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Geanie Morrison
Texas state legislator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Geanie Williams Morrison (born October 6, 1950)[1] is a Texas state representative from Victoria. A Republican, she represented District 30 from January 12, 1999 to January 14, 2025.[2][3]
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Personal life
Morrison attended Victoria College.[1] She has two children and two grandchildren with her husband Jack.[4]
Career
Before serving in the House of Representatives, Morrison served as the executive director of the Governor's Commission for Women.[3] She was appointed by then-Governor George W. Bush to the Texas Commission for Volunteerism and Community Service and the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission.[3]
Legislative career
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In 1999, Morrison introduced legislation creating the Safe-haven law. This law decriminalizes the leaving of unharmed infants with statutorily designated private persons so that the child becomes a ward of the state in order to eliminate child abandonment. Morrison's legislation became a blueprint and by 2008 similar laws were adopted across the country.[5]
Morrison was the first chairperson of the Environmental Regulation Committee when it was created in 2015.[6] As part of her work on the committee, she championed a bill that weakened environmental protections in an effort to encourage employers to move to Texas or to stay in the state.[7]
In 2018, she was elected to the 86th legislature with 74.7% of the vote, beating Robin Hayter.[8] Morrison served on the Culture, Recreation & Tourism Committee, the Environmental Regulation Committee, the Mass Violence Prevention & Community Safety Committee, and chaired the Local & Consent Calendars Committee.[3] She represented parts of Aransas, Calhoun, De Witt, Goliad, Refugio, and Victoria counties.[3]
Morrison had a primary challenger[9] but was unopposed in the 2020 general election.[2] She briefly was in the running to become Speaker of the House for the 87th legislature, but withdrew after only a week, throwing her support to Dade Phelan.[2] Later, she put her name back into contention for the speakership.[10] Her office was involved in removing a statue of a Confederate soldier in 2020.[11]
On May 27, 2023, Morrison voted against impeaching Ken Paxton.[12] She was succeeded by AJ Louderback in 2024.[13]
References
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