Jake Ellzey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ellzey was born in Amarillo, Texas, and raised in Perryton.[5] He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in political science from the United States Naval Academy in 1992.[6] Ellzey was deployed nine times in his 20 years in the Navy before becoming a commercial airline pilot.[7]

Career

Lieutenant Ellzey studies a map during a mission in 1997
Ellzey meeting with Rear Admiral Richard O'Hanlon in 2009

Since retiring from the Navy, Ellzey has worked as a pilot for Southwest Airlines[8] and as a consultant. He was also a social aide in the White House Office during the Bush administration.[9] From 2012 to 2018, he was one of five commissioners of the Texas Veterans Commission.[10]

In 2018, Ellzey was an unsuccessful candidate for Texas's 6th congressional district. During his campaign, he was endorsed by The Dallas Morning News.[11] He placed second in the Republican primary, behind Ron Wright, who won the general election.

Ellzey was elected to the Texas House of Representatives in 2020. He took office on January 12, 2021.[2] He resigned in July 2021 to take his seat in Congress. Governor Greg Abbott set August 31, 2021, as the special election date for the Texas State House of Representatives District 10 seat that Ellzey vacated.[12][13] Republican Brian Harrison won the seat, defeating the representative who previously held the seat, John Wray.

U.S. House of Representatives

Elections

2021 special

On February 26, 2021, Ellzey announced his candidacy in Texas's 6th congressional district special election to replace Ron Wright, who died in office on February 7.[14][15][16][17] In the 23-candidate nonpartisan blanket primary, Ellzey finished second to Wright's widow Susan, who had been endorsed by former President Donald Trump, and 354 votes ahead of Democrat Jana Sanchez. On May 2, Sanchez conceded to Ellzey.[18] Governor Greg Abbott set July 27 as the special election runoff date.[19] Ellzey defeated Wright in the runoff, 53% to 47%.[20] He was sworn in on July 30, 2021.[8]

2022

Ellzey defeated James Buford and Bill Payne in the Republican primary election, and was re-elected unopposed in the general election.[21]

2024

Ellzey received support from AIPAC and Pro-Israel America in his re-election campaign.[22][23] He defeated Democrat John Love III, a former member of the Midland city council, in the general election with 66.4% of the vote.[24]

Tenure

At the start of the 118th Congress, Ellzey supported Rep. Kevin McCarthy in his bid for the House speakership, voting for him in all 15 rounds.[25]

Ellzey later opposed the October 2023 vote to remove McCarthy as speaker, which ultimately succeeded 216–210.[26] In the succeeding election for the next speaker, Ellzey was one of 18 Republicans who voted against Jim Jordan's nomination for Speaker of the House all three times. He would ultimately support the new nominee, Mike Johnson, in the fourth and final ballot.[27]

Ellzey was part of a bipartisan congressional delegation that visited Tel Aviv in June 2024, meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defense minister Yoav Gallant.[28][29]

Committee assignments

For the 119th Congress:[30]

Caucus memberships

Political positions

Texas Central Railway

Ellzey described the Texas Central Railway bullet train project as "all one big grift" and applauded the Trump administration’s decision to pull their 64 million dollar grant from the project.[34]

Israel

Ellzey voted to provide Israel with support following 2023 Hamas attack on Israel.[35][36]

Veterans

The PACT ACT which expanded Veterans Affairs benefits to veterans exposed to toxic chemicals during their military service, received a "nay" from Ellzey.[37]

Abortion

In January 2025, Ellzey cosponsored fellow GOP House member Eric Burlison's bill recognizing personhood as starting at conception.[38]

Electoral history

2018

Republican primary results, 2018[39]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ron Wright 20,659 45.1
Republican Jake Ellzey 9,956 21.7
Republican Ken Cope 3,527 7.7
Republican Shannon Dubberly 2,880 6.3
Republican Mark Mitchell 2,141 4.7
Republican Troy Ratterree 1,854 4.0
Republican Kevin Harrison 1,768 3.9
Republican Deborah Gagliardi 1,674 3.7
Republican Thomas Dillingham 543 1.2
Republican Shawn Dandridge 517 1.1
Republican Mel Hassell 266 0.6
Total votes 45,785 100.0
Republican primary runoff results, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ron Wright 12,747 52.2
Republican Jake Ellzey 11,686 47.8
Total votes 24,433 100

2020

Election results:[40]

District Democratic Republican Libertarian Total Result
District 10--65,06275.83%20,73324.17%85,795100.00%Republican Hold

2021

Texas's 6th congressional district special election, 2021[41]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Susan Wright 15,052 19.21
Republican Jake Ellzey 10,851 13.85
Democratic Jana Sanchez 10,497 13.39
Republican Brian Harrison 8,476 10.81
Democratic Shawn Lassiter 6,964 8.89
Republican John Anthony Castro 4,321 5.51
Democratic Tammy Allison Holloway 4,238 5.41
Democratic Lydia Bean 2,920 3.73
Republican Michael Wood 2,503 3.19
Republican Michael Ballantine 2,224 2.84
Republican Dan Rodimer 2,086 2.66
Democratic Daryl J. Eddings Sr. 1,652 2.11
Republican Mike Egan 1,543 1.97
Democratic Patrick Moses 1,189 1.52
Democratic Manuel R. Salazar III 1,119 1.43
Republican Sery Kim 888 1.13
Republican Travis Rodermund 460 0.59
Independent Adrian Mizher 351 0.45
Democratic Brian K. Stephenson 271 0.35
Libertarian Phil Gray 265 0.34
Democratic Matthew Hinterlong 252 0.32
Republican Jennifer Garcia Sharon 150 0.19
Democratic Chris Suprun 102 0.13
Total votes 78,374 100

2021 (runoff)

2021 Texas' 6th congressional district special election runoff[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jake Ellzey 20,837 53.27
Republican Susan Wright 18,279 46.73
Total votes 39,116 100.00
Republican hold

2022

2022 Texas' 6th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jake Ellzey (incumbent) 149,321 100.00
Total votes 149,321 100.00
Republican hold

2024

2024 Texas's 6th congressional district election[42]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jake Ellzey (incumbent) 188,119 65.7
Democratic John Love III 98,319 34.3
Total votes 286,438 100.0
Republican hold

Personal life

References

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