Barbara Vucanovich - Political Career

Political Career

Vucanovich's husband, Ken Dillon introduced her to Nevada Republican politics in the 1950s, when the party was slowly building after decades of being in the minority. Ken introduced her to a young district attorney from Carson City named Paul Laxalt. After working on Laxalt's gubernatorial campaigns and his razor close win over Harry Reid in 1974, Vucanovich was hired as the district director for the newly elected Senator.

When Nevada was split into two congressional districts after 1980 Census, Laxalt urged Vucanovich to run for the 2nd District, which included the entire state outside of Las Vegas. She won handily and served in Congress from 1983 until her retirement in 1997. She only faced serious opposition once, in 1992.

Shortly after taking office in 1983 she was diagnosed and had surgery for breast cancer. Vucanovich served for many years on the House Interior Committee, where she eventually became the ranking Republican on the Mining and Minerals Subcommittee. She also served on the House Administration Committee until her appointment in 1991 to the Appropriations Committee. She became Chairwoman of the Subcommittee on Military Construction when the Republicans gained control of the House of Representatives in 1995.

She launched a campaign to become Secretary of the Republican Conference shortly after Congressman Bob Michel announced he would not seek another term, creating several vacancies in Republican leadership as Newt Gingrich and others jockied for higher positions in leadership. Despite having been a member of the Conservative Opportunity Society, a group led by Newt Gingrich with the goal of achieving Republican control of the House of Representatives, she faced serious opposition in her leadership bid from a freshman member from Arkansas. She prevailed in a close contest for Secretary after a rousing nomination speech by Congressman Henry Hyde of Illinois a good friend and ally in their shared opposition to abortion.

Vucanovich positioned herself early in her House career as a conservative leader, aligning herself with a group of Members including, Newt Gingrich, Bob Walker, and Vin Weber who were not content with minority status. She helped draft two of the ten bills that were part of the Contract with America. She served on the Presidential Debate Commission from 1987 to 1997.

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