United States Representative Ed Whitfield
Ed
Whitfield was elected to Congress in 1994 as the first Republican to
represent Kentucky’s First Congressional District.
Whitfield is a native of Hopkinsville, Kentucky and attended
Madisonville High School. He earned a Bachelor's Degree and Juris
Doctorate from the University of Kentucky. He also studied at Wesley
Theological Seminary in Washington, D.C., where he now serves on the
Board of Governors. Whitfield served as a 1st Lieutenant in the
100th Division of the U.S. Army Reserves.
Congressman Whitfield served in the Kentucky House of
Representatives from 1974-75 while practicing law in Hopkinsville,
where he operated a successful oil distributorship in the west
Kentucky coal fields. In 1979, he became Counsel to the President of
Seaboard System Railroad in Washington, D.C. Later, he was named
Vice President of State Relations and then Vice President for
Federal Railroad Affairs for CSX Corporation. Whitfield served as
Legal Counsel to the Chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission
(ICC) from 1991 to 1993 where he worked to reduce regulation of the
nation’s barge, railroad and trucking industries.
Congressman Whitfield serves on the House Committee on Energy and
Commerce. The Committee is the oldest standing Committee in the
House and presides over a wide spectrum of issues, giving it the
broadest jurisdiction of any committee in the legislative body. The
Committee maintains primary responsibility for legislative oversight
relating to healthcare, telecommunications, consumer protection,
food and drug safety, public health, air quality and environmental
health, the supply and delivery of energy and interstate and foreign
commerce.
During his eight terms in Congress, Whitfield has championed the
needs and views of his constituents. The First District is home to
Fort Campbell, base for the 101st Airborne Division, the 160th
Special Operations Aviation Command, and the 5th Special Forces
Group. Whitfield has consistently voted in favor of a strong
national defense, including enhanced benefits for all active duty
service personnel, retirees and veterans. He has pursued a
pro-family agenda to permit prayer in schools, stop child
pornography and outlaw flag burning.
Through his Committee assignment, Whitfield has worked to promote
access to health care, and to protect Medicare and Medicaid. He also
has helped modernize our national energy policy, while promoting
clean uses of coal and protecting domestic uranium enrichment
capabilities at the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant, where he has
been an advocate for the health and welfare of its active and
retired employees.
Congressman Whitfield’s major legislative accomplishments include
creating the 170,000 acre National Recreation Area at the Land
Between the Lakes; introducing and passing legislation to create a
Health Compensation Program at the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant,
which has paid over $315,000,000 in compensation to 3,139 employees
and their survivors; helping to create the first Medicare
Prescription drug benefit plan for seniors; and advocating for the
humane treatment of animals.
The Congressman is married to Connie Harriman, who served as
Assistant Secretary of the Interior and Director of the U.S.
Export-Import Bank and, currently, as Senior Vice-President of the
Humane Society.
|