote in what had become a safe Republican district.[20]

In 2001, Vitter co-authored legislation to restrict the number of physicians allowed to prescribe RU-486, a drug used in medical abortions. The bill died in committee.[21][22]

In 2003, Vitter proposed to amend the U.S. Constitution to ban same-sex marriage.[23] In 2004, he said, "This is a real outrage. The Hollywood left is redefining the most basic institution in human history...We need a U.S. Senator who will stand up for Louisiana values, not Massachusetts values."[24]

2003 gubernatorial election Edit

In 2002, Vitter was preparing to run for governor in 2003, with the incumbent, Republican Mike Foster, prevented by term limits from running again. But in June 2002, shortly before the Louisiana Weekly reported on a claim from Vincent Bruno, a campaign worker for Treen in 1999, about Vitter's alleged relationship with a prostitute, Vitter dropped out of the governor's race,[25] saying he and his wife were dealing with marital problems.

Bruno said on a New Orleans-based radio show that he had been told by a prostitute that she had interactions with Vitter. However, Treen and his campaign decided to not publicize this information during the election.[26]

United States Senate Edit

2004 election Edit

In 2004, Vitter ran to replace Democrat John Breaux in the U.S. Senate.

During the campaign, Vitter was accused by a member of the Louisiana Republican State Central Committee of having had a lengthy affair with a prostitute in New Orleans. Vitter responded that the allegation was "absolutely and completely untrue" and that it was "just crass Louisiana politics."[7]

On November 2, 2004, Vitter won the jungle primary, garnering a majority of the vote, while the rest of the vote was mostly split among the Democratic contenders.

Vitter was the first Republican in Louisiana to be popularly elected as a U.S. Senator. The previous Republican Senator, William Pitt Kellogg, was chosen by the state legislature in 1876, in accordance with the process used before the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution went into effect in 1914.[27]

2010 election Edit

 
Vitter yard sign (2010)

Vitter began fundraising for his 2010 reelection run in December 2008.[28] He raised $731,000 in the first quarter of 2009 and $2.5 million for his 2010 campaign.[29] He had wide leads against potential Democratic opponents in aggregate general election polling.[30][31] He faced intraparty opposition from Chet D. Traylor of Monroe, a former associate justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, in the August 28 Republican primary election and defeated him.

He faced the Democratic U.S. Representative Charlie Melançon of Napoleonville in the November 2 general election. State Representative Ernest Wooton of Belle Chasse in Plaquemines Parish, an Independent, also ran.[32] On November 4, 2010, Vitter was re-elected as Louisiana Senator, defeating his Democratic rival, Melancon. Vitter got 715,304 votes while Melancon got 476,423 votes. Vitter received about 57% of the total vote while Melancon got 38%. The Independent candidate Wooton finished with 8,167 votes, or 1 percent of the total cast.

Tenure Edit

Vitter has identified himself as a political conservative throughout his political career. His legislative agenda includes positions ranging from anti-abortion to pro-gun rights while legislating against gambling, same-sex marriage, civil unions, federal funding for abortion providers, increases in the State Children's Health Insurance Program, the United Nations, and amnesty for America's illegal immigrants. Vitter's stated positions include a balanced budget constitutional amendment,[33] abolishing the federal and state estate tax,[34] increasing local police forces,[35] and an assortment of health care, tax and national defense reforms.[36][better source needed]

After conceding defeat to John Bel Edwards in the 2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election, Vitter announced that he would not seek reelection to his Senate seat in 2016 and would retire from office at the completion of his term.[37]

Abortion Edit

In October 2007, Vitter introduced an amendment[38] barring all federal public funds to health care providers and Planned Parenthood that provide services that include abortion. Federal law bars any funding to directly finance elective abortions in accordance with the Hyde amendment. Vitter argued that the funds are used for overhead costs that benefit the abortion services. The amendment failed to pass.[39][40] Following the rejection, Vitter and others urged the Senate to pass a similar bill introduced by Vitter in January 2007. The bill failed to pass.[41]

In January 2008, Vitter proposed an amendment to prohibit the funding of abortions with Indian Health Service funds except in the case of rape, incest, or when the life of the woman is at risk.[42] The amendment would have held future presidential administrations to an executive principle first crafted in 1982 by the Ronald Reagan White House.[43] Vitter's amendment passed the Senate but later was stalled in the House.[44]

Later that year, Vitter co-sponsored the Pregnant Women Health and Safety Act which – along with other oversight regulations – required doctors performing abortions to have the authority granted by a nearby hospital to admit patients. The bill was never reported to committee.[45][46]

Abstinence education Edit

Vitter advocated abstinence-only sex education, emphasizing abstinence over sex education that includes information about birth control, drawing criticism from Planned Parenthood.[47] He said, "Abstinence education is a public health strategy focused on risk avoidance that aims to help young people avoid exposure to harm...by teaching teenagers that saving sex until marriage and remaining faithful afterwards is the best choice for health and happiness."[48]

Automotive industry bailout Edit

Vitter was one of 35 Senators to vote against the Big 3 Bailout bill.[49] The financial bailout package was for GM, Chrysler, and Ford, but failed to pass on December 11, 2008. During the Senate debate Vitter referred to the approach of giving the automotive industry a financial package before they restructured as "ass-backwards".[50] He soon apologized for the phrasing of the comment, which did not appear in the Congressional Record.[51]

BP Horizon oil spill Edit

In response to the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill at an offshore drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico threatening the coast of Louisiana, Vitter introduced legislation along with Jeff Sessions of Alabama to increase the liability cap of an oil company from $75 million to its most recent annual profits (or $150 million if greater).[52] In the case of BP, the owner of the oil lease, its liability would be $20 billion.[53] Vitter later introduced an amendment that would remove the cap entirely for this particular spill.[52] Competing Democratic proposals would have raised the liability to $10 billion regardless of profits or removed the cap altogether.[52] Sessions argued that large caps unrelated to company profits would harm smaller companies.[53]

Chemical safety Edit

In May 2013, Vitter introduced the Chemical Safety Improvement Act, a bipartisan bill to reform the Toxic Substances Control Act, which would have regulated the introduction of new or already existing chemicals. The bill would have given additional authority to the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate chemicals and streamline the patchwork of state laws on chemicals under federal authority.[54][55]

Child protection Edit

In April 2008, Vitter introduced an amendment to continue funding the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act which was excluded from the 2008/2009 budget. The federal program maintains a national sex offender registry, provides resources for tracking down unregistered sex offenders and increases penalties for the sexual assault of children. His amendment received bipartisan support.[56][57]

Children's health insurance program Edit

In September 2007, Vitter opposed an increase of $35 billion for the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), the national program to provide health care for children from families who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but cannot afford private health insurance. He said he preferred that private health insurance provide the needed care and deemed the bill as "Hillarycare", a reference to the 1993 Clinton health care plan created by Hillary Clinton which proposed universal health care.[58]

Ethics and term limits Edit

Vitter refused to pledge to a voluntary term limit when running for the U.S. Congress in 1999. His opponent characterized this stance as hypocritical, and Vitter countered that unless it were universally applied, the loss of seniority would disadvantage his district.[10][59] As a Senator, he has proposed term limit constitutional amendments for members of Congress three times.[60][61][62] Vitter eventually decided to retire from the Senate in 2016 after serving two terms.

In 2007, in response to lobbying scandals involving, among others, Jack Abramoff and Duke Cunningham, Congress passed a lobbying and ethics reform package to which Vitter proposed a package of five amendments.[63][64][65][66] The Senate approved three that limited which legislators' spouses could lobby the Senate,[67] created criminal penalties for legislators and executive branch officials who falsify financial reports,[68] and doubled the penalties for lobbyists who failed to comply with disclosure requirements.[69] The Senate rejected prohibiting legislators from paying their families with campaign funds with some saying it was unrelated to the current legislation and others that the payments were not a problem.[70][71] Additionally, they tabled his proposal to define Indian tribes as corporations and its members as shareholders so that they are required to contribute to candidates through political action committees instead of their tribal treasury.[72] Senators objected saying that they are already subjected to campaign laws for unincorporated entities and individuals and that the proposal was singling them out unfairly.[71] The reform package became law in September 2007.[63]

In 2009, Vitter and Democratic former Senator Russ Feingold announced an effort to end automatic pay raises for members of Congress.[73]

Franken Amendment Edit

 
Vitter in 2011

In October 2009, the Senate passed Democratic Senator Al Franken's amendment to the 2010 Defense Appropriations bill that would forbid federal contractors from forcing victims of sexual assault, battery and discrimination to submit to binding arbitration (where a third-party typically chosen by the contractor adjudicates) and thereby prohibiting them from going to court.[74][75][76] The impetus for the amendment came from the story of Jamie Leigh Jones who alleged that she was drugged and gang-raped by employees of Halliburton/KBR, a federal contractor.[74][77][78]

The amendment passed 68 to 30 with all opposition coming from Republicans including Vitter (all four female Republicans, six other Republicans and all present Democrats voted for passage).[74][79] Vitter's 2010 Democratic Senatorial opponent Charlie Melancon criticized Vitter for his vote saying, "David Vitter has refused to explain why he voted to allow taxpayer-funded companies to sweep rape charges under the rug. We can only guess what his reasons were."[78][80][81][82] However, The Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker argued that the 30 senators were being "unfairly smeared for doing the harder thing, maybe even for the right reasons."[77]

Republican senators said they voted against it because it was unenforceable, a position also taken by the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Obama administration.[74][77][78] However, the DOD and the White House stated they agreed with the intent of the legislation and suggested it would be better if it was broadened to prohibit the use of arbitration in cases of sexual assault for any business contract, not just federal contractors.[77] Senators explained their vote against the legislation by saying it was a political attack on Halliburton and that the Senate shouldn't regulate contracts.[77] The latter argument is countered with many examples of similar restrictions on contractors such as discrimination, bonuses and health care.[74][78] Others felt it was unconstitutional and that arbitration is useful in resolving disputes, often faster, privately and cheaper.[74]

Later, a Baton Rouge rape survivor confronted Vitter at a town hall meeting saying, "[it] meant everything to me that I was able to put the person who attacked me behind bars ... How can you support a law that tells a rape victim that she does not have the right to defend herself?" Vitter replied, "The language in question did not say that in any way shape or form."[83][84]

