Steve Toth

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Steve Toth
SteveTothTheWoodlandsTX07JUNE2019.jpg
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 15th district
Assumed office
January 8, 2019
Preceded byMark Keough
In office
January 8, 2013 – January 13, 2015
Preceded byRob Eissler
Succeeded byMark Keough
Personal details
Born (1960-11-29) November 29, 1960 (age 60)
New York, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Babette Jayne Toth
Children3
ResidenceConroe, Texas, U.S.
Alma materRochester Bible College
OccupationBusinessman and former pastor
WebsiteOfficial campaign website

Steven Hixson Toth (born November 29, 1960)[1] is an American businessman and politician serving as a member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 15.[2]

Early life and education[]

Born and raised in New York, Toth attended Pittsford Mendon High School in suburban Rochester. He also attended Rochester Bible College.[3]

Career[]

Toth owns Acclaim Pools and My Pool Xpert in The Woodlands. He also works as a real estate agent.[4] He is a former pastor at Family Life Ministries of the Fellowship of The Woodlands, a congregation now known as The Woodlands Church.[5] He was formerly an elder and teacher at another non-denominational congregation, WoodsEdge Community Church also in The Woodlands, Texas.[1]

Toth is also a commentator on the political show FOX Faceoff which appears on Fox 26 Houston.[6]

Texas House of Representatives[]

Texas House District 15 is based entirely in suburban Montgomery County, part of the Houston Metro area in the southeastern portion of the state.

2012–2014[]

Toth won the 2012 election to the State House district 15. In February 2013, newly inaugurated Representative Toth was elected by his colleagues to the House Republican Caucus Policy Committee as the East Texas representative on the panel. Representative Toth was a member of two House committees: Corrections and Criminal Jurisprudence.[1]

In his first legislative session in 2013, Toth authored and carried the CSCOPE Transparency Act in the House (SB-1406). The bill brought the CSCOPE (Common Core) curriculum under the purview of the Texas State Board of Education. Toth was a co-sponsor of the measure which drew the most attention of the session, the forbidding of abortion after twenty weeks of gestation; the bill passed the House, 96-49. He voted for companion legislation to increase medical and licensing requirements of abortion providers.

He opposed the bill requiring the immunization of minors without parental consent, a measure which the House approved, 71–61. Toth co-sponsored legislation to provide marshals for school security. He co-sponsored the law to extend the franchise tax exemption to certain businesses. He co-sponsored the bill to require testing for narcotics of those receiving unemployment compensation. He voted against term limits for certain state officials because the legislation exempted both House and Senate Members.[7] He voted for the redistricting bills for the state House, the Texas Senate, and the United States House of Representatives.

Gun legislation[]

He authored the Firearms Protection Act (HB 1076) restricting federal control and regulations of firearms, which made it a Class A misdemeanor to interfere with a Texan's Second Amendment rights.[8][9] The act also protected Texas' state and local law enforcement officers from violating the U.S. Constitution, and prevented the federal government from targeting certain firearms and accessories with restrictions.[10] Texas Monthly Magazine called this the "nuttiest gun bill ever" and placed Steve on their dishonorable mention list of the worst Legislators in Texas that year.[11] Toth received assistance from Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott in drafting the bill.[12] On May 6th 2013 HB 1076 received enough votes to pass in The Texas House but was never approved by The Senate so did not become law. [13] He also supported another law allowing college and university officials to carry concealed weapons for campus security reasons. Toth supports constitutional carry for Texas.

In 2013, the Eagle Forum, founded by the late Phyllis Schlafly and managed in Texas by Cathie Adams, a former state chairman of the Texas Republican Party, rated Toth 95 percent favorable, as did the Young Conservatives of Texas.[14] Texans for Fiscal Responsibility rated him 92 percent.[14] The Texas Association of Business gave him an 80 percent score. He ranked 57 percent from the Texas League of Conservation Voters and 92 percent by the National Rifle Association.[15]

2019–present[]

Toth in March 2021

On January 11, 2019, Toth filed House Bill 792 (Senate Bill 345) with the 86th Legislature and entitled it the Jones Forest Preservation Act ("Jones Forest Act"). The Jones Forest Act protects the 1,722-acre William Goodrich Jones State Forest from development. Texas A&M University suggested that the university would develop a Texas A&M campus on the land, which sits next to The Woodlands, Texas. Neighborhood associations in the area complained that the development would add to traffic congestion and eliminate a forest that has been part of Texas heritage since 1923.[16][17] It was passed by both the Texas House and the Texas Senate and sent to Governor Greg Abbott on May 25, 2019.

