Ronnie Shows Explained

Ronnie Shows
State:Mississippi
Term Start:January 3, 1999
Term End:January 3, 2003
Predecessor:Mike Parker
Successor:Chip Pickering (Redistricting)
Office1:Commissioner for the Mississippi Transportation Commission for the Southern District
Term Start1:1988
Term End1:1998
Predecessor1:Robert E. Joiner
Successor1:Wayne Brown
Office2:Member of the Mississippi Senate
Term Start2:1980
Term End2:1988
Predecessor2:Ike Sanford
Successor2:Billy Harvey
Constituency2:42nd district (1980–1984)
41st district (1984–1988)
Birth Name:Clifford Ronald Shows
Birth Date:26 January 1947
Birth Place:Moselle, Mississippi, U.S.
Party:Democratic
Education:University of Southern Mississippi (BS)

Clifford Ronald Shows (born January 26, 1947) is an American educator and former Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from Mississippi. He served two terms in Congress from 1999 to 2003.

Biography

Shows was born in Moselle, Mississippi on January 26, 1947. He graduated from Moselle High School in 1965 and from the University of Southern Mississippi in 1971, earning degrees in education and political science. Shows worked as a teacher, before being elected as circuit clerk of Jefferson Davis County in 1976. From 1980 until 1988, he was a member of the Mississippi State Senate. After the senate, he was elected to the Mississippi Transportation Commission for the Southern District; he served from 1988-1998.

Congress

A Democrat, Shows was elected to Congress in 1998 and represented Mississippi's 4th district from January 3, 1999, until January 3, 2003. In 2002, Shows was pitted against fellow Congressman Chip Pickering, a Republican from the neighboring 3rd District, after Mississippi lost a seat in the 2000 Congressional redistricting.[1] Shows' Jackson-based district was dismantled and split between three neighboring districts. The largest chunk, including his home in Bassfield, was placed in Pickering's district. The new district heavily favored Pickering; notably, it was seven points whiter than Shows' old district and contained over 60 percent of Pickering's former territory. Pickering soundly defeated Shows with over 60% of the vote in the new 3rd District.[2]

In the 107th Congress, Shows introduced the Federal Marriage Amendment with 22 cosponsors and would have amended the U.S. Constitution to define marriage as legally between one man and one woman.[3] The Amendment failed to advance in Congress.

Shows is a resident of Bassfield, Mississippi.

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: November 6, 2002 . Pickering defeats fellow incumbent in Mississippi . 2024-03-29 . CNN.
  2. Book: Nash, Jere . Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2008, Second Edition . Taggart . Andy . 2009 . University Press of Mississippi . 978-1-60473-266-5 . THE STATE FLAG AND CONGRESSIONAL REAPPORTIONMENT, 2000–2001.
  3. Web site: Democrat Proposes Anti-Gay Marriage Constitutional Amendment. 2002-05-15. Log Cabin Republicans. 2009-01-16.