Pat Fallon | |
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Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromTexas's4th district | |
Assumed office January 3, 2021 | |
Preceded by | John Ratcliffe |
Member of theTexas Senate from the30th district | |
In office January 8, 2019 – January 3, 2021 | |
Preceded by | Craig Estes |
Succeeded by | Drew Springer |
Member of theTexas House of Representatives from the106th district | |
In office January 8, 2013 – January 8, 2019 | |
Preceded by | Rodney Anderson |
Succeeded by | Jared Patterson |
Personal details | |
Born | Patrick Edward Fallon (1967-12-19)December 19, 1967 (age 57) Pittsfield, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Susan Garner |
Children | 2 |
Education | University of Notre Dame (BA) |
Website | House website |
Military service | |
Branch/service | United States Air Force |
Years of service | 1990–1994 |
Rank | Captain |
Awards | Air Force Achievement Medal |
Patrick Edward Fallon (born December 19, 1967)[1] is an American businessman and politician. A member of theRepublican Party, he has been the U.S. representative forTexas's 4th congressional district since 2021. Fallon was also a member of theTexas House of Representatives for the106th district from 2013 to 2019 and represented the30th district of theTexas Senate from 2019 to 2021.[2]
Fallon is a member of the new House Department of Government Efficiency Committee.[3]
Fallon was born inPittsfield, Massachusetts.[4] Both his parents were public school teachers, and he was raised in suburban areas, growing up in the largest city in Berkshire County.[5][6][7]
Fallon earned his bachelor's degree ingovernment andinternational relations from theUniversity of Notre Dame,[1] where he played varsityfootball under coachLou Holtz and was part of the 1988 national championship team.[8][9] He ran at-shirt business as a student and participated in campus political activities. He was a cadet in theAir Force Reserve Officers Training Corps and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in theUnited States Air Force upon graduation. He then served in the Air Force for four years, during which he received theAir Force Achievement Medal.[10]
After college, Fallon relocated toDenton County, Texas, in the early 1990s. He is the president and chief executive officer of Virtus Apparel, a company that specializes in clothing of military and patriotic design. Based inProsper, Texas, it has a dozen national locations and about 100 total employees.[10][11]
In 2009, Fallon launched a campaign that netted him 57% of the vote to defeat three opponents for an at-large seat on theFrisco City Council. In the Denton County portion of Frisco, which consists of about one-third of the voters in House District 106, Fallon polled 65% of the vote.[10] In his first year on the city council, Fallon voted against a tax rate increase. In 2010, he voted against a city budget that would have increased the municipal debt.[12] In May 2011, his council colleagues selected him to serve as mayor pro tem.[10]
In 2012 Fallon won the Republican nomination in the reconfigured District 106, in which incumbent RepublicanRodney Anderson ofGrand Prairie did not run. Instead, Anderson unseated incumbent Republican Linda Harper-Brown in the 2014 primary election in neighboring District 105.[13] Fallon won the general election on November 6, 2012, with 41,785 votes (83.2%) toLibertarian Party nominee Rodney Caston's 8,455 (16.8%). Fallon faced noDemocratic Party opponent in the election.[14]
Fallon co-authored a 2013 Texas law that allows students and employees ofindependent school districts to say "Merry Christmas" rather than the secular "Happy Holidays".[15]
Fallon ran unopposed for the Republican nomination in 2014 and defeated Democrat Lisa Osterholt and Libertarian Rodney Caston in the general election with 24,419 votes, almost 70% of the total.[16][17] In the 2016 Republican primary, Fallon defeated challenger Trent Trubenbach with 16,106 votes (82.9%) to Tubenbach's 3,327 (17.1%).[18] He won the general election with 80.8% of the vote.[19]
In July 2017, Fallon announced that he would challenge incumbent state SenatorCraig Estes for the Republican nomination in Senate District 30.[20] Fallon defeated Estes andNocona businessman Craig Carter in the primary on March 6, 2018, with 53,881 votes (62%). In the November 6 general election, Fallon defeated Democratic nominee Kevin Lopez with 233,949 votes (73.9%) to Lopez's 82,449 (26.1%).[21] Fallon served on the House committees on Human Services and Technology.[1]
