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Chip Pickering hails from Laurel, Mississippi. Currently serving his
fifth term representing Mississippi’s Third District, he was
first elected to Congress in 1996, at the young age of 33. Chip serves
as Vice Chairman of the House Energy & Commerce Committee. He
is assistant majority whip in the House of Representatives.
Before
coming to Congress, Chip pioneered the first full-time presence by
a Southern Baptist missionary behind the Iron Curtain in Budapest,
the capital of then communist Hungary. President George H. W. Bush
appointed Pickering to the United States Department of Agriculture
to bring economic and democratic reform to Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union.
Later,
as a member of Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott’s staff, and
as a professional staff member on the Senate Commerce Committee, Chip
helped shape the landmark Telecommunications Act of 1996. He continues
to be a leader on telecommunications and technology issues reflecting
the growing importance of these industries to Mississippi’s
future.
Chip
served as George W. Bush’s Co-Chairman of Mississippi for Bush
2000
and Bush 2004. Chip’s ever growing record of achievement has
earned him a reputation as an effective voice for Mississippi’s
interests, a rising star in the Congress, and champion for the changes
that are transforming America’s economy in this century and
beyond.
Chip
holds a bachelors degree in business administration from the University
of Mississippi and a masters degree in business administration from
Baylor University. He and his wife Leisha have five sons: Will, Ross,
Jackson, Asher, and Harper. They reside on a small farm in rural Madison
County.