WASHINGTON, JAN. 16, 2007-Former Missouri Sen.
Jim Talent has been named a distinguished fellow at The Heritage
Foundation, where he will specialize in military readiness and
welfare reform issues, the prominent think tank announced
today.
In announcing the appointment,Heritage President Ed Feulner
praised Talent as "uniquely qualified" to provide policy
recommendations on these two disparate issues. "Jim not only
understands the policy pressure points of debate over defense and
welfare issues, he has experience writing legislation addressing
these critical issues," Feulner said. "This gives him practical
skills and insights beyond what most experts offer."
One of Talent's objectives at Heritage is to raise
awareness-within Congress and throughout the country-of the
importance of assuring stable, robust funding of America's
military, in peace as well as war.
As a member of the House Armed Services Committee, Talent was in
the thick of the debate over strengthening the armed forces, taking
a firm stance to protect America's military from cuts in size and
funding. Such activism dates to his freshman year in the House in
1993, when he formed a special congressional panel to address the
decline in readiness.
He continued to focus on defense issues in the upper
chamber. He served as a member of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, and chaired the Sea Power Subcommittee for four
years.
Talent also was a leading voice on welfare issues throughout his
Congressional career. As a freshman member of the U.S. House
of Representatives, he introduced the Real Welfare Reform Act of
1994. This proposal subsequently became the basis for the
bipartisan reforms enacted as the Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Act of 1996. The legislation is credited with moving
4.2 million welfare recipients from dependency on the government to
jobs and self-sufficiency.
As a Senator, he introduced the Compassion and Personal
Responsibility Act of 2003 to build on the success of the 1996
welfare reform package. He designed the anti-poverty measure to
assist more citizens to realize the American dream through
opportunity, work, independence and healthy marriages. Talent also
was chairman of the House Committee on Small Business.
Talent's political career began in 1984, when, at age 28, he was
elected to the Missouri House of Representatives. His legislative
successes there over eight years included measures to build roads,
toughen drug laws, secure taxpayer rights and reduce taxes. At 32,
he was chosen unanimously by colleagues as minority leader, the
highest-ranking Republican position in the Missouri House. He
served in that role until 1992, when he was elected to Congress
representing Missouri's Second District.
After serving eight years in Congress, Talent ran unsuccessfully
for Missouri governor in 2000 before winning a seat in the U.S.
Senate in a special election in 2002. He narrowly lost his bid for
a second Senate term this November.
Talent was born and raised in Des Peres, Mo. He is a 1978
graduate of Washington University in St. Louis, where he received
the Arnold J. Lien Prize for most outstanding political science
student. He graduated Order of the Coif from University of
Chicago Law School in 1981, then clerked for Judge Richard Posner
of the U.S. Court of Appeals for two years. He and his wife,
Brenda, have three children. The family lives in Chesterfield,
Mo.
The Heritage Foundation is the nation's most broadly supported
public policy research institute, drawing financial support from
the voluntary donations of more than 275,000 individuals,
foundations and corporations. The 33-year-old institution has a
staff of nearly 200.