Thomas Washburne

American politician
Thomas Washburne
Member of the Indiana House of Representatives
from the 64th district
In office
2013–2019
Preceded byKreg Battles[1]
Succeeded byMatthew Hostettler
Personal details
BornPrinceton, Indiana
Political partyRepublican
Residence(s)Inglefield, Indiana
EducationPurdue University, Indiana University
Alma materPrinceton Community High School
OccupationAttorney

Thomas Washburne (c. 1963 – ) is a Republican member of the Indiana House of Representatives, representing the 64th District since 2013.[2] In 2017, Washburne announced that he would not be running for reelection to the State House.[3]

Personal details

Thomas Washburne was born around 1963 and comes from Princeton, Indiana. He has five children.[4] He resides in Inglefield, Indiana.

Career

An attorney, Washburne has worked for multiple law firms and represented two Indiana members of the US Congress, including United States Representative John Hostettler, as their chief of staff. Washburne is currently an attorney at Old National Bank in Evansville, Indiana.[5]

Politics

Washburne was reelected to his seat in the Indiana House of Representatives in 2014 after running unopposed in the republican primary and in the general election.

In 2012, Washburne defeated James Amick in the republican primary election and won the 64th district seat against democratic opponent Mark Norton.

Indiana House of Representatives, District 64, Election Results, November 6, 2012[6]

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Thomas Washburne Republican 17,133 58.3%
Mark Norton Democrat 12,255 41.7%

Issues

Capital punishment

Washburne spent the 2015 legislative session pushing for more severe capital punishments for specific aggravators as chair of the House Courts and Criminal Code Committee. Senate Bill 385,[7] which passed the Senate and has moved on to the House, would allow for defendants to receive the death penalty or a conviction of life without parole if they are charged of committing murder on a school grounds or in a place of religious worship. Washburne, who is a strong supporter of capital punishment, says that both of those situations warrant being added to the list of aggravators, which already includes defendants charged with dismembering a body.[8][9]

Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 2015

Washburne also voted for Indiana's version of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which was signed into law by Indiana Gov. Mike Pence on April 2, 2015.[10] He supports the law, which protects Indiana businesses and business owners' freedom of religion and does not allow for interference from state and local government. Washburne says it's important that citizens of Indiana have religious freedoms, even those that others "might be appalled by."[11]

References

  1. ^ "List of All Offices and Office Holders". 5 March 2015.
  2. ^ Bradner, Eric; Orr, Susan (Nov 6, 2012). "UPDATE: McNamara, Becker win re-election to Indiana Legislature". Evansville Courier & Press.
  3. ^ "State Rep. Tom Washburne will retire after 2018".
  4. ^ Castillo, Eddie (January 28, 2013). "Q&A: Meet Rep. Thomas Washburne, pushing a conservative platform". THESTATEHOUSEFILE.COM. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  5. ^ Bradner, Orr, Eric, Susan (November 6, 2012). "UPDATE: McNamara, Becker win re-election to Indiana Legislature". Evansville Courier and Press. Retrieved 9 April 2015.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ "Election Results". Indiana Secretary of State. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  7. ^ "Senate Bill No. 385". Indiana General Assembly. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  8. ^ Guerra, Kristine (March 10, 2015). "Bill allowing death penalty in school shootings has good chance in House committee". Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  9. ^ "House Committee Approves One Expansion Of Death Penalty". WBIW. April 3, 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  10. ^ Cook, Tony (April 2, 2015). "Gov. Mike Pence signs 'religious freedom' bill in private". Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  11. ^ STRICHERZ, MARK (March 27, 2015). "Gay Couples Couldn't Demand Business Services Under Indiana Bill". aletia. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  • Indiana State Legislature - Representative Thomas Washburne Official government website
  • Project Vote Smart - Representative Thomas Washburne (IN) profile
  • v
  • t
  • e
123rd General Assembly (2023–2024)
Speaker
Todd Huston (R)
Majority Leader
Matt Lehman (R)
Minority Leader
Phil GiaQuinta (D)
  1. Carolyn Jackson (D)
  2. Earl Harris Jr. (D)
  3. Ragen Hatcher (D)
  4. Edmond Soliday (R)
  5. Dale DeVon (R)
  6. Maureen Bauer (D)
  7. Jake Teshka (R)
  8. Ryan Dvorak (D)
  9. Pat Boy (D)
  10. Charles Moseley (D)
  11. Michael Aylesworth (R)
  12. Mike Andrade (D)
  13. Sharon Negele (R)
  14. Vernon Smith (D)
  15. Hal Slager (R)
  16. Kendell Culp (R)
  17. Jack Jordan (R)
  18. David Abbott (R)
  19. Julie Olthoff (R)
  20. Jim Pressel (R)
  21. Timothy Wesco (R)
  22. Craig Snow (R)
  23. Ethan Manning (R)
  24. Donna Schaibley (R)
  25. Becky Cash (R)
  26. Chris Campbell (D)
  27. Sheila Klinker (D)
  28. Jeff Thompson (R)
  29. Chuck Goodrich (R)
  30. Michael Karickhoff (R)
  31. Lori Goss-Reaves (R)
  32. Victoria Wilburn (D)
  33. John Prescott (R)
  34. Sue Errington (D)
  35. Elizabeth Rowray (R)
  36. Kyle Pierce (R)
  37. Todd Huston (R)
  38. Heath VanNatter (R)
  39. Jerry Torr (R)
  40. Greg Steuerwald (R)
  41. Mark Genda (R)
  42. Alan Morrison (R)
  43. Tonya Pfaff (D)
  44. Beau Baird (R)
  45. Bruce Borders (R)
  46. Bob Heaton (R)
  47. Robb Greene (R)
  48. Douglas Miller (R)
  49. Joanna King (R)
  50. Lorissa Sweet (R)
  51. Dennis Zent (R)
  52. Ben Smaltz (R)
  53. Bob Cherry (R)
  54. Cory Criswell (R)
  55. Lindsay Patterson (R)
  56. Bradford Barrett (R)
  57. Craig Haggard (R)
  58. Michelle Davis (R)
  59. Ryan Lauer (R)
  60. Peggy Mayfield (R)
  61. Matt Pierce (D)
  62. Dave Hall (R)
  63. Shane Lindauer (R)
  64. Matt Hostettler (R)
  65. Christopher May (R)
  66. Zach Payne (R)
  67. Alex Zimmerman (R)
  68. Randy Lyness (R)
  69. Jim Lucas (R)
  70. Karen Engleman (R)
  71. Wendy Dant Chesser (D)
  72. Edward Clere (R)
  73. Jennifer Meltzer (R)
  74. Stephen Bartels (R)
  75. Cindy Ledbetter (R)
  76. Wendy McNamara (R)
  77. Ryan Hatfield (D)
  78. Tim O'Brien (R)
  79. Matt Lehman (R)
  80. Phil GiaQuinta (D)
  81. Martin Carbaugh (R)
  82. Kyle Miller (D)
  83. Christopher Judy (R)
  84. Robert Morris (R)
  85. Dave Heine (R)
  86. Ed DeLaney (D)
  87. Carey Hamilton (D)
  88. Chris Jeter (R)
  89. Mitch Gore (D)
  90. Mike Speedy (R)
  91. Robert Behning (R)
  92. Renee Pack (D)
  93. Julie McGuire (R)
  94. Cherrish Pryor (D)
  95. John Bartlett (D)
  96. Greg Porter (D)
  97. Justin Moed (D)
  98. Robin Shackleford (D)
  99. Vanessa Summers (D)
  100. Blake Johnson (D)