In January 2019, he was appointed to the House Appropriations Committee by Texas House Speaker Dennis Bonnen.[18] On January 25, Toth along with Will Metcalf and Cecil Bell filed House Bill 1042 which would require Texas schools and law enforcement agencies to establish active shooter response plans and law enforcement agencies to conduct annual drills while also requiring law enforcement to immediately contain or eliminate a threat.[19][20]

On February 7, 2019, Toth filed the JD Lambright Local Government Ethics Reform Act (HB-1495), which requires cities, counties, and other political subdivisions statewide to post contracts they have with taxpayer-funded lobbyists and to post how much they are paying the lobbyists. It was filed in the Senate by Brandon Creighton on February 8 as Senate Bill 710. The house bill was passed by both chambers and was sent to the governor for signature on May 29, 2019.[21] Governor Abbott signed the bill into law on June 14, 2019.[22]

In February 2019, Toth co-authored Texas House Bill 1500 which would ban abortions after the detection of an unborn child's heartbeat.[23] He also co-authored Texas House Bill 896 which would prohibit abortion.[24] In March 2019, Toth became a cosponsor of SB 22 which prohibits government entities from providing taxpayer-funded resources (including cash, goods, services, and anything of value) to Planned Parenthood. It was a response to Planned Parenthood's $1-per-year rental agreement with the City of Austin for a clinic. It passed both chambers and was sent to Abbott on May 25, 2019 for signature.[25] The bill was signed into law by Abbott on June 7, 2019.[26]

On March 5, 2019, Toth introduced Texas HB 3145, the School Lunch Bill. It clarifies that each parent, including the non-custodial parent, in a divorce can visit their child during school lunch and school activities regardless of possession schedule. It passed both chambers and was sent to the governor on May 28, 2019.

In March 2019 Toth introduced Texas House Bill 2518 which aims to reduce cannabis possession from a Class B to a Class C misdemeanor. To take it down from B to C would remove jail time for simple possession (180 days is the current penalty) and lower the monetary penalty from $2,000 down to $500.[27][28]

In August 2020, Toth, along with fellow state representatives Mike Lang, Kyle Biedermann, Bill Zedler, and state senator Bob Hall sued Texas Governor Greg Abbott over a $295 million Covid-19 contact tracing contract Abbott awarded to a small Frisco, Texas technology firm without approval from the Texas legislature.[29] In May 2020, Toth protested Abbott's lockdown order by getting a haircut.[30]

In November 2020, during the 87th Texas legislative session, Toth filed again the Texas Firearm Protection Act (HB 112), basically the same piece of legislation that he originally filed in January 2019. The previous version passed the Texas House with a 100-vote supermajority but died in the Senate. Governor Greg Abbott assisted Toth in writing the bill in 2013 when Abbott was serving as Texas Attorney General. It is also known as the Second Amendment sanctuary bill. It would make any attempt to enforce federal gun laws in Texas void if those laws were not part of Texas law.[31] The bill had 14 co-sponsors including Briscoe Cain, Valoree Swanson, Cecil Bell, and Tony Tinderholt. It was referred to the State Affairs Committee of the House, from which it never progressed. However, a similar bill, House Bill 2622 (by Representative Justin Holland and Senator Bob Hall) passed the Texas House (with Toth's support) and the Texas Senate and was signed by Governor Greg Abbott on June 17, 2021.[32]

Toth was ranked the fourth most conservative House member of the 2021 Texas legislature by Mark Jones, a political science professor at Rice University.[33]

On July 19, 2021, Toth introduced a bill to conduct a forensic audit of the November 2020 election in the 13 counties with the largest populations in Texas, which tend to lean for the Democratic Party. The bill has been named the Texas Voter Confidence Act.[34][35] Asked why he did not call for an audit of all counties in the state, Toth argued it would be time-consuming and expensive, and cited the Republican lean of the counties, "What’s the point? I mean, all the small counties are red."[36] Election experts said that it did not make sense to specifically exclude Republican-leaning counties if the intent was to detect errors.[37]

Political campaigns[]