Gambling Edit

Vitter opposed a bid by the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians to build a casino in Louisiana, arguing that the build site was not historically part of their tribal lands. He lobbied the Interior Department and included language in an appropriations bill to stop the casino. Although the Interior Department gave its approval, the casino has not yet been approved by the state.[85] The Jena chief accused Vitter of ties with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who simultaneously lobbied against the casino. The chairman of the Senate committee investigating the lobbyist said, "The committee has seen absolutely no evidence whatsoever that Senator Vitter's opposition to (the proposed casino) had to do with anything other than his long-standing opposition to gambling."[86] In 2007 and 2008, Vitter introduced a bill to prohibit Indian casinos such as Jena's. Neither bill became law.[87][88][89]

Gun rights Edit

Rated "A" by the NRA Political Victory Fund,[90] Vitter has been a consistent defender of gun rights.[91] In April 2006, in response to firearm confiscations in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Vitter was the Senate sponsor of the Disaster Recovery Personal Protection Act, to prohibit federal funding for the confiscation of legally held firearms during a disaster.[92] Later, Vitter included the provisions of the act in an amendment to an appropriation bill for the Department Of Homeland Security.[93] The bill became law in September 2006, with the amendment modified to allow for the temporary surrender of a firearm as a condition for entering a rescue or evacuation vehicle.[94]

On April 17, 2013, Vitter voted against the Toomey-Manchin Gun Control Amendment. The amendment failed to reach the sixty senatorial votes necessary to overcome a Republican-led filibuster. The Toomey-Manchin Gun Control Amendment is a bipartisan deal on gun background checks. Under the proposal, federal background checks would be expanded to include gun shows and online sales. All such sales would be channeled through licensed firearm dealers who would be charged for keeping record of transactions. The proposal does not require background checks for private sales between individuals.[95]

In February 2008, Vitter – along with Senators Larry Craig and Mike Crapo of Idaho – blocked the confirmation of Michael J. Sullivan as head of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) saying Sullivan supports "burdensome regulations" on gun owners and dealers and is "overly aggressive" enforcing gun laws. An editorial writer for The Boston Globe wrote that Vitter's position was "unreasonable" because the guns Sullivan sought to control are those commonly used in crimes: those stolen or purchased on the black market.[96][97] On the other hand, gun rights advocates say that many gun dealers have lost their licenses for harmless bureaucratic errors.[98] Sullivan stayed on as acting head of the ATF until January 2009 to make way for President Barack Obama to name his own nominee.[99]

Hurricane Katrina Edit

 
Senator Vitter discussing relief efforts with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Vitter and the rest of the Louisiana congressional delegation worked to bring aid to the Gulf Coast region to rebuild broken levees, schools and hospitals, restore coastal wetlands, and provide assistance for its many victims.[100]

In early September, Vitter said that he would give "the entire big government organized relief effort a failing grade, across the board." He said that state and local governments shared in the blame as well.[101] Vitter's actions during Hurricane Katrina are described in historian Douglas Brinkley's May 2006 book, The Great Deluge.

In September 2007, Vitter announced that he got "a critical concession" from the White House that decreased Louisiana's obligations for hurricane recovery by $1 billion. However, the White House said that was false.[102]

Immigration Edit

Vitter has been actively involved with legislation concerning illegal immigrants. In June 2007, he led a group of conservative Senators in blocking the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, a piece of federal legislation that would have granted a pathway to legal residence to 12 million illegal immigrants coupled with increased border enforcement. The bill's defeat won Vitter national attention as the bill was supported by President George W. Bush, John McCain, and Ted Kennedy, among others. Vitter characterized the bill as amnesty, which supporters denied. Bush accused the bill's opponents of fear mongering.[103][104][105]

In October 2007, Vitter introduced an amendment withholding Community Oriented Policing Services funds from any sanctuary city which bans city employees and police officers from asking people about their immigration status in violation of the Illegal Immigration Act. Democratic Senator Dick Durbin, in opposition to the amendment, said these cities do not want to inquire about someone's status if they report a crime, are a victim of domestic violence or get vaccinations for their children. The amendment was defeated.[106]

In November 2007, Vitter introduced a bill requiring banks to verify that no customer was an illegal immigrant before issuing banking or credit cards. The bill never made it out of committee.[107][108]

In March 2008, Vitter reintroduced the latter two proposals[109][110] and cosponsored ten of eleven other bills[111] in a Republican package of tough immigration enforcement measures including jail time for illegal border crossing; deportation for any immigrant (legal or illegal) for a single driving while intoxicated; declaration of English as the official language (thereby terminating language assistance at voting booths and federal agencies); additional construction of a border fence; permission for local and state police to enforce immigration laws and penalties for states who issue drivers licenses to illegals. None of these proposals passed, partially because the Democratic-controlled Senate preferred a comprehensive approach which would include a guest-worker program and a path to citizenship for the current population more akin to the package defeated by Vitter in 2007.[112]

In April 2008, Vitter introduced a joint resolution proposing a constitutional amendment that a child born in the United States is not a citizen unless a parent is a citizen, lawful permanent resident, or alien serving in the military.[113] Currently the Constitution grants citizenship to children born within the U.S. regardless of the legal status of the parents.[114] The bill never made it out of the Democratic-led committee.

Louisiana Family Forum earmark Edit

In September 2007, Vitter earmarked $100,000 in federal money for a Christian group, the Louisiana Family Forum,[115] known for challenging evolution by means of "teaching the controversy" which promotes intelligent design.[116] According to Vitter, the earmark was "to develop a plan to promote better science education".[115] The Times-Picayune alleged the group had close ties with Vitter.[115] However, they have criticized Vitter for his support of Rudy Giuliani.[117]

On October 17, 2007, the liberal organization People For the American Way, along with several other groups asked the Senate to remove the earmark.[118][119] Vitter later withdrew it.[120][121]

Military Edit

In May 2008, Vitter voted with the majority, despite the opposition of Bush and other Republicans, for the passage of the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 to expand educational benefits for veterans similar to the level provided for returning World War II veterans in the G.I. Bill.[122][123][124]

Network neutrality Edit

Vitter was one of six senate Republicans to propose an amendment to a bill which would stop the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) from enforcing network neutrality which they allege is a violation of the First Amendment.[125]

New Orleans public housing Edit

In September 2007, The Times-Picayune reported that Vitter and the Bush administration opposed a provision of The Gulf Coast Housing Recovery bill which required that every public housing apartment torn down be replaced with another form of low-income housing on a one-for-one basis. The administration testified that there was not sufficient demand for public housing units, a position contested by several senators. Vitter stated it would recreate "housing projects exactly as they were", isolated and riddled with crime. However, Mary Landrieu, the Louisiana Democratic Senator, said the intent was to make certain there were affordable places for working-class people who returned. The bill requires that demolished housing projects be replaced with mixed income communities which local housing advocates say is different from the massive public housing developments that Vitter is referring to. However, the bill does not include a ban on large-scale projects.[126][127] The city housing authority is planning on replacing 4,000 low-income units with mixed-income projects providing a smaller inventory of low-income units.[128] In December 2007, Vitter prevented the bill from leaving the committee.[127]

Obama nominations Edit

Vitter and Jim DeMint were the only two Senators that voted against Hillary Clinton's confirmation for the position of Secretary of State under the new Obama administration, on January 21, 2009.[129]

He blocked President Obama's nominee for the new Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) administrator until he received a written commitment on flood control issues from the nominee and FEMA. The New York Times, along with some Republican Senators, criticized Vitter for what it characterized as political posturing, given that the hurricane season was quickly approaching. He lifted his hold on May 12, 2009.[130][131]

Affordable Care Act Edit

Vitter opposed President Barack Obama's health reform legislation; he voted against the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in December 2009,[132] and he voted against the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010.[133]

Same-sex marriage Edit

Vitter opposes both same-sex marriage and civil unions. In June 2006, he said "I don't believe there's any issue that's more important than this one ... I think this debate is very healthy, and it's winning a lot of hearts and minds. I think we're going to show real progress."[134] In 2006, he told The Times-Picayune, "I'm a conservative who opposes radically redefining marriage, the most important social institution in human history."[135]

In October 2005, at a Lafayette Parish Republican Executive Committee luncheon, Vitter compared gay marriage to hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which came through the same geographical areas. Vitter said "It's the crossroads where Katrina meets Rita. I always knew I was against same-sex unions."[136]

School board prayer Edit

In 2005 Vitter introduced a resolution supporting prayer at school board meetings in response to an earlier district court decision that the Louisiana's Tangipahoa Parish practice of opening meetings with Christian prayers was unconstitutional. The bill died in committee after receiving little support from colleagues on both sides of the aisle.[137][138] Vitter later reintroduced the resolution in January 2007 after a panel of the Fifth Circuit Court concluded that Christian prayers were unconstitutional but was undecided whether nonsectarian prayers were allowed. In July 2007, the full Fifth Circuit dismissed the case because of a lack of standing. The school board subsequently resumed prayer evocations but opened it to diverse community religions. Vitter's bill died in committee.[138][139][140][141]

Tea Party movement Edit

In recognition of the Tea Party protests opposing President Barack Obama's policies, Vitter proposed Senate Resolution 98, which would designate April 15 in years both 2009 and 2010 as "National TEA Party Day". As of April 2009, the bill has no cosponsors and has been referred to the Committee on the Judiciary with no scheduled action.[142]

In September 2010, Vitter signed a candidate pledge from the North Central Louisiana TEA Party Patriots. It included a promise to "Conduct myself personally and professionally in a moral and socially appropriate manner."[143]

United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea Edit

In September 2007, during hearings of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Vitter expressed serious doubts about the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea treaty concerning issues of U.S. sovereignty[144] echoing an array of conservative groups against the treaty[144][145] including the National Center for Public Policy Research,[146] The Heritage Foundation[147] and the Center for Security Policy.[148] The treaty, which sets up countries' jurisdiction over their coasts and ocean including exploration and navigation rights,[149] was supported by the Bush administration, a majority of the United States Senate, the Pentagon, the State Department and Navy[150] as do a coalition of business and environmental groups.[151] The committee approved the treaty 17–4, with Vitter voting no.[152]

Water Resources and Development Act Edit

Vitter helped write the Water Resources and Development Act for flood-control, hurricane-protection and coastal-restoration projects including $3.6 billion for Louisiana. He called it the "single most important" legislation for assisting Louisiana with its recovery from hurricane Katrina. President George W. Bush vetoed the act, objecting to its cost.[153][154][155] Congress overrode his veto, enacting the bill.[156]

