Difference between revisions of "Roger Wicker"

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{{Officeholder
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{{Officeholder
 
|name=Roger Wicker
 
|name=Roger Wicker
 
|image=000Wicker.jpg‎
 
|image=000Wicker.jpg‎
 
|party=[[Republican]]
 
|party=[[Republican]]
 
|spouse=Gayle Wicker
 
|spouse=Gayle Wicker
|religion=Baptist
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|religion=[[Baptist]]
 
|offices=
 
|offices=
 
{{Officeholder/senator
 
{{Officeholder/senator
 
|state=Mississippi
 
|state=Mississippi
|terms=December 31, 2007 – Present
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|terms=December 31, 2007 – present
 
|preceded=[[Trent Lott]]
 
|preceded=[[Trent Lott]]
|former=n
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|status=s
 
|succeeded=
 
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|terms=January 4, 1995 – December 31, 2007
 
|terms=January 4, 1995 – December 31, 2007
 
|preceded=Jamie Whitten
 
|preceded=Jamie Whitten
|former=n
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|former=y
 
|succeeded=Travis Childers
 
|succeeded=Travis Childers
 
}}
 
}}
 
}}
 
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'''Roger Frederick Wicker''' (born July 5, 1951 in Pontotoc, Mississippi) is the junior [[United States Senator]] from [[Mississippi]] and a member of the [[Republican Party]]. After being appointed by [[Governor]] [[Haley Barbour]] in December 2007 upon the resignation of Senator [[Trent Lott]], Wicker was elected to a term in his own right in 2008 with 55% of the vote. He has voted with a majority of his Republican colleagues 87.3% of the time during the current [[Congress]]. <ref>http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/W000437/</ref>
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'''Roger Frederick Wicker''' (born July 5, 1951 in Pontotoc, Mississippi) is the senior [[United States Senator]] from [[Mississippi]] and a member of the [[Republican Party]]. After being appointed by [[Governor]] [[Haley Barbour]] in December 2007 upon the resignation of Senator [[Trent Lott]], Wicker was elected in his own right in 2008 to complete the remainder of the term with 55% of the vote. He would win re-election in 2012, 2018, and 2024, easily defeating his opponents in the predominantly Republican state.
  
Wicker serves on the Committe on Armed Services, Commerce, Science and Transportation, Foreign Relations, Small Business and Entrepreneurship and Veterans' Affairs. Prior to serving in the Senate, Roger represented Mississippi’s First Congressional District in the [[U.S. House of Representatives]], having been elected in the 1994 Republican Revolution and reelected six times.  
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He has voted with a majority of his Republican colleagues 87.3% of the time during the current [[Congress]].<ref>http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/W000437/</ref>
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For the 119th Congress Wicker serves on the following Senate Committees:
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*[[Senate Armed Services Committee|Armed Services]] (where he is the chair; by rule he is ''ex officio'' a member of all its subcommittees)
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*Commerce, Science and Transportation
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*Environment and Public Works
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*Rules
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In addition, he serves as the chair of the Senate Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
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Prior to serving in the Senate, Roger represented Mississippi's First Congressional District in the [[U.S. House of Representatives]], having been elected in the 1994 Republican Revolution and reelected six times.  
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In 2013 a letter with ricin was sent to Wicker. It was intercepted by the FBI. The transmitter is unknown.<ref>https://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/04/17/envelope-containing-ricin-sent-to-sen-wicker-lawmakers-say/</ref>
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
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{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
  
{{DEFAULTSORT: Wicker, Roger}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Wicker, Roger}}
 
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[[Category:United States Senators]]
 
[[Category:United States Senators]]
 
[[Category:111th United States Congress]]
 
[[Category:111th United States Congress]]
 
[[Category:112th United States Congress]]
 
[[Category:112th United States Congress]]
 
[[Category:113th United States Congress]]
 
[[Category:113th United States Congress]]
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[[Category:114th United States Congress]]
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[[Category:Pro Patriot Act]]
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[[Category:Warmongers]]

Latest revision as of 22:45, May 22, 2026

Roger Wicker
000Wicker.jpg
Senior U.S. Senator from Mississippi
From: December 31, 2007 – present
Predecessor Trent Lott
Successor Incumbent (no successor)
Former U.S. Representative from Mississippi's 1st Congressional District
From: January 4, 1995 – December 31, 2007
Predecessor Jamie Whitten
Successor Travis Childers
Information
Party Republican
Spouse(s) Gayle Wicker
Religion Baptist

Roger Frederick Wicker (born July 5, 1951 in Pontotoc, Mississippi) is the senior United States Senator from Mississippi and a member of the Republican Party. After being appointed by Governor Haley Barbour in December 2007 upon the resignation of Senator Trent Lott, Wicker was elected in his own right in 2008 to complete the remainder of the term with 55% of the vote. He would win re-election in 2012, 2018, and 2024, easily defeating his opponents in the predominantly Republican state.

He has voted with a majority of his Republican colleagues 87.3% of the time during the current Congress.[1]

For the 119th Congress Wicker serves on the following Senate Committees:

  • Armed Services (where he is the chair; by rule he is ex officio a member of all its subcommittees)
  • Commerce, Science and Transportation
  • Environment and Public Works
  • Rules

In addition, he serves as the chair of the Senate Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe

Prior to serving in the Senate, Roger represented Mississippi's First Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives, having been elected in the 1994 Republican Revolution and reelected six times.

In 2013 a letter with ricin was sent to Wicker. It was intercepted by the FBI. The transmitter is unknown.[2]

External links

References