Jim Oberstar

James Louis Oberstar (September 10, 1934 – May 3, 2014) was an American politician and Congressman who served in the United States House of Representatives from 1975 to 2011.[11] Along with John Conyers, in April 2006, Oberstar brought an action against George W. Bush and others alleging violations of the U.S. Constitution in the passage of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005.[25] Oberstar voted against legislation in 2005 to require the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to research embryonic stem cells, and again in 2007, one of the only 14 and 16 Democratic members respectively to do so.[28] Oberstar supported the bill to move the Terri Schiavo case to federal court, and appeared at a press conference with then-House Majority leader Tom DeLay to urge its passage.[40] He voted to pass the Energy and Environmental Law Amendments, which aimed to establish a program to regulate greenhouse gas emissions in 2009.[40] According to the Minnesota Congressional Election 2008 Political Courage Test, Oberstar supported having taxation of corporate earnings, gasoline, and cigarettes.[45] He believed that free trade under NAFTA and CAFTA offered little or no economic opportunity for American workers and producers due to inadequate provisions in the agreements.During the 2006 elections, Oberstar's Republican opponent was former United States Senator Rod Grams, whose lived in the southwestern corner of the 8th.During the 2008 campaign, Oberstar appeared alongside other public officials in a TV ad[47] supporting the reelection of Puerto Rico Governor Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, a fellow Democrat.During the 2010 elections, Oberstar lost a close race to political newcomer and Tea Party favorite Chip Cravaack, who won a plurality of 48 percent of the vote.[50] In May 2011, a Great Lakes ore carrier, of the Interlake Steamship Company, which typically transports taconite pellets from Duluth, Silver Bay and Marquette to steel mills near Detroit, Cleveland, and Chicago, was renamed after him, dubbed the MV Honorable James L.In October 2015, the new passenger terminal of the Duluth International Airport was named in honor of Oberstar, who helped secure funding for the facility before its 2013 opening.The collection emphasizes Oberstar's activities on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, demonstrated by an extensive series of staff office topical files addressing various issues, projects, and legislation related to aviation, highways and bridges, railways, waterways, and bikeways.Additional significant content focuses on economic development in the Iron Range, travel and tourism, trade, and environmental protection of Minnesota's land and water resources.
Oberstar in 1991
Congressman Don Young hands over the gavel to incoming Transportation Chairman Jim Oberstar on December 6, 2006.
Oberstar in 2010
Oberstar (second from right), watching President George W. Bush sign the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act in 2003.
Bust of Oberstar located in the Duluth International Airport , now known as the "James L. Oberstar Terminal"
U.S. House of RepresentativesMinnesotaJohn BlatnikChip CravaackHouse Transportation CommitteeDon YoungJohn MicaNorman MinetaChisholm, MinnesotaPotomac, MarylandDemocraticUniversity of St. Thomas, MinnesotaCollege of EuropeCongressmanUnited States House of RepresentativesDemocratic–Farmer–Labor Partyeighth congressional districtDuluthBrainerdGrand RapidsInternational FallsHibbingIron RangeHouse Transportation and Infrastructure CommitteeRepublicanUnited Steelworkers (USW)Chisholm High SchoolUniversity of St. ThomasBruges, BelgiumUniversité LavalSainte-Foy, QuebecGeorgetown UniversityUnited States Marine CorpsHaitian military personnelnoncommissioned officersaviationaviation safetyPresident's Commission on Aviation Security and TerrorismEconomic Development AdministrationCirrus AircraftGeneral Aviation Revitalization Actgeneral