Committee assignments Edit

2007 prostitution scandal Edit

In early July 2007, Vitter's phone number was included in a published list of phone records of Pamela Martin and Associates, a company owned and run by Deborah Jeane Palfrey, also known as the "D.C. Madam", who was convicted by the U.S. government for running a prostitution service. Hustler identified the phone number and contacted Vitter's office to ask about his connection to Palfrey.[157][158] The following day, Vitter issued a written statement in which he took responsibility for his "sin" and asked for forgiveness.[159] On July 16, 2007, after a week of self-imposed seclusion, Vitter emerged and called a news conference. As his wife stood next to him, Vitter asked the public for forgiveness. Following Vitter's remarks, his wife Wendy Vitter spoke, but both refused to answer any questions.[160][161][162] In 2004, Vitter had denied allegations that he had patronized prostitutes.[7]

While the Louisiana state Republican Party offered guarded support,[163] national Republicans offered forgiveness.[164] The Nation predicted that the Republican Party would be in a "forgiving mood", because if he were to resign, Governor of Louisiana Kathleen Blanco, a Democrat, would likely appoint a Democrat to take Vitter's place until a special election could be held, thus increasing Democratic control over the US Senate.[165][166][167]

On September 8, 2015, reporter Derek Myers was fired from WVLA-TV after asking Vitter, who was running for governor, about allegations that the senator had frequented prostitutes.[168] After Myers' question, Myers said an unnamed coworker overheard a conversation about the Vitter campaign's ad dollars at the station, possibly with a threat from the campaign to pull the ads.[169] Democrat John Bel Edwards released an ad about the prostitution scandal two weeks before the run-off election and won by more than 12%.[170]

2015 gubernatorial election Edit

Vitter announced on January 21, 2014, that he would run for governor of Louisiana in the 2015 election.[171] Then-Governor Bobby Jindal was ineligible to seek re-election due to term limits.[172] Vitter was the first sitting or ex-U.S. Senator to launch a gubernatorial bid in Louisiana since 1904, when Democrat Newton Blanchard was elected.[173] Vitter's major opponents were Republicans Scott Angelle, Louisiana Public Service Commissioner and former lieutenant governor,[174][175] and Jay Dardenne, the current lieutenant governor;[176] and Democrat John Bel Edwards, Minority Leader of the Louisiana House of Representatives.[174][177]

In the November 21 runoff election, Edwards defeated Vitter by 56% to 44%.[178]

Other political involvement Edit

In 2016, Vitter succeeded after a five-year battle in passing through the Senate landmark legislation to reform the country's chemical safety laws. Vitter called the legislation a "big accomplishment. This is an area of federal law that everybody, every stakeholder, every group, whether it's some far-left environmental group or industry, said needed to be updated. The trick was getting agreement on doing that." Democratic colleague Richard Durbin of Illinois, a frequent critic of Vitter, said that if the bill is enacted with President Obama's signature "it's quite an accomplishment for him and for Congress to pass historic legislation."[179]

Post-Senate career Edit

After his Senate term ended, Vitter joined the Washington, D.C. lobbying firm, Mercury LLC.[180] As of October 2019, Vitter had lobbied for sanctioned Chinese surveillance company Hikvision[181] as well as for the Libyan Government of National Accord and the Zimbabwean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.[182] He also lobbied for the sanctioned Russian bank Sovcombank.[183]

Electoral history Edit

2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election

Blanket primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic John Bel Edwards 444,517 39.89%
Republican David Vitter 256,300 23.00%
Republican Scott Angelle 214,982 19.29%
Republican Jay Dardenne 166,656 14.96%
Democratic Cary Deaton 11,763 1.06%
Democratic S. L. Simpson 7,420 0.67%
No party Beryl Billiot 5,694 0.51%
Other Jeremy Odom 4,756 0.43%
Other Eric Paul Orgeron 2,248 0.20%
Total 1,114,336 100%
Runoff
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic John Bel Edwards 646,924 56.1%
Republican David Vitter 505,940 43.9%
Total 1,152,864 100%
Democratic gain from Republican

2010 Louisiana United States Senatorial Election

Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Vitter (inc.) 715,304 56.56%
Democratic Charlie Melancon 476,423 37.67%
Libertarian Randall Hayes 13,952 1.10%
No party Michael Brown 9,970 0.79%
Other Mike Spears 9,188 0.73%
Other Ernest Wooton 8,164 0.65%
No party Skip Galan 7,471 0.59%
Reform William McShan 5,879 0.46%
Other Bob Lang 5,732 0.45%
No party Milton Gordon 4,806 0.38%
Other Tommy LaFargue 4,042 0.32%
No party Sam Melton 3,779 0.30%
Total 1,264,710 100%
Republican hold

2004 Louisiana United States Senatorial Election

Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Vitter 943,014 51.03%
Democratic Chris John 542,150 29.34%
Democratic John Neely Kennedy 275,821 14.92%
Democratic Arthur A. Morrell 47,222 2.56%
Other Richard M. Fontanesi 15,097 0.82%
Other R. A. "Skip" Galan 12,463 0.67%
Democratic Sam Houston Melton, Jr. 12,289 0.66%
Total 1,848,056 100%
Republican gain from Democratic

1999 Louisiana 1st District United States Congressional Election

Blanket primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David C. Treen 36,719 25.06%
Republican David Vitter 31,741 21.67%
Republican David Duke 28,059 19.15%
Republican Monica Monica 22,928 15.65%
Democratic Bill Strain 16,446 11.23%
Republican Rob Couhig 9,295 6.34%
Democratic Darryl P. Ward 720 0.49%
Republican Patrick E. Landry 344 0.23%
Republican S. J. LoCoco 246 0.17%
Total 146,498 100%
Runoff
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Vitter 61,661 50.75%
Republican David C. Treen 59,849 49.25%
Total 121,510 100%
Republican hold

1995 Louisiana 81st District State House of Representatives Election

Party Candidate %
Republican David Vitter (inc.) 100%
Total 100%
Republican hold

1991 Louisiana 81st District State House of Representatives Election

Party Candidate %
Republican David Vitter 68%
Republican Mike Reynolds 24%
Republican Mercedes Hernandez 8%
Total 100%
Republican hold

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

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External links Edit

  • official U.S. Senate website (Archived)
Louisiana House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the Louisiana House of Representatives
from the 81st district

1992–1999
Succeeded by
Jennifer Sneed Heebe
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Louisiana's 1st congressional district

1999–2005
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Louisiana
(Class 3)

2004, 2010
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Bobby Jindal
Republican nominee for Governor of Louisiana
2015
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 3) from Louisiana
2005–2017
Served alongside: Mary Landrieu, Bill Cassidy
Succeeded by
John Neely Kennedy
Preceded by Ranking Member of the Senate Environment Committee
2013–2015
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee
2015–2017
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former US Senator Order of precedence of the United States
as Former US Senator
Succeeded byas Former US Senator

