Van Taylor – TX3

Van Taylor

Summary

Current Position: US Representative of TX District 3 since 2019
Affiliation: Republican
Former Positions: State Senator from 2015 – 2019; State Delegate from 2010 – 2015

Featured Quote: 
Joined @RepMariaSalazar on the steps of our nation’s Capitol to speak against the consequences of socialism from the island’s tyrannical regime. As the leader of the free world, America must stand in solidarity with the Cuban people while they fight for their freedom. #SOSCuba

Featured Video: 
Inside Texas Politics: U.S. Rep. Van Taylor on Iran and impeachment

OnAir Post: Van Taylor – TX3

News

https://www.wfaa.com/video/news/politics/inside-politics/texas-politics/republican-van-taylor-calls-afghanistan-withdrawal-atrocious/287-04343ee7-9bf4-4dcd-8ada-e8f54bde9958?jwsource=cl

Twitter

About

Van Taylor 1

Source: Government page

A seventh generation Texan, Van Taylor is a family man, businessman, and decorated Iraq War Veteran. Growing up, Van earned the Eagle Scout rank from the future President George Bush.

After high school, Van attended Harvard College from which he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in history. After graduating college, Van volunteered to serve his country and received a commission in the United States Marine Corps.

He attended The Basic School, Infantry Officer Course, and graduated first in his class from Sniper Employment Officer Course. He completed Intelligence School as the Marine Honor Graduate and commanded First Marine Regiment’s Reconnaissance Platoon in Camp Pendleton, CA. After completing that assignment, he served as an intelligence officer for an artillery battalion. Van earned the Navy Achievement Medal for devising a quantitative combat power analysis system.

Van Taylor joined the Marine Corps Reserves to continue serving his country while earning his MBA at Harvard Business School. He served in Fourth Civil Affairs Group, graduating from the John F. Kennedy School of Special Warfare at Ft. Bragg, NC. He joined 4th Reconnaissance Battalion as a platoon commander for Charlie Company.

On September 11, 2001, Van was serving his final day at the 4th Civil Affairs Group at the Anacostia Naval Annex. He was supposed to have lunch at the Pentagon that day, but instead watched smoke rise from across the Potomac River as the Pentagon burned from the 9-11 terrorist attack.

That day, Van swore to always serve and make a difference.

Two years after September 11, Van deployed to Iraq where he fought with 2nd Force Reconnaissance Company. While deployed, Van led the first platoon into Iraq for his brigade and a mission that rescued 31 wounded Marines during the pitched Battle of An Nasiriyah. For his service in Iraq, the Marine Corps awarded Captain Taylor the Combat Action Ribbon, Presidential Unit Citation, and the Navy Commendation Medal with “V” for valor.

Van and his wife, Anne, married after his return from Iraq and are the proud parents of three young girls, Laura, Helen, and Susie whom they have raised in Plano near the land Van’s great-grandfather farmed during the Great Depression.

From April 2010 to January 2015, Van Taylor represented District 66 in the Texas House of Representatives. From January 13, 2015 – January 3, 2019, Taylor served as a Member of the Texas Senate, representing the Eighth Senate District of Texas. On January 3, 2019, Van Taylor was sworn in as a Member of the United States Congress, representing Texas Third Congressional District.

During the 1st Session of the 116th Congress, Representative Taylor served on the House Committee on Homeland Security and the Committee on Education and Labor. Given Taylor’s personal experience as well as the heavy presence of financial services sector companies and employees in Texas’ Third Congressional District,  Congressman Taylor was appointed to serve on the influential House Committee on Financial Services in January 2020.

Voting Record

Votes on Bills

Caucuses 

  • For Country Caucus, Co-Chair
  • Problem Solvers Caucus
  • Republican Study Committee

Offices

Washington, DC Office

1404 Longworth House Office Bldg
Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone: (202) 225-4201

Plano Office

5600 Tennyson Pkwy, #275
Plano, TX 75024
Phone: (972) 202-4150

 

Contact

Email:

Web

Government Page, Twitter, Campaign Site, YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook, Wikipedia

Politics

Source: none

Campaign Finance

Open Secrets – We Follow the Money

Voting Record

VoteSmart – Key Votes & Ratings

Search

Google

Wikipedia Entry

Nicholas Van Campen Taylor (born August 1, 1972), known as Van Taylor,[1] is an American businessman and Republican politician from Plano, Texas. He was the U.S. representative for Texas‘s 3rd congressional district from 2019 to 2023, and was first elected in 2018.

