Kel Seliger

Kelton Gray Seliger, known as Kel Seliger (born June 16, 1953), is a Republican member of the Texas State Senate for District 31, which stretches from the Panhandle south to the Permian Basin.[1]

Kel Seliger
President pro tempore of the Texas Senate
In office
January 10, 2017  May 29, 2017
Preceded byKevin Eltife
Succeeded byRobert Nichols
Member of the Texas Senate
from the 31st district
Assumed office
March 2, 2004
Preceded byTeel Bivins
Mayor of Amarillo
In office
1993–2001
Preceded byKeith Adams
Succeeded byTrent Sisemore
Personal details
Born
Kelton Gray Seliger

(1953-06-16) June 16, 1953
Amarillo, Texas, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Nancy Seliger
Children2
EducationDartmouth College (BA)

Background

Born in Amarillo and reared in the Panhandle city of Borger in Hutchinson County, Seliger is a graduate of Borger public schools and Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, an elite Ivy League institution. He spent 35 years in the steel industry[2] and is co-owner and executive vice-president of Lake Steel, Inc., a steel service center. He is also a licensed commercial pilot and flight instructor.

Seliger is currently a member of the National Rifle Association, the Texas Farm Bureau, and the Harley-Davidson Owners Group.

Seliger and his wife, the former Nancy Caroline Meredith (born October 11, 1960), reside in Amarillo with their two sons, Jonathan and Matthew.

Political life

Seliger served four terms in the nonpartisan position as mayor of Amarillo (19932001). He is also a former city commissioner and a former member of the Amarillo Civil Service Commission. He also served on former Texas Attorney General John Cornyn's Municipal Advisory Committee and, in 2002, he was appointed to the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission by Governor Rick Perry.

Seliger was sworn into the Texas Senate on March 2, 2004, to complete the term of Teel Bivins of Amarillo, who obtained a diplomatic appointment as United States Ambassador to Sweden from the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush. Seliger was reelected to serve a full, four-year term on November 4, 2004. The district spans twenty-six counties and serves large slices of the Panhandle and Permian Basin, including Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, and Big Spring. It is one of the most Republican districts in the state; he has only faced a Democratic opponent once, during his first bid for a full term in 2004.

Seliger is a member of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), serving as Texas state leader.[3]

Seliger was appointed by Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst to serve as Vice-Chair of the Criminal Justice Committee for the Seventy-ninth Texas Legislature. In addition, he was appointed to the Natural Resources, International Relations and Trade, and Administration Committees.

Seliger filed and sponsored over seventy-five bills, fifty of which were passed in one form or another during the regular session of the 79th Legislature. As the vice chairman of the Senate Criminal Justice Committee, Senator Seliger passed House Bill 2577 requiring local law enforcement agencies to report to the state the reason for a peace officer's termination to protect the integrity of the state's law enforcement officers. This legislation prevents those peace officers with a history of poor performance or unethical behavior, termed "gypsy cops," from taking advantage of police departments that lack the resources to investigate their employment history.

Seliger's membership on the Senate Natural Resources Committee aided him in passing several important bills for West Texas. House Bill 2161 ensures that effective pipeline safety standards are in place for all construction work around oil and gas pipelines. It also establishes a program to address abandoned or orphaned oil and gas wells and includes considerations for potential future periods of decline in oil and gas prices. Additionally, House Bill 951 will establish a notice and remediation process for construction around pipelines.

The Texas Municipal League presented Seliger with its 2005 Distinguished Legislative Service Award for his dedication to protecting and promoting local control. He also received the 2005 Rural Legislator of the Year Award from the Association of Rural Communities in Texas.

Seliger won re-nomination to a full four-year term in the state Senate in the Republican primary held on March 4, 2014. He defeated attorney and former Midland Mayor Michael Jackson "Mike" Canon, Sr. (born 1946), 36,623 (52.4 percent) to 33,223 (47.6 percent).[4]

Seliger is a moderate Republican by Texas standards. He is considered one of the most moderate of the twenty (as of 2015) Texas Senate Republicans, along with Kevin Eltife of Tyler, according to an analysis by Mark P. Jones of the political science department at Rice University in Houston. Jones also found that these Republicans saw passage of 90 percent of the bills for which they voted.

In February 2015, Seliger filed proposed legislation backed by many school districts that a graduation committee be appointed for each pupil who twice fails an end-of-course assessment. With a unanimous committee vote, the student would be allowed to graduate from high school. The committee would consist of a principal, counselor, teacher, and parent and would consider course grades, standardized test scores, and regularity of attendance as factors to permit graduation in such situations. A. Marcus Nelson, superintendent of the Laredo Independent School District endorsed Seliger's bill, which he said would impact 172 pupils in Laredo who have twice failed the end-of-course assessments. "We need to find the right balance in the number of assessments and the accountability that goes with it," Nelson said.[5]

Seliger is the recipient of the Bell Helicopter 2012 Legislative Leadership Award, the Texas Municipal League's 2011 Legislator of the Year, the Texas District and County Attorneys Association's 2009 Law and Order Award, Legislator of the Year 2009 from the Associated Security Services and Investigators of the State of Texas and the citizens of Odessa honored him with the 2009 Heritage of Odessa Foundation Community Statesman Award in Government.[2]

In the general election held on November 6, 2018, Seliger handily prevailed over his only opponent, the Libertarian Jack B . Westbrook, 171,831 votes (87.5 percent) to 24,458 (12.5 percent). No Democrat sought the seat.[6]