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Not to be confused with David Vetter Senator Vitter redirects here For the South Dakota state senate member see Drue Vitter David Bruce Vitter born May 3 1961 is an American politician who represented Louisiana in the United States Senate from 2005 to 2017 A member of the Republican Party Vitter served in the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992 to 1999 and in the U S House of Representatives from 1999 to 2005 David VitterOfficial portrait 2005United States Senatorfrom LouisianaIn office January 3 2005 January 3 2017Preceded byJohn BreauxSucceeded byJohn KennedyChair of the Senate Small Business CommitteeIn office January 3 2015 January 3 2017Preceded byMaria CantwellSucceeded byJim RischMember of the U S House of Representatives from Louisiana s 1st districtIn office May 29 1999 January 3 2005Preceded byBob LivingstonSucceeded byBobby JindalMember of the Louisiana House of Representatives from the 81st districtIn office 1992 1999Preceded byDavid DukeSucceeded byJennifer Sneed HeebePersonal detailsBornDavid Bruce Vitter 1961 05 03 May 3 1961 age 62 New Orleans Louisiana U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseWendy Baldwin m 1990 wbr RelationsJeffrey Vitter brother Children4EducationHarvard University BA Magdalen College Oxford BA Tulane University JD SignatureDavid Vitter s voice source source David Vitter highlights the fifth anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon oil spillRecorded April 20 2015Vitter was first elected to the U S Senate in 2004 He was the first Republican to represent Louisiana in the Senate since the Reconstruction Era and the first ever Republican to be popularly elected In 2007 Vitter admitted to and apologized for past involvement with prostitution as part of a Washington D C escort service which gained much notoriety 1 and while not affecting his 2010 election is believed to have played a part in his loss of the 2015 gubernatorial election In 2010 Vitter won a second Senate term by defeating Democratic U S Representative Charlie Melancon Vitter unsuccessfully ran for governor to succeed the term limited Bobby Jindal in the 2015 gubernatorial election He lost the general election to Democrat John Bel Edwards While conceding defeat to Edwards Vitter announced that he would not seek reelection to his Senate seat in 2016 and would retire from office at the completion of his term Following the conclusion of his second Senate term Vitter became a lobbyist Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early political career 2 1 Louisiana House of Representatives 2 2 United States House of Representatives 2 3 2003 gubernatorial election 3 United States Senate 3 1 2004 election 3 2 2010 election 3 3 Tenure 3 3 1 Abortion 3 3 2 Abstinence education 3 3 3 Automotive industry bailout 3 3 4 BP Horizon oil spill 3 3 5 Chemical safety 3 3 6 Child protection 3 3 7 Children s health insurance program 3 3 8 Ethics and term limits 3 3 9 Franken Amendment 3 3 10 Gambling 3 3 11 Gun rights 3 3 12 Hurricane Katrina 3 3 13 Immigration 3 3 14 Louisiana Family Forum earmark 3 3 15 Military 3 3 16 Network neutrality 3 3 17 New Orleans public housing 3 3 18 Obama nominations 3 3 19 Affordable Care Act 3 3 20 Same sex marriage 3 3 21 School board prayer 3 3 22 Tea Party movement 3 3 23 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 3 3 24 Water Resources and Development Act 3 4 Committee assignments 4 2007 prostitution scandal 5 2015 gubernatorial election 6 Other political involvement 7 Post Senate career 8 Electoral history 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 External linksEarly life and education Edit nbsp David Vitter and his family with Vice President Dick CheneyDavid Bruce Vitter 2 was born on May 3 1961 3 in New Orleans Louisiana He is the son of Audrey Malvina nee St Raymond and Albert Leopold Vitter Vitter graduated in 1979 from De La Salle High School in New Orleans 4 While a student at De La Salle Vitter participated in the Close Up Washington civic education program He received a Bachelor of Arts from Harvard College in 1983 a second B A from Magdalen College Oxford in 1985 as a Rhodes Scholar and a Juris Doctor degree in 1988 from the Tulane University Law School in New Orleans He was a practicing lawyer 5 6 and adjunct law professor at Tulane and Loyola University New Orleans 6 Vitter and his wife Wendy a former prosecutor 7 8 have four children Vitter s brother Jeffrey is a computer scientist who has served as chancellor of the University of Mississippi from January 2016 to January 2019 Early political career EditLouisiana House of Representatives Edit Vitter was a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992 to 1999 Vitter has argued for ethics reform and term limits since he was in the Louisiana Legislature in the early 1990s 9 As a Louisiana state legislator Vitter successfully pushed through a term limits amendment to the state constitution to oust the largely Democratic legislature 10 11 12 13 The first election legislators affected by the reform occurred in 2007 14 In order to leverage the term limits advantage in that election Vitter formed a Political Action Committee with the goal of winning a legislative Republican majority 15 16 While the Republicans saw gains the Democrats maintained majority control 13 Vitter opposed gambling during his tenure in the Louisiana House 17 United States House of Representatives Edit Vitter won a special election to Louisiana s 1st congressional district in 1999 succeeding Republican U S Representative Bob Livingston who resigned after disclosure that he had committed adultery In the initial vote on May 1 1999 18 former Congressman and Governor David C Treen finished first with 36 719 votes 25 percent Vitter was second with 31 741 22 percent and white nationalist David Duke finished third with 28 055 votes 19 percent Monica L Monica a Republican ophthalmologist had 16 percent State Representative Bill Strain a conservative Democrat finished fifth with 11 percent and Rob Couhig a Republican lawyer and the owner of New Orleans s minor league baseball team garnered 6 percent 19 In the runoff Vitter defeated Treen 51 49 percent 20 In 2000 and 2002 Vitter was re elected with more than 80 percent of the vote in what had become a safe Republican district 20 In 2001 Vitter co authored legislation to restrict the number of physicians allowed to prescribe RU 486 a drug used in medical abortions The bill died in committee 21 22 In 2003 Vitter proposed to amend the U S Constitution to ban same sex marriage 23 In 2004 he said This is a real outrage The Hollywood left is redefining the most basic institution in human history We need a U S Senator who will stand up for Louisiana values not Massachusetts values 24 2003 gubernatorial election Edit In 2002 Vitter was preparing to run for governor in 2003 with the incumbent Republican Mike Foster prevented by term limits from running again But in June 2002 shortly before the Louisiana Weekly reported on a claim from Vincent Bruno a campaign worker for Treen in 1999 about Vitter s alleged relationship with a prostitute Vitter dropped out of the governor s race 25 saying he and his wife were dealing with marital problems Bruno said on a New Orleans based radio show that he had been told by a prostitute that she had interactions with Vitter However Treen and his campaign decided to not publicize this information during the election 26 United States Senate Edit2004 election Edit Main article 2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana In 2004 Vitter ran to replace Democrat John Breaux in the U S Senate During the campaign Vitter was accused by a member of the Louisiana Republican State Central Committee of having had a lengthy affair with a prostitute in New Orleans Vitter responded that the allegation was absolutely and completely untrue and that it was just crass Louisiana politics 7 On November 2 2004 Vitter won the jungle primary garnering a majority of the vote while the rest of the vote was mostly split among the Democratic contenders Vitter was the first Republican in Louisiana to be popularly elected as a U S Senator The previous Republican Senator William Pitt Kellogg was chosen by the state legislature in 1876 in accordance with the process used before the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution went into effect in 1914 27 2010 election Edit Main article 2010 United States Senate election in Louisiana nbsp Vitter yard sign 2010 Vitter began fundraising for his 2010 reelection run in December 2008 28 He raised 731 000 in the first quarter of 2009 and 2 5 million for his 2010 campaign 29 He had wide leads against potential Democratic opponents in aggregate general election polling 30 31 He faced intraparty opposition from Chet D Traylor of Monroe a former associate justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court in the August 28 Republican primary election and defeated him He faced the Democratic U S Representative Charlie Melancon of Napoleonville in the November 2 general election State Representative Ernest Wooton of Belle Chasse in Plaquemines Parish an Independent also ran 32 On November 4 2010 Vitter was re elected as Louisiana Senator defeating his Democratic rival Melancon Vitter got 715 304 votes while Melancon got 476 423 votes Vitter received about 57 of the total vote while Melancon got 38 The Independent candidate Wooton finished with 8 167 votes or 1 percent of the total cast Tenure Edit Vitter has identified himself as a political conservative throughout his political career His legislative agenda includes positions ranging from anti abortion to pro gun rights while legislating against gambling same sex marriage civil unions federal funding for abortion providers increases in the State Children s Health Insurance Program the United Nations and amnesty for America s illegal immigrants Vitter s stated positions include a balanced budget constitutional amendment 33 abolishing the federal and state estate tax 34 increasing local police forces 35 and an assortment of health care tax and national defense reforms 36 better source needed After conceding defeat to John Bel Edwards in the 2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election Vitter announced that he would not seek reelection to his Senate seat in 2016 and would retire from office at the completion of his term 37 Abortion Edit In October 2007 Vitter introduced an amendment 38 barring all federal public funds to health care providers and Planned Parenthood that provide services that include abortion Federal law bars any funding to directly finance elective abortions in accordance with the Hyde amendment Vitter argued that the funds are used for overhead costs that benefit the abortion services The amendment failed to pass 39 40 Following the rejection Vitter and others urged the Senate to pass a similar bill introduced by Vitter in January 2007 The bill failed to pass 41 In January 2008 Vitter proposed an amendment to prohibit the funding of abortions with Indian Health Service funds except in the case of rape incest or when the life of the woman is at risk 42 The amendment would have held future presidential administrations to an executive principle first crafted in 1982 by the Ronald Reagan White House 43 Vitter s amendment passed the Senate but later was stalled in the House 44 Later that year Vitter co sponsored the Pregnant Women Health and Safety Act which along with other oversight regulations required doctors performing abortions to have the authority granted by a nearby hospital to admit patients The bill was never reported to committee 45 46 Abstinence education Edit Vitter advocated abstinence only sex education emphasizing abstinence over sex education that includes information about birth control drawing criticism from Planned Parenthood 47 He said Abstinence education is a public health strategy focused on risk avoidance that aims to help young people avoid exposure to harm by teaching teenagers that saving sex until marriage and remaining faithful afterwards is the best choice for health and happiness 48 Automotive industry bailout Edit Vitter was one of 35 Senators to vote against the Big 3 Bailout bill 49 The financial bailout package was for GM Chrysler and Ford but failed to pass on December 11 2008 During the Senate debate Vitter referred to the approach of giving the automotive industry a financial package before they restructured as ass backwards 50 He soon apologized for the phrasing of the comment which did not appear in the Congressional Record 51 BP Horizon oil spill Edit In response to the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill at an offshore drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico threatening the coast of Louisiana Vitter introduced legislation along with Jeff Sessions of Alabama to increase the liability cap of an oil company from 75 million to its most recent annual profits or 150 million if greater 52 In the case of BP the owner of the oil lease its liability would be 20 billion 53 Vitter later introduced an amendment that would remove the cap entirely for this particular spill 52 Competing Democratic proposals would have raised the liability to 10 billion