The district included much of Collin County, a suburban county north of Dallas. A veteran of the Iraq War, he represented the 8th district in the Texas Senate from 2015 to 2019. He also previously served in the Texas House of Representatives for the 66th district in southwestern Collin County. On March 2, 2022, Taylor admitted to an extramarital affair and announced that he would suspend his reelection campaign and retire at the end of the 117th Congress.

Early life, education, and career

A seventh-generation Texan, Taylor was born in Dallas.[1] He is a descendant of Humble Oil co-founder Robert Lee Blaffer.[2][3] He grew up in Midland, Texas, where he attended the Hillander School and San Jacinto Junior High School. He graduated from St. Paul’s School in Concord, New Hampshire. With numerous AP credits, he subsequently graduated in three years from Harvard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts, from which he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in history. He earned a Master of Business Administration from Harvard Business School in 2001.[4][5]

From January 2002 to December 2018, Taylor worked for Churchill Capital Company,[6] a real estate investment banking and principal investment firm,[7] as a real estate investment banker.[8] He previously worked for McKinsey & Company and Trammell Crow Company.[9]

Taylor married Anne Coolidge, a real estate investment manager, in 2004.[10]

Military service

In Iraq, Taylor was assigned to the Marine Corps’ Company C, 4th Reconnaissance Battalion and fought with 2nd Force Reconnaissance Company. As a captain, Taylor led missions in advance of Task Force Tarawa during Operation Iraqi Freedom, which detected and defeated several Fedayeen ambushes. He also participated in a casualty evacuation of 31 wounded Marines, transporting them safely to medical treatment.

Taylor’s military decorations include the Navy Commendation Medal with “V”, the Combat Action Ribbon, and the Presidential Unit Citation. Taylor left the Marine Corps Reserve as a major.

2006 campaign for U.S. House

In 2005 and 2006, Taylor ran for Texas’s 17th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives. He won the Republican primary with 54.03% of the vote. With 40.31% of the vote in the general election, he lost to incumbent Democrat Chet Edwards.[11]

Texas House of Representatives

2010 campaign

On December 2, 2009, Taylor announced his candidacy for the District 66 Texas State House seat. Plano city council member Mabrie Jackson had already resigned from the council to enter the House race.[12] On November 30, 2009, incumbent representative Brian McCall announced that he would not run for reelection.[13] Observers speculated that McCall had told Jackson that he would step down so that she could get a head start in the campaign. McCall also endorsed Jackson as his successor.

The candidates in the March 2 Republican primary were Wayne Richards, Jackson, and Taylor. While Jackson earned the largest number of votes (41%) in the primary, she was shy of the 50% plus one vote required to win the nomination outright.[14] Richards promptly endorsed Taylor, who then defeated Jackson in the April run-off election. McCall left the House seat early, and Taylor was sworn into office on April 20, 2010, by Collin County Judge Keith Self.

Texas State Senate

2014 campaign

On August 2, 2013, Taylor announced he would seek the Republican Party’s 2014 nomination for the Texas Senate, District 8 seat held by Ken Paxton, who was stepping down to run for state attorney general.[15]

Political positions

Taylor is considered a major ally of the Tea Party movement.[16] He was endorsed by the North Texas Tea Party for his 2014 campaign for Texas Senate, District 8.[17]

In 2017, Taylor introduced legislation to establish a registry of individuals who have been barred from employment at an educational facility. The measure, if adopted, would prevent any school employee, not just administration and faculty, from working at a school if the person is found to have engaged in an improper relationship with a student.[18]

Juneteenth

Taylor was one of two House Republicans to co-sponsor the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act.[19]

Foreign policy

Taylor was among 129 Republicans to oppose President Donald Trump‘s withdrawal from Syria.[20]

U.S. House of Representatives

Elections

2018

In August 2017, Taylor announced his candidacy for the United States House of Representatives for Texas’s 3rd congressional district. Incumbent 13-term Republican Sam Johnson had announced his retirement. Taylor was endorsed by the Club for Growth, a national conservative group,[21] and With Honor, a cross-partisan political group supporting next-generation military veterans.[22] Taylor secured the nomination after easily winning the March 6 primary.[23] He won the November 6 general election with 54.3% of the vote.[24]

Taylor’s victory continued a run of Republican control in one of the first areas of Texas to turn Republican. The GOP has held the seat without interruption since a 1968 special election, and Taylor is only the fourth person to represent it since then. At the same time, it was the closest race in the district in over half a century; indeed, it was the first time since the regular 1968 election that a Democrat had crossed the 40% mark.

2020

Taylor was unopposed in the 2020 Republican primary. In the general election, he faced Democrat Lulu Seikaly. Some observers considered him potentially vulnerable due to the district’s demographic changes and its high population of college-educated voters, who had been trending away from the GOP in recent years.[25] Taylor was reelected by over 12 percentage points even as President Donald Trump carried the district by only 1.

