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American politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Starr (born c. 1933) is an American politician and farmer in Oregon. He served as a Republican member of the Oregon Legislature for 14 years, serving in both houses. A native of Texas, Starr served in the Oregon State Senate with his son Bruce Starr, the first time in Oregon's history a father and son served in the Senate together.
Charles Starr | |
---|---|
Member of the Oregon State Senate | |
In office 1999–2007 | |
Preceded by | Jeannette Hamby |
Succeeded by | Larry George |
Member of the Oregon House of Representatives | |
In office 1993–1999 | |
Succeeded by | Bruce Starr |
Personal details | |
Born | circa 1933 (age 90–91) Texas |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Kathy Starr |
Children | Bruce Starr |
Residence | Hillsboro, Oregon |
Alma mater | University of Idaho |
Occupation | Farmer, contractor |
Charles Starr was born around 1933 and raised in the central part of Texas.[1] The son of an oil driller, he attended 19 different schools between first grade and sixth grade.[1] Starr married Kathy and they would have four children, all boys; Bryan, West, Alan, and Bruce.[2][3] Charles earned a bachelor's degree in agriculture in 1955 from the University of Idaho and then worked for a year as an agricultural teacher.[2] He would serve in the United States Army from 1956 to 1958.[2] He earned a master's degree from the University of California, Davis in 1960 in agribusiness management.[2]
Starr moved to Oregon in 1962 and began working at Farmers Oil Cooperative in McMinnville, followed by a job at Pacific Farmers Cooperative in Hillsboro.[2][3] He left Pacific in 1969 and spent ten years working for Flavorland Foods before becoming a general contractor in 1979.[2] Living in Hillsboro, he remained a contractor and also farmed until retirement in 2002.[2] He had operated Starr Boys Garden Center.[1]
Starr started his political career serving on the school board of Groner Elementary School south of Hillsboro, and now part of the Hillsboro School District.[1] He then joined the Hillsboro Union High School Board, spending a total of 12 years on the two boards.[1] He made an unsuccessful bid for a seat on the Washington County Board of Commissioners in 1986.[2] A conservative Christian politician,[4] Starr was elected to the Oregon House of Representatives as a Republican representing Hillsboro and Washington County in 1992.[5] Entering state politics at age 59, he defeated Democrat Pat Kliewer to represent the area surrounding most of Hillsboro, Forest Grove, and Cornelius.[1]
He was re-elected to the same seat in 1994[6] and 1996.[7] Both times he defeated Democrat Marcus Simantel in the November elections.[8] Son Bruce served as his legislative assistant during these terms.[3]
After three terms in the House, he was elected to the State Senate in 1998, while his son Bruce Starr was elected to his former House seat.[9] Starr was prohibited at the time by Oregon's term limits from another term in the House, pushing towards a run at the state senate.[10] A pro-life advocate, he had defeated incumbent and pro-choice Republican state senator Jeannette Hamby in the Republican primary.[11] In 1999, he helped to pass Oregon's charter school bill.[12]
In the legislature he was a proponent of home schooling and charter schools, while opposing same-sex unions.[13] Starr ran for Oregon's 1st Congressional District in 2000, defeating Alice Schlenker in the May primary with 62% of the vote compared to 38%.[14][15] He lost to incumbent Democrat David Wu in the November general election.[16] He had received support in his bid from Oregon business interests including Intel due to Wu's vote against free trade with China.[4]
In 2002, the Oregon Supreme Court stuck down Oregon's 1992 law imposing term limits for state legislators.[17] Prior to the ruling, Starr would not have been able to run for re-election to the state senate as he had served 10 years in the legislature, and the law limited people to 12 years maximum.[18] He had been a proponent of term limits.[12] In 2002, he was re-elected to a second four-year term in the Senate where son Bruce was also elected to serve.[19] Charles' district now included parts of Marion, Clackamas, Yamhill, and Washington counties.[19]
Charles and Bruce were the first father-son tandem to serve at the same time in the history of the Oregon State Senate.[20][21] In 2003, Charles Starr created some controversy when he told a constituent in a letter to "run - not walk - to remove their children from public schools" in response to the constituent's opposition to charter schools.[22] At the time, Starr was chairman of the Senate Education Committee, and in June 2003 his lawn was filled with plastic pink flamingos paid for by a fundraising campaign at a local elementary school.[22] Democrats called for Starr to be replaced as chairman of the education committee.[23] During the 2005 legislative session he served as vice chairman of the Education and Workforce Committee, and as vice chairman of the Judiciary Committee in the Senate.[24]
In the May 2006 Republican primary, Charles lost to Larry George who would then win the general election in November, and joined his own father in the Senate.[20][25] The loss was attributed in part to Starr's voting record that included raising taxes, with an anti-tax group contributing $50,000 to his opponent during the election.[13] With the loss in the primary, Charles' time in the Oregon Legislative Assembly ended after 14 years.[20][25]
After leaving the legislature Starr began working as a lobbyist at the state capitol in 2007.[26] He publicly opposed a bill that prohibited discrimination based on sexual orientation that same year.[27] He also came out against dual-language immersion programs over concerns that teachers were not properly trained and students would not be able to learn to read at an early age.[28]
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