regardless of profits or removed the cap altogether 52 Sessions argued that large caps unrelated to company profits would harm smaller companies 53 Chemical safety Edit In May 2013 Vitter introduced the Chemical Safety Improvement Act a bipartisan bill to reform the Toxic Substances Control Act which would have regulated the introduction of new or already existing chemicals The bill would have given additional authority to the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate chemicals and streamline the patchwork of state laws on chemicals under federal authority 54 55 Child protection Edit In April 2008 Vitter introduced an amendment to continue funding the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act which was excluded from the 2008 2009 budget The federal program maintains a national sex offender registry provides resources for tracking down unregistered sex offenders and increases penalties for the sexual assault of children His amendment received bipartisan support 56 57 Children s health insurance program Edit In September 2007 Vitter opposed an increase of 35 billion for the State Children s Health Insurance Program SCHIP the national program to provide health care for children from families who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but cannot afford private health insurance He said he preferred that private health insurance provide the needed care and deemed the bill as Hillarycare a reference to the 1993 Clinton health care plan created by Hillary Clinton which proposed universal health care 58 Ethics and term limits Edit Vitter refused to pledge to a voluntary term limit when running for the U S Congress in 1999 His opponent characterized this stance as hypocritical and Vitter countered that unless it were universally applied the loss of seniority would disadvantage his district 10 59 As a Senator he has proposed term limit constitutional amendments for members of Congress three times 60 61 62 Vitter eventually decided to retire from the Senate in 2016 after serving two terms In 2007 in response to lobbying scandals involving among others Jack Abramoff and Duke Cunningham Congress passed a lobbying and ethics reform package to which Vitter proposed a package of five amendments 63 64 65 66 The Senate approved three that limited which legislators spouses could lobby the Senate 67 created criminal penalties for legislators and executive branch officials who falsify financial reports 68 and doubled the penalties for lobbyists who failed to comply with disclosure requirements 69 The Senate rejected prohibiting legislators from paying their families with campaign funds with some saying it was unrelated to the current legislation and others that the payments were not a problem 70 71 Additionally they tabled his proposal to define Indian tribes as corporations and its members as shareholders so that they are required to contribute to candidates through political action committees instead of their tribal treasury 72 Senators objected saying that they are already subjected to campaign laws for unincorporated entities and individuals and that the proposal was singling them out unfairly 71 The reform package became law in September 2007 63 In 2009 Vitter and Democratic former Senator Russ Feingold announced an effort to end automatic pay raises for members of Congress 73 Franken Amendment Edit nbsp Vitter in 2011In October 2009 the Senate passed Democratic Senator Al Franken s amendment to the 2010 Defense Appropriations bill that would forbid federal contractors from forcing victims of sexual assault battery and discrimination to submit to binding arbitration where a third party typically chosen by the contractor adjudicates and thereby prohibiting them from going to court 74 75 76 The impetus for the amendment came from the story of Jamie Leigh Jones who alleged that she was drugged and gang raped by employees of Halliburton KBR a federal contractor 74 77 78 The amendment passed 68 to 30 with all opposition coming from Republicans including Vitter all four female Republicans six other Republicans and all present Democrats voted for passage 74 79 Vitter s 2010 Democratic Senatorial opponent Charlie Melancon criticized Vitter for his vote saying David Vitter has refused to explain why he voted to allow taxpayer funded companies to sweep rape charges under the rug We can only guess what his reasons were 78 80 81 82 However The Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker argued that the 30 senators were being unfairly smeared for doing the harder thing maybe even for the right reasons 77 Republican senators said they voted against it because it was unenforceable a position also taken by the Department of Defense DOD and the Obama administration 74 77 78 However the DOD and the White House stated they agreed with the intent of the legislation and suggested it would be better if it was broadened to prohibit the use of arbitration in cases of sexual assault for any business contract not just federal contractors 77 Senators explained their vote against the legislation by saying it was a political attack on Halliburton and that the Senate shouldn t regulate contracts 77 The latter argument is countered with many examples of similar restrictions on contractors such as discrimination bonuses and health care 74 78 Others felt it was unconstitutional and that arbitration is useful in resolving disputes often faster privately and cheaper 74 Later a Baton Rouge rape survivor confronted Vitter at a town hall meeting saying it meant everything to me that I was able to put the person who attacked me behind bars How can you support a law that tells a rape victim that she does not have the right to defend herself Vitter replied The language in question did not say that in any way shape or form 83 84 Gambling Edit Vitter opposed a bid by the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians to build a casino in Louisiana arguing that the build site was not historically part of their tribal lands He lobbied the Interior Department and included language in an appropriations bill to stop the casino Although the Interior Department gave its approval the casino has not yet been approved by the state 85 The Jena chief accused Vitter of ties with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff who simultaneously lobbied against the casino The chairman of the Senate committee investigating the lobbyist said The committee has seen absolutely no evidence whatsoever that Senator Vitter s opposition to the proposed casino had to do with anything other than his long standing opposition to gambling 86 In 2007 and 2008 Vitter introduced a bill to prohibit Indian casinos such as Jena s Neither bill became law 87 88 89 Gun rights Edit Rated A by the NRA Political Victory Fund 90 Vitter has been a consistent defender of gun rights 91 In April 2006 in response to firearm confiscations in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina Vitter was the Senate sponsor of the Disaster Recovery Personal Protection Act to prohibit federal funding for the confiscation of legally held firearms during a disaster 92 Later Vitter included the provisions of the act in an amendment to an appropriation bill for the Department Of Homeland Security 93 The bill became law in September 2006 with the amendment modified to allow for the temporary surrender of a firearm as a condition for entering a rescue or evacuation vehicle 94 On April 17 2013 Vitter voted against the Toomey Manchin Gun Control Amendment The amendment failed to reach the sixty senatorial votes necessary to overcome a Republican led filibuster The Toomey Manchin Gun Control Amendment is a bipartisan deal on gun background checks Under the proposal federal background checks would be expanded to include gun shows and online sales All such sales would be channeled through licensed firearm dealers who would be charged for keeping record of transactions The proposal does not require background checks for private sales between individuals 95 In February 2008 Vitter along with Senators Larry Craig and Mike Crapo of Idaho blocked the confirmation of Michael J Sullivan as head of the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives ATF saying Sullivan supports burdensome regulations on gun owners and dealers and is overly aggressive enforcing gun laws An editorial writer for The Boston Globe wrote that Vitter s position was unreasonable because the guns Sullivan sought to control are those commonly used in crimes those stolen or purchased on the black market 96 97 On the other hand gun rights advocates say that many gun dealers have lost their licenses for harmless bureaucratic errors 98 Sullivan stayed on as acting head of the ATF until January 2009 to make way for President Barack Obama to name his own nominee 99 Hurricane Katrina Edit nbsp Senator Vitter discussing relief efforts with Defense Secretary Donald RumsfeldIn the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina Vitter and the rest of the Louisiana congressional delegation worked to bring aid to the Gulf Coast region to rebuild broken levees schools and hospitals restore coastal wetlands and provide assistance for its many victims 100 In early September Vitter said that he would give the entire big government organized relief effort a failing grade across the board He said that state and local governments shared in the blame as well 101 Vitter s actions during Hurricane Katrina are described in historian Douglas Brinkley s May 2006 book The Great Deluge In September 2007 Vitter announced that he got a critical concession from the White House that decreased Louisiana s obligations for hurricane recovery by 1 billion However the White House said that was false 102 Immigration Edit Vitter has been actively involved with legislation concerning illegal immigrants In June 2007 he led a group of conservative Senators in blocking the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act a piece of federal legislation that would have granted a pathway to legal residence to 12 million illegal immigrants coupled with increased border enforcement The bill s defeat won Vitter national attention as the bill was supported by President George W Bush John McCain and Ted Kennedy among others Vitter characterized the bill as amnesty which supporters denied Bush accused the bill s opponents of fear mongering 103 104 105 In October 2007 Vitter introduced an amendment withholding Community Oriented Policing Services funds from any sanctuary city which bans city employees and police officers from asking people about their immigration status in violation of the Illegal Immigration Act Democratic Senator Dick Durbin in opposition to the amendment said these cities do not want to inquire about someone s status if they report a crime are a victim of domestic violence or get vaccinations for their children The amendment was defeated 106 In November 2007 Vitter introduced a bill requiring banks to verify that no customer was an illegal immigrant before issuing banking or credit cards The bill never made it out of committee 107 108 In March 2008 Vitter reintroduced the latter two proposals 109 110 and cosponsored ten of eleven other bills 111 in a Republican package of tough immigration enforcement measures including jail time for illegal border crossing deportation for any immigrant legal or illegal for a single driving while intoxicated declaration of English as the official language thereby terminating language assistance at voting booths and federal agencies additional construction of a border fence permission for local and state police to enforce immigration laws and penalties for states who issue drivers licenses to illegals None of these proposals passed partially because the Democratic controlled Senate preferred a comprehensive approach which would include a guest worker program and a path to citizenship for the current population more akin to the package defeated by Vitter in 2007 112 In April 2008 Vitter introduced a joint resolution proposing a constitutional amendment that a child born in the United States is not a citizen unless a parent is a citizen lawful permanent resident or alien serving in the military 113 Currently the Constitution grants citizenship to children born within the U S regardless of the legal status of the parents 114 The bill never made it out of the Democratic led committee Louisiana Family Forum earmark Edit nbsp Wikinews has related news Senator David Vitter to earmark 100 000 for creationist group In September 2007 Vitter earmarked 100 000 in federal money for a Christian group the Louisiana Family Forum 115 known for challenging evolution by means of teaching the controversy which promotes intelligent design 116 According to Vitter the earmark was to develop a plan to promote better science education 115 The Times Picayune alleged the group had close ties with Vitter 115 However they have criticized Vitter for his support of Rudy Giuliani 117 On October 17 2007 the liberal organization People For the American Way along with several other groups asked the Senate to remove the earmark 118 119 Vitter later withdrew it 120 121 Military Edit In May 2008 Vitter voted with the majority despite the opposition of Bush and other