Tenure

On May 19, 2021, Taylor was one of 35 Republicans to join all Democrats in voting for legislation to establish the January 6 commission meant to investigate the storming of the U.S. Capitol.[26] During his 2022 reelection campaign, this vote became a focal point for conservative critics and his opponents in the Republican primary, despite Taylor’s conservative voting record on other issues.[27]

2022 campaign and allegations of infidelity

On February 27, 2022, two days before the Republican primary, right-wing media outlet National File posted an interview with Tania Joya, a British woman then living in Plano, who said that she and Taylor had a nine-month sexual affair in 2020 and 2021.[28] Joya is the widow of John Georgelas, an American who gained notoriety for joining the Islamic State (commonly known as ISIS) in 2013,[29] and has been dubbed the “ISIS bride” by the British tabloid press.[28][30]

Saying that she and Taylor met during a “reprogramming” session for former jihadists,[28] Joya shared salacious details about the affair and said that Taylor had given her $5,000 for her credit card bills and personal expenses. Her statements were repeated the next day by Breitbart News and circulated widely on social media.[28][30] The Texas Tribune could not independently verify any of Joya’s claims.[30] In a statement to The Dallas Morning News, Joya said that she was “annoyed at having to see her ex-lover’s face on billboards” and approached Taylor’s Republican primary opponent Suzanne Harp (who would finish third in the primary), hoping that Harp would privately persuade Taylor to drop out of the race, but Taylor did not do so, prompting Joya to make her statements public.[28]

On March 1, 2022, Taylor won 49% of the vote in the Republican primary, short of the 50% majority required to win outright, triggering a May 24 runoff election against runner-up and former Collin County judge Keith Self. The next day, in an email to supporters, Taylor announced the suspension of his reelection campaign: “About a year ago, I made a horrible mistake that has caused deep hurt and pain among those I love most in this world. I had an affair, it was wrong, and it was the greatest failure of my life. I want to apologize for the pain I have caused with my indiscretion, most of all to my wife Anne and our three daughters.” Taylor did not indicate that he would resign from office before the end of his term but a campaign spokesperson said that he would withdraw from the election.[28][30] Taylor formally withdrew from the runoff two days later, making Self the Republican nominee by default.[31]

Committee assignment

Caucus memberships

Electoral history

Republican primary results, 2018[36]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanVan Taylor 45,475 84.7
RepublicanDavid Niederkorn5,0529.4
RepublicanAlex Donkervoet3,1855.9
Total votes53,712 100.0
Texas’s 3rd congressional district, 2018[37]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanVan Taylor 169,520 54.2
DemocraticLorie Burch138,23444.2
LibertarianChristopher Claytor4,6041.5
IndependentJeff Simons (write-in)1530.1
Total votes312,511 100.0
Republican hold
Texas’s 3rd congressional district, 2020[38]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanVan Taylor (incumbent) 230,512 55.1
DemocraticLulu Seikaly179,45842.9
LibertarianChristopher Claytor8,6212.1
Total votes418,591 100.0
Republican hold
Republican primary results, 2022
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanVan Taylor (incumbent) 31,489 48.8
RepublicanKeith Self 17,058 26.5
RepublicanSuzanne Harp13,37520.8
RepublicanRickey Williams1,7312.7
RepublicanJeremy Ivanovskis8181.3
Total votes64,471 100.0