Fallon defended his "Merry Christmas" law in an appearance onDavid Barton'sWallBuilders Liveradio program, telling co-hostRick Green, a former member of the Texas House fromHays County insuburbanAustin, that those offended by public schools hosting Christmas parties should examine their own hearts to evaluate their attitudes. Both Fallon and Green said that no citizen has a constitutional right "not to be offended". Fallon vowed to make T-shirts with a Christmas theme for pupils to wear on the day before the holiday break.[22]
In 2013 Fallon supportedTexas House Bill 2, a bill that would banabortion after 20 weeks ofgestation and require abortion providers to haveadmitting privileges at a nearby hospital. The measure passed the House, 96–49. These issues brought forth an unsuccessfulfilibuster in theTexas State Senate by SenatorWendy R. Davis.[23] Parts of the bill were later deemed unconstitutional and struck down by theSupreme Court of the United States inWhole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt. The TexasRight to Life Committee rated Fallon 100% favorable.[24]
Fallon opposed the bill to establish a taxpayer-funded breakfast program for public schools; the measure passed the House, 73–58. He co-sponsored legislation to provide marshals for school security as a separate law-enforcement entity. He co-sponsored the successful bill to extend thefranchise tax exemption to certain small businesses. He voted to require testing fornarcotics of those individuals receivingunemployment compensation.[25]
Fallon co-sponsored the measure to forbid the state from engaging in the enforcement of federal regulations of firearms. He co-sponsored legislation to allow college and university officials tocarry concealed weapons on campus and in vehicles in the name of security. He voted to reduce the time required to obtain a concealed-carry permit. Fallon voted forterm limits for certain state officials. To protect election integrity, Fallon supported legislation to forbid an individual from turning in multiple ballots.[25]
ThePACT ACT which expandedVA benefits to veterans exposed to toxic chemicals during their military service, received a "nay" from Fallon.[26] Regarding cannabis, despite lobbying fromVSOs such as theDAV,[27] Fallon also voted against the2022 MORE Act.[28]
In 2018, Fallon was criticized[29] for his remarks about state representativeMary González, an openlypansexual woman, while delivering a speech to the localWichita County Republican Women's group.TheEl Paso Times quoted Fallon:
"You can’t be gay anymore. It’s like the whole alphabet soup now — lesbian, transgender, bisexual, questioning. There’s something called pansexual."
Fallon later apologized,[30] saying, "It was an innocent little comment about mocking the labeling, not a person."
In 2015 Fallon was named one of "The 3 Worst North Texas Legislators" byD Magazine, which wrote, "Fallon has a lawyerlike relationship with the truth" and was "vindictive, and he’ll say anything to get what he wants".[31]
By contrast,Phyllis Schlafly'sEagle Forum, managed in Texas byCathie Adams, a former state chairman of theTexas Republican Party and a Fallon supporter,[32] rated Fallon 95%. TheYoung Conservatives of Texas scored him 92%. The TexasLeague of Conservation Voters rated him 25%; Environment Texas, 28%.Texans for Fiscal Responsibility rated Fallon 98%; the Texas Association of Business, 80%. TheNRA Political Victory Fund rated him "A+".[33][24]
In May 2020, Fallon launched a campaign forTexas's 4th congressional district to replace former U.S. representativeJohn Ratcliffe, who resigned to becomeDirector of National Intelligence. On August 8, 2020, Fallon was selected to replace Ratcliffe on the November ballot by the 18 county Republican Party chairs and precinct chairs in the district, winning the nomination with 82 votes to his nearest opponent's 34.[34] Fallon faced Democrat Russell Foster in the November general election. According toThe Texas Tribune, the district was so heavily gerrymandered that the county Republican chairs effectively chose Ratcliffe's successor when they chose Fallon to replace him as the Republican nominee.[35]
As expected, Fallon won the general election in a landslide, with 75% of the vote to Foster's 22%. When he took office, he was only the sixth person to represent this district since its creation in 1903.