aviationcyclistSAFETEA-LU act109th CongressconservativeprogressiveJohn ConyersGeorge W. BushU.S. ConstitutionDeficit Reduction Act of 2005Conyers v. BushI-35W Mississippi River bridgeMinnesota Department of Transportationreplacement bridgeprivate suborbital spaceflightCongressional Caucus on Global Road SafetyCongressional Human Rights Caucusanti-abortion Democratconstitutional amendmentsright to lifeprocedureHyde AmendmentHenry Hyde (R-IL)House Judiciary Committeeanti-abortion movementRoe v. WadePartial-Birth Abortion Ban Actintact dilation and extractionNational Right to Life Committee (NRLC)legislationDepartment of Health and Human Services (HHS)research embryonic stem cellsChris SmithNew JerseyTerri Schiavo caseTom DeLayLGBT rightsDefense of Marriage ActHuman Rights Campaign (HRC)making crimes motivated by discrimination against sexual orientation or gender identity a federal hate crimea billemployment discriminationHead Start Programanti-povertyAmerican Association of University WomenNatural Resources Research InstituteAmerican Wind Energy Associationorganized laborAFL-CIOPolitical Courage TestAmericans For Fair TaxationNational Taxpayers Unionfree trade agreementsNorth American Free Trade AgreementCentral American Free Trade AgreementUnited States SenatorRod GramsAníbal Acevedo ViláU.S. House elections, 2010Democratic (DFL)James OberstarIndependenceU.S. House elections, 2008U.S. House elections, 2006Minnesota 8th congressional district election, 2006Harry WeltyU.S. House elections, 2004U.S. House elections, 2002Duluth International AirportTony Jannus AwardGreat Lakes ore carrierInterlake Steamship CompanytaconiteSilver BayMarquettesteel millsDetroitClevelandChicagoOrdre national du MériteMinnesota Aviation Hall of FameJohn F. Kennedy Center for the Performing ArtsMineta I.I.STPS InstituteSan Jose State UniversityWayback MachineThe Clarion LedgerAmerican Catholic StudiesUC Santa BarbaraThe Washington PostHuman Rights CampaignThe Tampa TribuneBiographical Directory of the United States CongressFederal Election CommissionC-SPANSourceWatchMinnesota Public RadioMinnesota's 8th congressional districtChairs of the United States House Committee on Transportation and InfrastructurePetrikinBoardmanFicklinHoustonBowdonStantonCraigeCovodeHopkinsBeattyHalseyHolmanShallenbergerStockslagerDibbleMillikenBankheadMercerGilletBartholdtSheppardLangleyElliottLanhamWillisBlanchardHendersonCatchingsHookerCooperBurtonAlexanderSparkmanKennedyDempseyMansfieldShacklefordDowellCartwrightRobinsonHumphreysRodenbergSchallWilsonWhittingtonDonderoBuckleyFallonBlatnikJohnsonHowardAndersonMinetaE. ShusterW. ShusterDeFazioGravesMembers of the U.S. House of Representatives from Minnesota1st districtSibleyKingsburyWindomWilkinsonDunnellT. WilsonHarriesTawneyFurlowChristgauAndresenErdahlGutknechtJ. HagedornFinstad2nd districtDonnellyE.M. WilsonAverillStraitPoehlerWakefieldMcClearyHammondEllsworthClagueO'HaraNelsenT. Hagedorn3rd districtStewartWashburnMacDonaldD. HallO. HallHeatwoleLundeenTeiganGallagherMacKinnonMacGregorFrenzelRamstadPaulsenPhillipsMorrison4th districtGilfillanSniderCastleKieferStevensVan DykeKellerStarkeyDevittMcCarthyMcCollum5th districtNelsonComstockHalvorsonFletcherNewtonW. NolanChristiansonD. JohnsonYoungdahlFraserEllison6th districtBaldwinMorrisBuckmanLindberghH. KnutsonMarshallR. NolanSikorskiLutherBachmann7th districtVolsteadO. KvaleP. KvaleAndersenLangenBerglandStangelandPetersonFischbach8th districtMillerLarsonPittengerBernardCravaackStauber9th districtSteenersonWefaldSelvigBucklerC. Knutson10th districtGoodwinGeneral ticketCavanaughPhelpsAldrichManahanHoidaleShoemakerUnited States CongressesSenateW. MondaleH. HumphreyW. AndersonA. QuieJ. KarthD. FraserR. BerglandB. FrenzelM. HumphreyD. DurenbergerR. BoschwitzB. VentoA. StangelandA. ErdahlM. SaboV. WeberT. PennyG. SikorskiP. WellstoneC. PetersonJ. RamstadR. GramsD. MingeG. GutknechtB. LutherM. DaytonD. BarkleyM. KennedyB. McCollumN. ColemanJ. KlineA. KlobucharM. BachmannK. EllisonT. WalzA. FrankenE. Paulsen