References

  1. ^ a b Texas Birth Index, 1903–1997.
  2. ^ “From Humble Beginnings” (PDF). New Orleans Bar Association. October 21, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 5, 2015. Retrieved February 17, 2018.
  3. ^ “JANE OWEN Obituary – Houston, TX | Houston Chronicle”. Legacy.com. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  4. ^ “Connecting People, building relationships”. Successnorthdallas.org. Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  5. ^ Vote Smart Bio: Van Taylor
  6. ^ Linkedin Bio: Van Taylor
  7. ^ “Real Estate Investment Banking & Investment Firm | Churchill Capital”. www.churchillcapital.com.
  8. ^ correspondent, Maria Recio American-Statesman. “Chip Roy, Central Texas’ newest congressman, returns to the halls of Congress”. Austin American-Statesman. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  9. ^ “79(R) SR 951 – Enrolled version – Bill Text”. capitol.texas.gov.
  10. ^ “Coolidge-Taylor wedding”. Midland Reporter-Telegram. May 8, 2004. Retrieved February 17, 2018.
  11. ^ “State Sen. Van Taylor”. Texastribune.org. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  12. ^ “Star Local: Plano Star Courier”. Planostar.com. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  13. ^ http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/city/collin/plano/stories/DN-txhouse_15met.ART.Central.Edition1.4bf7bab.html [dead link]
  14. ^ “Error”. Archived from the original on March 7, 2010.
  15. ^ “Taylor to seek Paxton’s Texas Senate seat | Dallas Morning News”. Trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com. August 2, 2013. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  16. ^ Tomlinson, Chris (January 15, 2013). “Texas House starts session with fight over rules, powers | Lubbock Online | Lubbock Avalanche-Journal”. Lubbockonline.com. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  17. ^ “First NTTP TeaApproval for 2014 – Van Taylor for State Senate, District 8”. Northtexasteaparty.org. August 2, 2013. Archived from the original on June 5, 2015. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  18. ^ Elena Mejia Lutz, “Improper relations at school targeted”, San Antonio Express-News, February 24, 2017, p. A5.
  19. ^ “Cosponsors – H.R.1320 – 117th Congress (2021-2022): Juneteenth National Independence Day Act”. February 25, 2021.
  20. ^ “Summary of H.J.Res. 77 (116th): Opposing the decision to end certain United States efforts to prevent Turkish military …”.
  21. ^ Svitek, Patrick (August 23, 2017). “GOP state Sen. Van Taylor of Plano makes congressional run official”. Texas Tribune. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  22. ^ “With Honor Endorses Nine Next-Generation Veterans for Congress”. Politico. January 25, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2019.
  23. ^ “Texas Primary Election Results”. The New York Times. March 7, 2018. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  24. ^ “Texas’ 3rd Congressional District election, 2018 – Ballotpedia”. Ballotpedia. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  25. ^ @Redistrict (September 17, 2020). “Whenever someone has asked me my “sleeper” House race of 2020, this has been my answer of late. #TX03 is by far the…” (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  26. ^ LeBlanc, Paul (May 19, 2021). “Here are the 35 House Republicans who voted for the January 6 commission”. CNN. Retrieved May 19, 2021.
  27. ^ Gillman, Todd J. (January 27, 2022). “Rep. Van Taylor’s rivals say Trump won, Jan. 6 no big deal, and he’s out of touch for disagreeing”. The Dallas Morning News. Dallas, Texas. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Gillman, Todd J. (March 2, 2022). “Rep. Van Taylor apologizes for affair with ‘ISIS bride,’ abruptly drops reelection bid”. The Dallas Morning News. Dallas, Texas. Retrieved March 3, 2022. Joya said she didn’t intend to inject herself into the election and didn’t even realize the primary was five days away when she contacted Harp. She was just annoyed at having to see her ex-lover’s face on billboards as she drove around Plano. “All I wanted was for Suzanne Harp to just say, ‘Hey, I know your little scandal with Tania Joya. Would you like to resign before we embarrass you?’ But it didn’t happen like that,” Joya told The News.
  29. ^ Wood, Graeme (November 3, 2017). “From the Islamic State to Suburban Texas”. The Atlantic. Washington, D.C. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  30. ^ a b c d Svitek, Patrick (March 2, 2022). “U.S. Rep. Van Taylor ends reelection campaign after he admits to affair”. The Texas Tribune. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  31. ^ Caldwell, Emily (March 11, 2022). “Keith Self, ex-Collin County judge, now GOP nominee for Rep. Van Taylor’s seat after incumbent exits”. The Dallas Morning News. Dallas, Texas. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  32. ^ “Office of the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives”. clerk.house.gov. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  33. ^ “For Country Caucus Announces Chairs, Members for 117th Congress”. U.S. Representative Van Taylor. February 25, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  34. ^ “Featured Members”. Problem Solvers Caucus. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  35. ^ “Member List”. Republican Study Committee. Archived from the original on January 1, 2019. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
  36. ^ “2018 Primary Election Official Results”. Texas Secretary of State. Archived from the original on March 7, 2018. Retrieved March 8, 2018.
  37. ^ “Texas Election Results”. Texas Secretary of State. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  38. ^ “Texas Election Results – Official Results”. Texas Secretary of State. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
Texas Senate
Preceded by

Member of the Texas Senate
from the 8th district

2015–2018
Succeeded by

Texas House of Representatives
Preceded by

Brian McCall
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 66th district

2010–2015
Succeeded by

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by

Member of the United States House of Representatives
from Texas’s 3rd congressional district

2019–2023
Succeeded by

U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded by

as Former US Representative

Order of precedence of the United States
as Former US Representative
Succeeded by

as Former US Representative


Issues

Source: Government page

Committees

  • Committee on Financial Services

Legislation

Sponsored and Cosponsored

Issues

 

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