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Steve Stivers

Steve Stivers
Steve Stivers, Official Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg
U.S. Representative from Ohio's 15th Congressional District
From: January 3, 2011 – present
Predecessor Mary Jo Kilroy
Successor Incumbent (no successor)
State Senator from Ohio's 15th District
From: January 6, 2003 – December 31, 2008
Predecessor Mary Jo Kilroy
Successor Jim Hughes
Information
Party Republican
Spouse(s) Karen Stivers
Religion Methodist[1]
Military Service
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Service Years 1985–present
Rank Brigadier General
Awards Bronze Star
Meritorious Service
Army Commendation Medal
Reserve Good Conduct
National Defense Service Medal

Steven Ernst “Steve” Stivers (born March 26, 1965 in Ripley, Ohio) is a former Ohio State Senator and entrenched RINO who is the incumbent U.S. representative from Ohio's 15th congressional district. As shown below, he is a globalist establishmentarian who has sided against President Trump and conservatives.

Contents

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U.S. House of Representatives

Tenure

Stivers had been noted in 2013 as a "close Boehner ally" who floated potential tax hikes.[2]

Stivers was elected in mid-November 2016 the chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee to succeed Moderate Republican Greg Walden.[3]

In mid-July 2017, Stivers joined 26 other Moderate Republicans/RINOs in siding with all House Democrats against a bill that would require the U.S. military to study links between Islamic doctrine and terrorism.[4] The legislation narrowly failed to pass.

Amidst flimsy, politically motivated accusations hurled against Roy Moore, Stivers asked Moore to return campaign donations he gave and further called for him to drop out of the Alabama special election.[5][6]

During the 2018 Midterms, Stivers as chair of the NRCC urged urged Trump to end strict border policies that have ensured greater security.[7] An adamant globalist, he later in August 2018 called for bringing more foreign students into the U.S. to take American jobs, adding on: "I don’t want to cut legal immigration."[8]

Stivers joined liberals and politically correct Republicans in condemning Trump in mid-2019 over remarks toward the Squad,[9]

In mid-August 2019, Stivers along several Moderate Republicans/RINO Backers offered to support Steve King's primary challenger Randy Feenstra,[10] an Iowa state senator who ran as a strong conservative and later proved to be an establishmentarian.[11]

In June 2020, Rep. Stivers and twenty other Moderate Republicans urged President Trump to increase H-1B amidst the coronavirus pandemic that left millions of Americans unemployed.[12]

Rep. Stivers voted in late July along with 71 moderate and conservative Republicans along with all Democrats to remove Civil War-era statues.[13] Unsurprisingly, he also later joined 13 House moderate Republicans voting for a bill to condemn the use of the term "Chinese virus" as being racist.[14]

Stivers said in early January 2021 that he would not oppose measures supported by Democrats to attempt removing President Trump from office via the 25th Amendment.[15]

See also

References

  1. Jump up↑ Religious affiliation of members of 116th Congress
  2. Jump up↑ Flynn, Mike (October 3, 2013). GOP Flirts With 'Grand Bargain,' Tax Hikes to Fix Funding, Debt IssuesBreitbart News. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  3. Jump up↑ Politico (November 15, 2016). Stivers elected to chair NRCCPolitico. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  4. Jump up↑ Bade, Rachel and Bresnahan, John (July 13, 2017). House rejects controversial study of IslamPolitico. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  5. Jump up↑ Persons, Sally (November 16, 2017). Rep. Steve Stivers, NRCC chairman, requests his donation to Roy Moore be returnedWashington Times. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  6. Jump up↑ Manchester, Julie (November 16, 2017). House GOP campaign chairman joins calls for Moore to step asideThe Hill. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  7. Jump up↑ Munro, Neil (June 19, 2018). GOP 2018 Campaign Chief Stivers Urging Trump to Aid Migrant FamiliesBreitbart News. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  8. Jump up↑ Munro, Neil (August 20, 2018). House GOP’s Midterm Campaign Chief Urges Unlimited College-Grad ImmigrationBreitbart News. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  9. Jump up↑ Two references:
  10. Jump up↑ Brufke, Juliegrace and Marcos, Cristina (August 16, 2019). Republicans offer support for Steve King challengerThe Hill. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  11. Jump up↑ Hayworth, Bret (January 7, 2021). Iowa Rep. Feenstra votes to affirm Electoral College result, thwarting Trump pushSioux City Journal. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  12. Jump up↑ Munro, Neil (June 3, 2020). GOP Reps. Ask Donald Trump to Import Armies of Foreign Workers for White-Collar JobsBreitbart News. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  13. Jump up↑ The List: 72 Republicans Vote with Democrats to Remove Civil War-Era Memorabilia from U.S. Capitol
  14. Jump up↑ Roll Call 193 | Bill Number: H. Res. 908
  15. Jump up↑ Choi, Justin (January 7, 2021). GOP lawmaker says he 'wouldn't oppose' removing Trump under 25th AmendmentThe Hill. Retrieved January 8, 2021.

External links

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Republican Establishment
Groups

National Republican Senatorial Committee • National Republican Congressional Committee • Republican Main Street Partnership • Tuesday Group

Political Agenda

Neoconservatism • Globalism • Centrism • Big government • Spending bills • Cronyism • Crony capitalism

People

John Barrasso • Roy Blunt • Susan Brooks • Liz Cheney • Tom Emmer • Jaime Herrera Beutler • John Katko • Kevin McCarthy • Mitch McConnell • Paul Mitchell • Tom Rice • Marco Rubio • Paul Ryan • Ben Sasse • Rick Scott • Steve Stivers • John Thune • Fred Upton • David Valadao • Todd Young

Historical Figures

Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller • Wendell Willkie • Alfred M. Landon • Prescott Bush • Thomas E. Dewey • George Romney • Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. • Hiram Fong • Jacob Javits • Thomas Kuchel • Joseph W. Martin, Jr. • John McCain • Winthrop Rockefeller

Backers

Lamar Alexander • Richard Burr • Shelley Moore Capito • Bill Cassidy • Susan Collins • John Cornyn • Brian Fitzpatrick • Lindsey Graham • Will Hurd • James Lankford • Adam Kinzinger • Peter Meijer • Lisa Murkowski • Dan Newhouse • Mitt Romney • Pat Toomey • Thom Tillis • Roger Wicker • Don Young

Allies

Senate Leadership Fund • Congressional Leadership Fund • Koch brothers • Big Pharma • RINOs • RINO Backers

Historical opponents

Calvin Coolidge • Robert Taft • John W. Bricker • Barry Goldwater • Everett Dirksen • Ronald Reagan

Conservative opponents

Todd Akin • Michele Bachmann • Ben Carson • Doug Collins • Steve King • Roy Moore • Richard Mourdock • Donald Trump • Rand Paul • Allen West

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