Republicans for the passage of the Post 9 11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 to expand educational benefits for veterans similar to the level provided for returning World War II veterans in the G I Bill 122 123 124 Network neutrality Edit Vitter was one of six senate Republicans to propose an amendment to a bill which would stop the Federal Communications Commission FCC from enforcing network neutrality which they allege is a violation of the First Amendment 125 New Orleans public housing Edit In September 2007 The Times Picayune reported that Vitter and the Bush administration opposed a provision of The Gulf Coast Housing Recovery bill which required that every public housing apartment torn down be replaced with another form of low income housing on a one for one basis The administration testified that there was not sufficient demand for public housing units a position contested by several senators Vitter stated it would recreate housing projects exactly as they were isolated and riddled with crime However Mary Landrieu the Louisiana Democratic Senator said the intent was to make certain there were affordable places for working class people who returned The bill requires that demolished housing projects be replaced with mixed income communities which local housing advocates say is different from the massive public housing developments that Vitter is referring to However the bill does not include a ban on large scale projects 126 127 The city housing authority is planning on replacing 4 000 low income units with mixed income projects providing a smaller inventory of low income units 128 In December 2007 Vitter prevented the bill from leaving the committee 127 Obama nominations Edit Vitter and Jim DeMint were the only two Senators that voted against Hillary Clinton s confirmation for the position of Secretary of State under the new Obama administration on January 21 2009 129 He blocked President Obama s nominee for the new Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA administrator until he received a written commitment on flood control issues from the nominee and FEMA The New York Times along with some Republican Senators criticized Vitter for what it characterized as political posturing given that the hurricane season was quickly approaching He lifted his hold on May 12 2009 130 131 Affordable Care Act Edit Vitter opposed President Barack Obama s health reform legislation he voted against the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in December 2009 132 and he voted against the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 133 Same sex marriage Edit Vitter opposes both same sex marriage and civil unions In June 2006 he said I don t believe there s any issue that s more important than this one I think this debate is very healthy and it s winning a lot of hearts and minds I think we re going to show real progress 134 In 2006 he told The Times Picayune I m a conservative who opposes radically redefining marriage the most important social institution in human history 135 In October 2005 at a Lafayette Parish Republican Executive Committee luncheon Vitter compared gay marriage to hurricanes Katrina and Rita which came through the same geographical areas Vitter said It s the crossroads where Katrina meets Rita I always knew I was against same sex unions 136 School board prayer Edit In 2005 Vitter introduced a resolution supporting prayer at school board meetings in response to an earlier district court decision that the Louisiana s Tangipahoa Parish practice of opening meetings with Christian prayers was unconstitutional The bill died in committee after receiving little support from colleagues on both sides of the aisle 137 138 Vitter later reintroduced the resolution in January 2007 after a panel of the Fifth Circuit Court concluded that Christian prayers were unconstitutional but was undecided whether nonsectarian prayers were allowed In July 2007 the full Fifth Circuit dismissed the case because of a lack of standing The school board subsequently resumed prayer evocations but opened it to diverse community religions Vitter s bill died in committee 138 139 140 141 Tea Party movement Edit In recognition of the Tea Party protests opposing President Barack Obama s policies Vitter proposed Senate Resolution 98 which would designate April 15 in years both 2009 and 2010 as National TEA Party Day As of April 2009 the bill has no cosponsors and has been referred to the Committee on the Judiciary with no scheduled action 142 In September 2010 Vitter signed a candidate pledge from the North Central Louisiana TEA Party Patriots It included a promise to Conduct myself personally and professionally in a moral and socially appropriate manner 143 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea Edit In September 2007 during hearings of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Vitter expressed serious doubts about the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea treaty concerning issues of U S sovereignty 144 echoing an array of conservative groups against the treaty 144 145 including the National Center for Public Policy Research 146 The Heritage Foundation 147 and the Center for Security Policy 148 The treaty which sets up countries jurisdiction over their coasts and ocean including exploration and navigation rights 149 was supported by the Bush administration a majority of the United States Senate the Pentagon the State Department and Navy 150 as do a coalition of business and environmental groups 151 The committee approved the treaty 17 4 with Vitter voting no 152 Water Resources and Development Act Edit Vitter helped write the Water Resources and Development Act for flood control hurricane protection and coastal restoration projects including 3 6 billion for Louisiana He called it the single most important legislation for assisting Louisiana with its recovery from hurricane Katrina President George W Bush vetoed the act objecting to its cost 153 154 155 Congress overrode his veto enacting the bill 156 Committee assignments Edit Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs Subcommittee on Housing Transportation and Community Development Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection Subcommittee on Securities Insurance and Investment Committee on Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Safety Subcommittee on Oversight Subcommittee on Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism Subcommittee on Immigration and The National Interest Subcommittee on Oversight Agency Action Federal Rights and Federal Courts Subcommittee on the Constitution Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship Chairman 2007 prostitution scandal EditIn early July 2007 Vitter s phone number was included in a published list of phone records of Pamela Martin and Associates a company owned and run by Deborah Jeane Palfrey also known as the D C Madam who was convicted by the U S government for running a prostitution service Hustler identified the phone number and contacted Vitter s office to ask about his connection to Palfrey 157 158 The following day Vitter issued a written statement in which he took responsibility for his sin and asked for forgiveness 159 On July 16 2007 after a week of self imposed seclusion Vitter emerged and called a news conference As his wife stood next to him Vitter asked the public for forgiveness Following Vitter s remarks his wife Wendy Vitter spoke but both refused to answer any questions 160 161 162 In 2004 Vitter had denied allegations that he had patronized prostitutes 7 While the Louisiana state Republican Party offered guarded support 163 national Republicans offered forgiveness 164 The Nation predicted that the Republican Party would be in a forgiving mood because if he were to resign Governor of Louisiana Kathleen Blanco a Democrat would likely appoint a Democrat to take Vitter s place until a special election could be held thus increasing Democratic control over the US Senate 165 166 167 On September 8 2015 reporter Derek Myers was fired from WVLA TV after asking Vitter who was running for governor about allegations that the senator had frequented prostitutes 168 After Myers question Myers said an unnamed coworker overheard a conversation about the Vitter campaign s ad dollars at the station possibly with a threat from the campaign to pull the ads 169 Democrat John Bel Edwards released an ad about the prostitution scandal two weeks before the run off election and won by more than 12 170 2015 gubernatorial election EditMain article 2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election Vitter announced on January 21 2014 that he would run for governor of Louisiana in the 2015 election 171 Then Governor Bobby Jindal was ineligible to seek re election due to term limits 172 Vitter was the first sitting or ex U S Senator to launch a gubernatorial bid in Louisiana since 1904 when Democrat Newton Blanchard was elected 173 Vitter s major opponents were Republicans Scott Angelle Louisiana Public Service Commissioner and former lieutenant governor 174 175 and Jay Dardenne the current lieutenant governor 176 and Democrat John Bel Edwards Minority Leader of the Louisiana House of Representatives 174 177 In the November 21 runoff election Edwards defeated Vitter by 56 to 44 178 Other political involvement EditIn 2016 Vitter succeeded after a five year battle in passing through the Senate landmark legislation to reform the country s chemical safety laws Vitter called the legislation a big accomplishment This is an area of federal law that everybody every stakeholder every group whether it s some far left environmental group or industry said needed to be updated The trick was getting agreement on doing that Democratic colleague Richard Durbin of Illinois a frequent critic of Vitter said that if the bill is enacted with President Obama s signature it s quite an accomplishment for him and for Congress to pass historic legislation 179 Post Senate career EditAfter his Senate term ended Vitter joined the Washington D C lobbying firm Mercury LLC 180 As of October 2019 Vitter had lobbied for sanctioned Chinese surveillance company Hikvision 181 as well as for the Libyan Government of National Accord and the Zimbabwean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Trade 182 He also lobbied for the sanctioned Russian bank Sovcombank 183 Electoral history Edit2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election Blanket primaryParty Candidate Votes Democratic John Bel Edwards 444 517 39 89 Republican David Vitter 256 300 23 00 Republican Scott Angelle 214 982 19 29 Republican Jay Dardenne 166 656 14 96 Democratic Cary Deaton 11 763 1 06 Democratic S L Simpson 7 420 0 67 No party Beryl Billiot 5 694 0 51 Other Jeremy Odom 4 756 0 43 Other Eric Paul Orgeron 2 248 0 20 Total 1 114 336 100 RunoffParty Candidate Votes Democratic John Bel Edwards 646 924 56 1 Republican David Vitter 505 940 43 9 Total 1 152 864 100 Democratic gain from Republican2010 Louisiana United States Senatorial Election Party Candidate Votes Republican David Vitter inc 715 304 56 56 Democratic Charlie Melancon 476 423 37 67 Libertarian Randall Hayes 13 952 1 10 No party Michael Brown 9 970 0 79 Other Mike Spears 9 188 0 73 Other Ernest Wooton 8 164 0 65 No party Skip Galan 7 471 0 59 Reform William McShan 5 879 0 46 Other Bob Lang 5 732 0 45 No party Milton Gordon 4 806 0 38 Other Tommy LaFargue 4 042 0 32 No party Sam Melton 3 779 0 30 Total 1 264 710 100 Republican hold2004 Louisiana United States Senatorial Election Party Candidate Votes Republican David Vitter 943 014 51 03 Democratic Chris John 542 150 29 34 Democratic John Neely Kennedy 275 821 14 92 Democratic Arthur A Morrell 47 222 2 56 Other Richard M Fontanesi 15 097 0 82 Other R A Skip Galan 12 463 0 67 Democratic Sam Houston Melton Jr 12 289 0 66 Total 1 848 056 100 Republican gain from Democratic1999 Louisiana 1st District United States Congressional Election Blanket primaryParty Candidate Votes Republican David C Treen 36 719 25 06 Republican David Vitter 31 741 21 67 Republican David Duke 28 059 19 15 Republican Monica Monica 22 928 15 65 Democratic Bill Strain 16 446 11 23 Republican Rob Couhig 9 295 6 34 Democratic Darryl P Ward 720 0 49 Republican Patrick E Landry 344 0 23 Republican S J LoCoco 246 0 17 Total 146 498 100 RunoffParty Candidate Votes Republican David Vitter 61 661 50 75 Republican David C Treen 59 849 49 25 Total 121 510 100 Republican hold1995 Louisiana 81st District State House of Representatives Election Party Candidate Republican David Vitter inc 100 Total 100 Republican hold1991 Louisiana 81st District State House of Representatives Election Party Candidate Republican David Vitter 68 Republican Mike Reynolds 24 Republican Mercedes Hernandez 8 Total 100 Republican holdSee also EditList of federal political sex scandals in the United StatesFootnotes Edit Murray Shailagh July 10 2007 Senator s Number on Madam Phone List The Washington Post Retrieved October 13 2014 David Bruce Vitter R The Washington Post 2004 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 De La Salle High School 1990 1999 Award Recipients De La Salle High School 1998 Archived from the original on July 9 2011 Retrieved November 6 2009 