Stallings taught history at
Brigham Young University–Idaho in
Rexburg, Idaho from 1969 until his election to Congress in 1984.
U.S. House of Representatives Idaho Democrats nominated Stallings to challenge four-term Republican incumbent
George V. Hansen in 1982, but he lost in the general election. In 1984, after Hansen was
censured by the House of Representatives, Stallings defeated him in a hotly contested race by fewer than 200 votes. Despite representing a heavily Republican district, Stallings was re-elected three times. A conservative Democrat, Stallings unexpectedly received three votes for the presidential nomination from
anti-abortion delegates at the
1988 Democratic National Convention.
Senate campaign Stallings was the Democratic nominee in 1992 for an open seat in the
United States Senate, but lost to
Dirk Kempthorne, the popular two-term mayor of
Boise.
Clinton administration In 1993, Stallings was appointed
United States Nuclear Waste Negotiator by President
Bill Clinton and served in that capacity until the office was eliminated in early 1995.
Later career Stallings attempted to win his old House seat back in 1998, but was defeated by
state house Speaker
Mike Simpson of
Blackfoot in the general election. The seat was open, as three-term incumbent
Mike Crapo successfully ran for an open seat in the U.S. Senate. After leaving Congress, Stallings later served as executive director of the Pocatello Neighborhood Housing Services and later on the
Pocatello, Idaho, City Council from 2001 to December 20, 2007.
Idaho Democratic Party Chair In 2005, Stallings won election as chairman of the
Idaho Democratic Party. Stallings was re-elected state Democratic chair in 2007. Stallings resigned on December 20, 2007.
2014 congressional campaign On March 14, 2014, Stallings filed to run as the Democratic candidate for his old U.S. House seat in Idaho's Second Congressional District. He was the Democratic nominee after the uncontested primary election, but was defeated by Simpson in the general election. == Personal life and death ==