U.S. House of Representatives
in
Wausau and Representative
Bill Young in September 2001.Obey was elected to the House to replace eight-term incumbent
Republican Melvin R. Laird, who was appointed
Secretary of Defense under President
Richard Nixon. Obey, only 30 when he was elected, became the youngest member of Congress upon taking his seat, as well as the first Democrat to represent the district in the 20th century. He was elected to a full term in 1970 and was reelected 18 times. Obey faced his closest race in 1972, during his bid for a second full term, when his district was merged with the neighboring 10th District of Republican
Alvin O'Konski, a 15-term incumbent. However, Obey retained 60 percent of his former territory, and was handily reelected in subsequent contests. In Congress, Obey chaired the commission to write the House's Code of Ethics. Among the reforms he instituted was one requiring members of the House to disclose their personal financial dealings so the public would be made aware of any potential conflicts of interest. Obey served as chairman of the
House Appropriations Committee from 2007 to 2011; he briefly chaired this committee from 1994 to 1995 and served as its ranking Democrat from 1995 to 2007. He also chaired its
Subcommittee on Labor. Obey was one of the most liberal members of the House; he considers himself a progressive in the tradition of
Robert La Follette. Obey had risen to the position of fifth ranking House Democrat since his party retook control of Congress. During the 1970s, Obey was the leader of the Democratic Study Group, which was a caucus of liberal Democrats in the House which was intended to "counter" the influence of conservative and southern Democrats. Obey also is remembered for being the congressman who intervened when fellow Democrat
Harold Ford, Jr. approached Republican
Jean Schmidt on the House floor in 2005. Ford was upset because Schmidt had called Congressman
John Murtha a coward for advocating a withdrawal of American forces in
Iraq. Obey holds a critical view of the mainstream American news media, as evidenced by his words on June 13, 2008, upon the sudden death of NBC News Washington Bureau Chief
Tim Russert. Obey said of Russert: "Tim Russert's death is not just a body blow for NBC News; it is a body blow for the nation and for anyone who cherishes newsmen and women who have remained devoted to reporting hard news in an era increasingly consumed by trivia." Dave Obey announced an end to his congressional career on May 5, 2010, with press releases being released on May 6. On June 30, 2010, Obey proposed an amendment to a supplemental war spending bill that would allocate $10 billion to prevent expected teacher layoffs from school districts nationwide. The amendment, which passed the House on July 1, 2010, proposed siphoning off $500 million from the
Race to the Top fund as well as $300 million designated for charter schools and teacher incentive pay. In response, the White House released a statement threatening a veto if the bill is passed by the Senate. On March 21, 2010, Obey swung the same gavel used to pass
Medicare in 1965, but this time to pass the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
Retirement Obey was expected to run in 2010, having raised a warchest of $1.4 million. However, Obey was facing tough poll numbers in his district, plus his age and the death of close colleague
John Murtha and his frustration with the White House convinced him to bow out of the race. On May 5, 2010, Obey announced that he would not seek reelection to Congress.
Political campaigns In 1994, Obey only won reelection by eight points as the Democrats lost control of the House during the
Republican Revolution.
2008 2010 Obey was expected to run in 2010, having raised a warchest of $1.4 million. However, Obey was facing tough poll numbers in his district, plus his age and the death of close colleague
John Murtha and his frustration with the White House convinced him to bow out of the race. Upon his retirement, the seat was won by Republican
Sean Duffy, who defeated Democratic State Senator
Julie Lassa. == Later career ==