David Bruce Vitter R The Washington Post Retrieved March 19 2009 a b U S Rep David Vitter To Present SLU Commencement Address Southeastern Louisiana University Public Information Office April 27 2001 Retrieved March 19 2009 While serving in the state legislature Vitter was a business attorney as well as an adjunct law professor at Tulane and Loyola Universities a b c Shailagh Murray Senator s Number on Madam Phone List The Washington Post July 10 2007 Wendy Vitter with one exception might have what it takes to be federal judge January 27 2018 Crouere Jeff July 12 2007 The Rise and Fall of David Vitter The Times Picayune Archived from the original on May 6 2008 Retrieved May 8 2008 a b Sack Kevin April 29 1999 Louisiana G O P Facing David Duke Again The New York Times Retrieved July 14 2008 Nossiter Adam July 11 2007 A Senator s Moral High Ground Gets a Little Shaky The New York Times Retrieved July 14 2008 Hasten Mike September 9 2007 Republicans set sights on control of La House The Town Talk Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Retrieved July 14 2008 a b The 2007 Elections Effect of Term Limits Part I LouisianaConservative com December 6 2007 Archived from the original on December 19 2007 Retrieved July 14 2008 Barrow Bill October 30 2007 Term limits aren t GOP bonanza The Times Picayune Retrieved July 14 2008 Barrow Bill August 5 2007 Quest for La House will look past Vitter The Times Picayune Archived from the original on July 23 2011 Retrieved July 14 2008 Vitter s effectiveness for raising the profile of Republican candidates in state legislative races has dissolved The 2007 Elections Effect of Term Limits Part I LouisianaConservative com December 6 2007 Archived from the original on December 19 2007 Retrieved July 14 2008 The LCRM also suffered somewhat of a setback when stories arose regarding Senator Vitter s involvement with prostitutes Applebome Peter June 12 1994 Legal Gambling Bedevils Louisiana The New York Times Retrieved April 21 2008 Louisiana has long experience with gambling as a political issue see e g Francis Grevemberg Stuart Rothenberg Hot race for Livingston s Louisiana House seat CNN April 13 1999 Kevin Sack David Duke Misses Louisiana Runoff but Has Strong Showing The New York Times May 3 1999 a b Almanac of American Politics June 25 2005 Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved December 7 2007 Kaiser Daily Women s Health Policy Kaiser Permanente February 7 2001 Archived from the original on March 1 2002 Retrieved December 10 2007 H R 482 107th RU 486 Patient Health and Safety Protection Act GovTrack Retrieved December 10 2007 Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States relating to marriage Introduced in House HJ 56 IH 108th CONGRESS H J RES 56 Archived October 19 2015 at the Wayback Machine May 21 2003 Mrs MUSGRAVE for herself Mr HALL Mr MCINTYRE Mr PETERSON of Minnesota Mrs JO ANN DAVIS of Virginia and Mr VITTER Vitter Statement on Protecting the Sanctity of Marriage Vitter2004 com Archived from the original on July 15 2007 Retrieved July 12 2007 Christopher Tidmore The Weekly s inside political track Louisiana Weekly March 29 2004 Bridges Tyler David Vitter murky past with prostitution focus of campaign behind campaign The Advocate September 25 2015 Rudin Ken November 1 2004 Final Call Kerry Wins Narrow Electoral Margin GOP Gains in House Senate NPR Retrieved April 30 2008 Scandal plagued Vitter gets La fundraising help Associated Press December 5 2008 Retrieved December 5 2008 permanent dead link Vitter s re election campaign stash swelling for 2010 NOLA com April 22 2009 Retrieved August 29 2010 permanent dead link Election 2010 Louisiana Senate Rasmussen Reports Rasmussenreports com Retrieved August 29 2010 Election 2010 Louisiana Senate Vitter vs Melancon RealClearPolitics Retrieved August 29 2010 Monroe s Traylor to challenge Vitter Monroe News Star July 10 2010 Archived from the original on July 15 2010 Retrieved July 10 2010 David Vitter Issues Budget David Vitter Archived from the original on April 22 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 David Vitter Issues Agriculture amp Seafood David Vitter Archived from the original on April 22 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 David Vitter Issues Crime and Drugs David Vitter Archived from the original on April 22 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 David Vitter Issues David Vitter Archived from the original on April 30 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 Edwards beats Vitter in Louisiana governor s race Politico November 21 2015 Retrieved November 21 2015 On the Amendment Vitter Amdt No 3330 United States Senate Retrieved November 17 2007 Alpert Bruce October 19 2007 Abortion plan is defeated in Senate The Times Picayune Archived from the original on February 22 2012 Retrieved October 19 2007 Taylor Andrew October 28 2007 No Cut in Money for Abortion Providers Associated Press Archived from the original on October 24 2007 Retrieved October 19 2007 S 351 Title X Family Planning Act GovTrack Retrieved November 17 2007 S Amdt 3896 To modify a section relating to limitation on use of funds GovTrack us Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Retrieved January 23 2008 KALB News Channel 5 February 26 2008 Senate Passes Vitter Amendment to Prohibit Federal Funding of Abortions KALB com Archived from the original on March 14 2008 Retrieved February 27 2008 110th Congress 2007 April 24 2007 S 1200 Legislation GovTrack us Retrieved April 29 2009 Indian Health Care Improvement Act Amendments of 2008 Alpert Bruce Walsh Bill April 20 2008 On The Hill Bill tightens abortion penalties The Times Picayune Retrieved April 21 2008 permanent dead link S 2788 110th Congress 2008 Pregnant Women Health and Safety Act GovTrack us database of federal legislation March 31 2008 Retrieved May 6 2008 Vitter David June 25 2007 Vitter Pushes for Reauthorization of Abstinence Education Program David Vitter press release Archived from the original on July 13 2007 Retrieved July 12 2007 Vitter David Bunning Jim June 21 2007 Letter to the chairman and ranking member of the U S Senate Finance Committee PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 How they voted Senate roll vote on 14B auto bailout Associated Press December 12 2008 Retrieved December 17 2008 dead link Puzzanghera Jim December 10 2008 White House Democrats reach accord on auto bailout Chicago Tribune Retrieved December 17 2008 Alpert Bruce December 17 2008 Vitter regrets salty language The Times Picayune Archived from the original on January 7 2009 Retrieved December 17 2008 a b c Berry Deborah Barfield May 26 2010 Lawmakers weigh liability cap The Daily Advertiser Retrieved May 27 2010 dead link a b Orndorff Mary May 27 2010 U S Sen Jeff Sessions wants to raise BP s liability to 20 billion The Birmingham News Retrieved May 27 2010 Vitter Support for Chemical Safety Improvement Act Grows June 11 2013 Vitter takes his Chemical Safety bill to House committee hearing The Advocate Archived from the original on March 6 2014 Retrieved March 3 2014 Alpert Bruce May 1 2008 Vitter seeks funding for child safety act The Times Picayune Archived from the original on February 22 2012 Retrieved May 1 2008 Vitter Offers Amendment to Fund Adam Walsh Act David Vitter Archived from the original on April 30 2008 Retrieved May 1 2008 Walsh Bill September 28 2007 Senate OKs child health expansion The Times Picayune Archived from the original on February 22 2012 Retrieved September 29 2007 Aynesworth Hugh April 18 1999 Morality is no issue in race for Livingston s seat Term limit Klansman dominate crowded campaign The Washington Times pp C4 S J Res 2 110th Congress 2007 A joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 17 2007 Retrieved July 15 2008 S J Res 3 109th Congress 2005 A joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 17 2007 Retrieved July 15 2008 110th Congress 2008 March 31 2008 S 2788 Legislation GovTrack us Retrieved April 29 2009 Pregnant Women Health and Safety Act a b Babington Charles September 15 2007 Bush Signs Lobby Ethics Bill The Washington Post Associated Press Retrieved May 9 2008 S 1 110th Congress 2007 Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 4 2007 Retrieved May 9 2008 Amendments to S 1 110th Congress 2007 Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 4 2007 Retrieved May 9 2008 Vitter Introduces Extensive Ethics Reform Package David Vitter January 4 2008 Archived from the original on May 1 2008 Retrieved May 9 2008 Proposed lobbying limits apply to only one senator Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington February 9 2007 Archived from the original on July 11 2007 Retrieved May 9 2008 Senate cracks down on financial fraud Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington January 10 2007 Archived from the original on October 20 2007 Retrieved May 9 2008 S Amdt 10 To increase the penalty for failure to comply with lobbying GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 10 2007 Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Retrieved May 9 2008 Campaigns Still A Family Affair Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington January 11 2007 Archived from the original on October 20 2007 Retrieved May 9 2008 a b Senate Record Legislative Transparency and Accountability Act of 2007 GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 10 2007 Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Retrieved May 9 2008 S Amdt 5 To modify the application of the Federal Election Campaign Act of GovTrack us database of federal legislation January 10 2007 Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Retrieved May 9 2008 Feingold Russ David Vitter April 14 2009 Congress Does Not Deserve Any Special Treatment RealClearPolitics Retrieved November 4 2009 a b c d e f Dizikes Cynthia October 6 2009 Senate passes Franken amendment aimed at defense contractors MinnPost com Archived from the original on October 10 2009 Retrieved November 3 2009 S amdt 2588 US Library of Congress THOMAS database October 1 2009 Archived from the original on December 8 2010 Retrieved November 3 2009 SA 2588 Congressional Record October 1 2009 pp S10069 S10070 Retrieved November 3 2009 a b c d e Parker Kathleen October 25 2009 The rape supporter ploy The Washington Post Retrieved November 3 2009 a b c d A case to make anyone ashamed Daily World November 2 2009 Retrieved November 3 2009 dead link S Amdt 2588 To prohibit the use of funds for any Federal to H R 3326 Department of Defense Appropriations Vote On Amendment Govtrack us October 6 2009 Retrieved November 3 2009 Fabian Jordan October 26 2009 Melancon hits at Vitter s rape amendment vote The Hill Retrieved November 3 2009 Moller Jan October 26 2009 Melancon enters online campaign fray The Times Picayune Retrieved November 3 2009 Melancon Charlie October 2009 Charlie Melancon for Senate Charlie Melancon Campaign Committee Inc Retrieved November 3 2009 Shields Gerard November 4 2009 Survivor of rape confronts Vitter The Advocate Louisiana Retrieved November 5 2009 Tilove Jonathan November 4 2009 When confronted by rape victim Vitter defends vote against Franken amendment The Times Picayune Retrieved November 5 2009 Susan Schmidt March 13 2005 Casino Bid Prompted High Stakes Lobbying The Washington Post p A01 Walsh Bill July 28 2005 McCain defends Vitter as tribe cries foul The Times Picayune Archived from the original on September 7 2005 Retrieved April 21 2008 Our View Tribal casinos win big bucks The Advocate Baton Rouge and WBRZ TV April 14 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 Vitter Introduces Indian Gambling Reform Act David Vitter Archived from the original on May 1 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 S 2676 A bill to make technical corrections to the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act and for other purposes GovTrack Retrieved April 21 2008 NRA PVF Endorses David Vitter for U S Senate nrapvf org NRA PVF September 13 2010 Archived from the original on August 12 2014 David Vitter on the issues On The Issues Retrieved February 16 2008 S AMDT S 2599 US Library of Congress THOMAS database September 19 2006 Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved December 4 2007 S AMDT 4615 US Library of Congress THOMAS database Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved December 10 2018 H R 5441 US Library of Congress THOMAS database 2006 Archived from the original on November 12 2008 Retrieved December 4 2007 Senate rejects effort to expand gun background checks Vitter votes no Landrieu yes Associated Press via nola com April 17 2013 Saltzman Jonathan February 14 2008 Sullivan ATF confirmation blocked The Boston Globe Retrieved February 16 2008 Held up by gun lobby radicals The Boston Globe February 16 2008 Retrieved February 6 2008 Schmitt Richard B February 25 2008 ATF nominee in the crossfire Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on April 14 2008 Retrieved February 25 2008 US Attorney Sullivan resigns WFXT January 20 2009 Retrieved April 29 2009 permanent dead link Hernandez Raymond October 5 2005 Gulf Coast Lawmakers in Spotlight as Aid Requests Pour In The New York Times Retrieved April 21 2008 Louisiana senior senator turns up heat on