Seliger's status as a Moderate Republican wields him potentially great power in the state Senate. He can join with the body's twelve Democratic members to block conservative initiatives from coming to the floor. In 2019, Seliger announced opposition to the property tax relief package offered by Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, Governor Greg Abbott, and House Speaker Dennis Bonnen, who maintain that the issue of runaway property taxes has reached emergency status. Seliger, however, said that municipalities and counties should be able to set their own rates in conjunction with value estimates from the appraisal boards and the will of local voters. Under the measure, counties with more than $15 million in combined property and sales taxes must obtain voter approval for any increase in property taxes greater than 2.5 percent of the current year rates.[7]

Removal from Agriculture Committee chairmanship

On January 22, 2019, Seliger was removed as chair of the Texas Senate Agriculture Committee after suggesting that a female staffer at the Capitol in Austin kiss his posterior.[8] Seliger previously compaoned that he had been named the chair of the Agriculture Committee. A senior staffer for Lieutenant Governor Patrick, Sherry Sylvester, responded to Seliger's complaint by stating that if Seliger believed being chair of Agriculture was beneath him then he should step down and let Patrick appoint someone else to the job. On the radio show, "Other Side of Texas," Seliger said, "It was extremely snide and really unbecoming for a member of the staff, the lieutenant governor’s or my staff. I didn’t say anything of the sort, and that assertion is disingenuous and I have a recommendation for Miss Sylvester and her lips and my back end." Patrick then removed Seliger from the chairmanship after Seliger was given forty-eight hours by Patrick to apologize to the female staffer. Seliger refused to make the apology.[9] Patrick then awarded the chairmanship of the Agriculture committee to state Senator Bob Hall.[10]

Election history

Election history of District 31 from 1992.[11]

2014

Texas general election, 2014: Senate District 31[12]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Kel Seliger (Incumbent) 107,885 90.43 -9.57
Libertarian Steven Gibson 11,416 9.57 +9.57
Majority 96,469
Turnout
Republican hold

2012

Texas general election, 2012: Senate District 31[13]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Kel Seliger (Incumbent) 195,878 100.0 +9.79
Majority 195,878
Turnout
Republican hold

2008

Texas general election, 2008: Senate District 31[14]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Kel Seliger (Incumbent) 180,267 90.21
Libertarian Lauren Poindexter 19,569 9.79
Majority 160,698
Turnout
Republican hold

2004

Texas general election, 2004: Senate District 31[15]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Kel Seliger (Incumbent) 170,299 78.53 -21.47
Democratic Elaine King Miller 46,556 21.47 +21.47
Majority 123,743 57.06 -42.94
Turnout 216,855 +82.33
Republican hold

2004

Special Election Runoff: Senate District 31, Unexpired Term[16]
17 February 2004
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Kirk Edwards 32,094 43.85 [17]+43.85
Republican Kel Seliger 41,102 56.15 +20.44
Majority 9,008 12.31
Turnout 73,196
Republican hold
Special Election: Senate District 31, Unexpired Term[18]
20 January 2004
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Bob Barnes 9,478 13.65
Republican Kirk Edwards 14,273 20.56
Republican Lee Gibson 2,429 3.50
Democratic Elaine King Miller 5,738 8.27
Republican Jesse Quackenbush 1,488 2.14
Republican Kel Seliger 24,793 35.72
Republican Don Sparks 11,216 16.16
Turnout
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gollark: Unfortunately, it isn't.

References

  1. Texas Department of State Health Services, Vital Records (1953-06-16). "Birth Certificate for Kelton Gray Seliger" (Third party index of birth records for Potter County). Rootsweb.com. Retrieved 2006-12-26. External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. "Senator Kel Seliger: District 31". Texas Senate. Archived from the original on April 18, 2015. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  3. http://www.alec.org/about-alec/state-chairmen/
  4. "Republican primary election returns, March 4, 2014". team1.sos.state.tx.us. Archived from the original on March 5, 2014. Retrieved March 5, 2014.
  5. Judith Rayo, "Senate Bill 149: State exit exams eyed; More students could graduate", Laredo Morning Times, February 26, 2015, pp. 1, 14A
  6. "Election Returns". Texas Secretary of State. November 6, 2018. Archived from the original on November 10, 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  7. Asher Price (February 14, 2019). "Key GOP lawmaker opposes marquee property tax bill". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved February 17, 2019.
  8. AUDIO: State Sen. Kel Seliger Removed as Chair of Senate Ag Committee Following 'Lewd Comment', KAMR-TV, Amarillo, Texas, January 22, 2019.
  9. Platoff, Emma (January 22, 2019). "Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick pulls Sen. Kel Seliger's chairmanship after Seliger suggested Patrick aide kiss his "back end"". Texas Tribune. Austin, Texas. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
  10. Lt. Gov. Appoints Sen. Bob Hall as Senate Ag Committee Chair, KAMR-TV, Amarillo, Texas, January 23, 2019.
  11. Uncontested primary elections are not shown.
  12. "2014 General Election". Office of the Secretary of State (Texas). Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  13. "2012 General Election". Office of the Secretary of State (Texas). Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  14. "2008 General Election". Office of the Secretary of State (Texas). Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  15. "2004 General Election". Office of the Secretary of State (Texas). Archived from the original on January 9, 2014. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
  16. "Special Runoff Election, State Senate, District 31". Office of the Secretary of State (Texas). Archived from the original on January 9, 2014. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
  17. Change from Special Election
  18. "Special Election, State Senate, District 31". Office of the Secretary of State (Texas). Archived from the original on January 9, 2014. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
Political offices
Preceded by
Keith Adams
Mayor of Amarillo
1993–2001
Succeeded by
Trent Sisemore
Texas Senate
Preceded by
Teel Bivins
Member of the Texas Senate
from the 31st district

2004–present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Kevin Eltife
President pro tempore of the Texas Senate
2017
Succeeded by
Robert Nichols
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