On January 6, 2021, Fallon, along with 147 of his fellow congressionalRepublicans, voted toblock certification of the results for President-electJoe Biden's 2020 United States presidential election.[36]
Fallon voted to include provisions for drafting women in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2022.[37]
In March 2023, Fallon was one of 26 Republicans sitting on the House Oversight and Accountability Committee who refused to join their Democratic counterparts in signing a letter denouncingwhite supremacy and racistconspiracy theories.[38]
Fallon was among the 71 Republicans who voted against final passage of theFiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 in the House.[39]
Fallon voted to provide Israel with support following2023 Hamas attack on Israel.[40][41]
On November 13, 2023, it was reported that Fallon had filed to run for thestate senate seat he once held, opening up his congressional seat in the2024 election.[42] Fallon reversed course the next day, even after his potential return to theTexas Senate received an endorsement from Lieutenant GovernorDan Patrick, and announced that he would instead seek reelection to his current House seat after all.[43]
On July 29, 2024, Fallon was announced as one of seven Republican members of a bipartisan task force investigating theattempted assassination of Donald Trump.[44]
In February 2022, theOffice of Congressional Ethics (OCE) board filed a report stating that there was "substantial reason to believe" that Fallon had violated a federal stock law.[48] TheHouse Committee on Ethics released that report on May 31, 2022, indicating that it was investigating Fallon over repeated reporting violations of theSTOCK Act, enacted in 2012 to preventinsider trading using non-public information by members of Congress and other government employees. Members of Congress are required to report any stock transaction over $1,000 within 45 days. Violations are subject to a $200 fine.[48]
The OCE report stated that during the first half of 2021, Fallon filed late reports representing as much as $17.53 million in trades. An OCE review of his record began in the fall of 2021. Reports for trades made in December 2021 again missed the required filing date. The OCE report states, "Rep. Fallon produced a limited set of documents to the OCE and declined to interview with the OCE. This non-cooperation undermined the OCE's ability to verify Rep. Fallon's overall STOCK Act compliance and to fully assess the reasons for his late filings."[48][49]
Fallon initially claimed he thought that reporting was required annually, as in the Texas legislature. On March 18, 2022, one of his lawyers, Kate Belinski, sent the OCE a letter insisting that Fallon's beliefs were "a common misconception, which, coupled with the overwhelming amount of information new members and their staff receive at the beginning of their terms, often results in inadvertent late disclosures." She insisted that Fallon had cooperated by providing the documents OCE requested.[48] But the OCE report noted Fallon's "late disclosure of reportable transactions, which continued even after he was on notice of his STOCK Act filing obligations."[48][49][50]
Fallon was named as part of theTrump campaign's Texas leadership team in March.[51]
Fallon is married to Susan Kimberly Garner; they have two sons.[1]
During his tenure in the state senate, Fallon lived in the Denton County portion ofProsper, which was just outside the 4th's boundaries. While candidates for the House are only constitutionally required to live in the state they wish to represent, longstanding convention holds that they live either in or reasonably close to the district they wish to represent.
Fallon is a member of Holy Cross Catholic Church inThe Colony. He is a donor toDallas Baptist University, Frisco Family Services, and theBoys & Girls Clubs of America.[10]
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)Texas House of Representatives | ||
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Preceded by | Member of theTexas State Representative from the 106th district 2013–2019 | Succeeded by |
Texas Senate | ||
Preceded by | Member of theTexas Senate from the30th district 2019–2021 | Succeeded by |
U.S. House of Representatives | ||
Preceded by | Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromTexas's 4th congressional district 2021–present | Incumbent |
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial) | ||
Preceded by | United States representatives by seniority 253rd | Succeeded by |