Bush Democrat Landrieu escalates rhetoric against president on Katrina response Associated Press September 11 2005 Walsh Bill September 29 2007 Louisiana looks like a state of denial The Times Picayune Retrieved September 29 2007 Vitter leads opposition to immigration bill The Times Picayune June 22 2007 Archived from the original on August 24 2007 Retrieved December 7 2007 Are Rational Immigration Laws a Job American Politicians Won t Do Human Events June 18 2007 Archived from the original on January 15 2008 Retrieved December 7 2007 Rutenberg Jim May 30 2007 Bush Takes On Conservatives Over Immigration The New York Times Retrieved December 7 2007 Plan to Crack Down on Sanctuary Cities Killed in Senate Fox News October 16 2007 Archived from the original on October 17 2007 Retrieved October 16 2007 Shields Gerald November 26 2007 Washington Watch for November 26 2007 The Advocate Baton Rouge and WBRZ TV Retrieved November 26 2007 S 2393 A bill to close the loophole that allowed the 9 11 hijackers to obtain credit cards GovTrack us Retrieved January 15 2008 S 2713 110th Congress 2008 A bill to prohibit appropriated funds from being used in contravention of section GovTrack us database of federal legislation March 5 2008 Retrieved May 6 2008 S 2714 A bill to close the loophole that allowed the 9 11 hijackers to obtain credit cards GovTrack us database of federal legislation March 5 2008 Retrieved May 6 2008 Measures Placed on the Calendar GovTrack us database of federal legislation March 6 2008 Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Retrieved May 6 2008 Gaouette Nicole March 5 2008 GOP senators to introduce toughest yet immigration package Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 6 2008 dead link S J RES 31 110th RA joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States relating to United States citizenship GovTrack Retrieved April 9 2008 Ho James C March 10 2007 Can Congress repeal birthright citizenship Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 5 2008 a b c Walsh David September 22 2007 Vitter earmarked federal money for creationist group Times Picayune Archived from the original on December 13 2007 Retrieved September 24 2007 Origins Science Louisiana Family Forum Retrieved November 10 2007 dead link Vitter Sends Shockwaves Louisiana Family Forum Retrieved November 10 2007 dead link Groups Ask Senate To Remove Earmark Promoting Creationism From Spending Bill Common Dreams NewsCenter October 17 2007 Archived from the original on October 20 2007 Retrieved October 17 2007 Earmark for Anti Science Creationist Group Must Be Removed People For the American Way October 17 2007 Archived from the original on August 28 2008 Retrieved October 17 2007 Walsh Bill October 19 2007 Vitter shifts 100 000 from religious group The Times Picayune Archived from the original on October 26 2007 Retrieved November 2 2007 Vitter earmark withdrawn National Center for Science Education October 18 2007 Retrieved November 18 2009 Lerman David Senate approves Jim Webb s new GI Bill Daily Press Retrieved May 22 2008 permanent dead link Senate Passes Iraq War Funding Bill The New York Times Associated Press May 22 2008 Retrieved May 22 2008 dead link Vote Summary United States Senate May 22 2008 Retrieved May 22 2008 Romm Tony September 22 2009 Amendment would block FCC regulation of net neutrality Retrieved September 22 2009 Walsh Bill September 26 2007 Feds oppose full replacement of N O public housing units The Times Picayune Archived from the original on October 17 2007 Retrieved September 27 2007 a b Webster Richard A December 3 2007 Razing a ruckus New Orleans City Business Archived from the original on December 11 2007 Retrieved December 3 2007 Saluny Susan December 3 2007 New Orleans Hurt by Acute Rental Shortage The New York Times Retrieved December 3 2007 Senate confirms Clinton as secretary of State USA Today Associated Press January 21 2009 Archived from the original on May 5 2009 Retrieved April 29 2009 Doin a Heck of a Job Senator The New York Times May 9 2009 Retrieved May 14 2009 Senator to Stop Blocking Choice to Head FEMA The New York Times Associated Press May 13 2009 Retrieved May 14 2009 U S Senate Roll Call Vote senate gov January 27 2015 U S Senate Legislation amp Records Home gt Votes gt Roll Call Vote Senate gov Retrieved August 29 2010 Senate set to reject gay marriage ban Backers see important debate critics blast effort to misdirect CNN June 7 2006 Norrister Adam July 11 2007 A Senator s Moral High Ground Gets a Little Shaky The New York Times Retrieved July 10 2007 Louisiana Senator Compares Hurricanes to Gay Marriage gayapolis com News posted October 18 2005 Retrieved July 10 2007 S Res 132 109th A resolution expressing support for prayer at school board meetings GovTrack us Retrieved January 16 2008 a b Mitchell David J January 20 2007 Tangipahoa parties say ruling unclear The Advocate Baton Rouge Retrieved January 16 2008 dead link Alt URL Archived January 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine S Res 35 A resolution expressing support for prayer at school board meetings GovTrack us Retrieved January 16 2008 Doe v Tangipahoa Parish Sch Bd No 05 30294 5th Cir Dec 15 2006 National School Boards Association December 2006 Archived from the original on January 1 2011 Retrieved January 16 2008 Mitchell David J August 22 2007 Tangipahoa board OKs prayer policy The Advocate Baton Rouge Retrieved January 16 2008 dead link Alt URL 111th Congress 2009 April 2 2009 S Res 98 Legislation GovTrack us Retrieved May 19 2009 A resolution designating each of April 15 2009 and April 15 2010 as National TEA Party Day Beutler Brian September 16 2010 Vitter Pledge To Tea Party I Will Conduct Myself In A Morally And Socially Appropriate Manner Talking Points Memo Retrieved September 24 2010 a b Sands David R September 28 2007 White House pushes sea treaty The Washington Times Retrieved September 28 2007 Pass the sea treaty Omaha World Herald May 16 2004 Archived from the original on September 26 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Ridenour David A August 2006 Ratification of the Law of the Sea Treaty A Not So Innocent Passage National Center for Public Policy Research Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Spring Baker and Steven Groves and Brett D Schaefer September 25 2007 The Top Five Reasons Why Conservatives Should Oppose the U N Convention on the Law of the Sea The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Gaffney Jr Frank J May 18 2004 Don t Get LOST National Review Online Retrieved September 28 2007 Scally William September 24 2007 Law of Sea Treaty Revived With Senate Hearings Congressional Quarterly Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Kraus Don June 6 2007 Time to Ratify the Law of the Sea Institute for Policy Studies Archived from the original on September 26 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Editorial U S should join Law of the Sea alliance Newsday September 27 2007 Archived from the original on July 3 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Dinan Stephen November 1 2007 Senate panel OKs sea treaty but fight looms The Washington Times Retrieved November 2 2007 Our Views State needs flood projects The Advocate Baton Rouge and WBRZ TV September 27 2007 Retrieved September 27 2007 Federal water bill critical to state The Daily Advertiser September 27 2007 Archived from the original on July 16 2007 Retrieved September 27 2007 Alpert Bruce November 2 2007 Bush vetoes massive water resources bill The Times Picayune Retrieved November 2 2007 dead link Senate Overrides Bush Veto on Water Bill The New York Times Associated Press November 8 2007 Retrieved November 8 2007 dead link Rood Justin July 10 2007 Hustler Call May Have Prompted Vitter Admission ABC News Archived from the original on July 12 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 Woman Convicted in Washington Escort Case The New York Times Associated Press April 16 2008 Retrieved April 21 2008 Douglass K Daniel Senator s number on escort service list Archived July 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press July 10 2007 Scandal linked senator breaks a week of silence CNN com July 17 2007 Retrieved August 24 2008 Vitter comes out of seclusion claims New Orleans prostitutes don t exist some say otherwise PDF Louisiana Weekly July 23 2007 Archived from the original PDF on May 15 2008 Retrieved August 24 2008 Moran Kate Walsh Bill McCarthy Brendan July 16 2007 Vitter re emerges and asks again for forgiveness The Times Picayune Archived from the original on October 7 2008 Retrieved August 24 2008 Walsh Bill July 13 2007 Louisiana Republicans offer guarded support for Vitter Times Picayune Archived from the original on July 16 2007 Retrieved July 22 2007 Radelat Ana July 19 2007 Vitter tries to move forward Gannett News Service Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved July 22 2007 Nichols John July 17 2007 A Family Values Headache for Senate GOP The Nation Retrieved July 22 2007 dead link Lipman Larry September 30 2007 A year later Foley fallout lingers Palm Beach Post Archived from the original on June 18 2007 Retrieved September 30 2007 Blumner Robyn September 30 2007 Republicans and their big Greenspan gap St Petersburg Times Retrieved September 30 2007 TV reporter fired after asking David Vitter about prostitutes newspaper reports Reporter Claims He Was Fired for Asking Louisiana Senator David Vitter About His History With Prostitutes Archived November 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Gawker Bridges Tyler December 15 2015 You re crazy if you believe that John Bel Edwards takes remarkable journey to improbable landslide in governor s race The Advocate Retrieved November 19 2017 David Vitter Announces Run for Governor Roll Call January 21 2014 Archived from the original on January 22 2014 Retrieved January 21 2014 John Bel Edwards beats David Vitter to become Louisiana s next governor NOLA November 21 2015 Retrieved November 21 2015 Ostermeier Eric January 24 2014 David Vitter Launches Historic Gubernatorial Bid in Louisiana Smart Politics a b Alford Jeremy May 6 2013 Saved by the Bel Gambit Retrieved May 13 2013 Avery Cole October 2 2014 Scott Angelle to run for governor in 2015 The Times Picayune Retrieved October 2 2014 Adelson Jeff March 20 2013 Lt Gov Jay Dardenne intends to run for governor in 2015 The Times Picayune Retrieved May 13 2013 Adelson Jeff February 10 2013 John Bel Edwards announces he is running for governor in 2015 The New Orleans Times Picayune Retrieved February 21 2013 Louisiana election results 2015 Live updates NOLA com June 14 2023 Deborah Barfield Berry June 12 2016 As retirement nears Vitter relishes win on chemical bill The Alexandria Town Talk Retrieved June 14 2016 David Vitter joins Washington based lobbying firm Beaumont Enterprise Beaumont Texas February 2 2017 Archived from the original on February 26 2017 Retrieved February 25 2017 Allen Ebrahimian Bethany October 29 2019 What a lobbyist s remarks behind closed doors tell you about Chinese money in Washington The Washington Post Retrieved October 30 2019 Honovich John October 29 2019 Senator Vitter Becomes Proud Member Of The Hikvision Team Calls Out Anti China Rubio IPVM Retrieved July 12 2021 Casey Tolan Devine Curt US lobbying firms rush to cut ties with Russian businesses hit with sanctions CNN Retrieved April 22 2022 External links EditUnited States Senator David Vitter official U S Senate website Archived nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Vitter David Vitter at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity 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 Senator Vitter at BR Press Club Appearances on C SPAN David Vitter at Curlie Vitter org Vitter family website maintained by brother Jeffrey VitterLouisiana House of RepresentativesPreceded byDavid Duke Member of the Louisiana House of Representativesfrom the 81st district1992 1999 Succeeded byJennifer Sneed HeebeU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byBob Livingston Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Louisiana s 1st congressional district1999 2005 Succeeded byBobby JindalParty political officesPreceded byJim Donelon Republican nominee for U S Senator from Louisiana Class 3 2004 2010 Succeeded byJohn Neely KennedyPreceded byBobby Jindal Republican nominee for Governor of Louisiana2015 Succeeded byEddie RisponeU S SenatePreceded byJohn Breaux U S Senator Class 3 from Louisiana2005 2017 Served alongside Mary Landrieu Bill Cassidy Succeeded byJohn Neely KennedyPreceded byJim Inhofe Ranking Member of the Senate Environment Committee2013 2015 Succeeded byBarbara BoxerPreceded byMaria Cantwell Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee2015 2017 Succeeded byJim RischU S order of precedence ceremonial Preceded byRob Portmanas Former US Senator Order of precedence of the United Statesas Former US Senator Succeeded byEvan Bayhas Former US Senator Portals nbsp Biography nbsp United States nbsp Law nbsp Education nbsp Politics nbsp Christianity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Vitter amp oldid 1177424702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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