2012 Texas House campaign[]

In the 2012 Republican primary for the District 15 House seat, the more conservative Toth unseated the five-term incumbent, Rob Eissler, 56.5% to 43.5%.[38][39] In the general election, Toth defeated the Libertarian Party nominee, Sterling Russell 87% to 13%. No Democrat sought the seat.[40]

2014 Texas House campaign[]

Toth did not seek a second term in House District 15 in the Republican primary on March 4, 2014. Instead he ran for the District 4 seat in the Texas Senate, vacated in the fall of 2013 by the resignation of Republican Tommy Williams of The Woodlands, who accepted a position with Texas A&M University in College Station.[41] Toth faced intraparty opposition for the Senate vacancy from neighboring District 16 Representative Brandon Creighton of Conroe, who left the House after four terms, Richard Finely "Gordy" Bunch, who serves on The Woodlands township council, and Michael Galloway, who formerly held the District 4 seat in the 1990s.[5][42]

In the May 10, 2014, special election Toth came in second place behind Creighton.[43] Creighton received 45.2%, Toth 23.7%, Bunch 21.8%, and Galloway 9.3%.[43]

Toth and Creighton then met in a special election runoff on August 5, 2014.[43] In the special election runoff, Toth was defeated by Creighton 67% to 33% percent.[44][45] Rice University political science professor Mark Jones said both Creighton and Toth "are significantly more conservative than Williams."[46]

2016 congressional campaign[]

In November 2015, Toth announced his candidacy for Texas's 8th congressional district seat currently held by Kevin Brady.[47][48][49] In January 2016, Toth received the endorsement of all Tea Party organizations in Montgomery County, Texas.[50] Professor Jones of Rice University stated: "Toth is certainly a more credible challenger than the typical Republican gadfly who is unknown and unfunded."[48]

In the March 1, primary, Toth and two fellow challengers held incumbent Brady to 53 percent of the vote.[51][52] In 2014, Brady had received 68 percent of the vote in the primary.[51] In 2016, Brady prevailed with 64,745 votes (53.4 percent) to Toth's 45,298 (37.4 percent). Two other candidates held the remaining 9.2 percent of the ballots cast.[52] During the primary, Toth and the two other challengers (Craig McMichael and Andre Dean) had an informal détente among themselves. As all three were politically to the right of Representative Brady, and believing none of them would win an outright majority of votes cast their immediate goal was to force a run-off. Their hope was that then the top vote getter among themselves would face off and defeat Brady for the nomination, but Brady did get over 50% of the vote.[53][52]

Toth spent $89,325 on the primary.[54] Brady spent over $1.5 million on the primary.[55] Toth criticized Brady for compromising too often with President Obama,[54] supporting the omnibus federal budget bill, and voting to revive the U.S. Export-Import Bank.[56] Toth had support from Tea Party groups.[56] Brady received significant support from the business wing of the Republican Party. FEC filings show leading up to the primary and general elections he received campaign contributions from the following industries: Oil and Gas $401K, Healthcare $367K, Insurance $302K, Securities & Investments $269K, Pharmaceuticals $261K. [57]

2018 Texas House campaign[]

On May 31, 2017, Toth announced that he would be running for his old Texas House seat, District 15, since the incumbent, Mark Keough, announced he would not be running for re-election but instead run for Montgomery County Judge.[58][59] Toth's opponent in the Republican primary was Mary "Jackie" Waters of The Woodlands.[60][61] Toth stated that he wanted to reduce property taxes for homeowners by implementing an acquisition-based appraisal system.[62] A taxpayer's home value would be set upon the purchase price, regardless of how long the taxpayer lives in the house.[62] Toth wants to encourage the San Jacinto River Authority ("SJRA") to work on the flood control aspects of its mission statement, instead of keeping Lake Conroe at full capacity for recreational purposes.[61] He has also advocated for the directors of the SJRA board to be elected positions and for the directors to have a civil engineering background, to encourage effective floodplain models.[61]

On March 6, 2018, Toth won the Republican nomination for Texas House District 15 over Waters by 78% to 21%.[63] Toth received the largest vote margin of any candidate in Montgomery County, defeating Waters by 58% of the vote, a three to one margin.[64]

In the November 2018 general election, Toth faced Democrat Lorena Perez McGill of The Woodlands.[65] Toth indicated that in the general election against McGill he would be focusing on lowering property taxes, passing tax reform, and raising teacher salaries.[63] From July through September 30, 2018, Toth raised $65,756, spent $7,026 and had $56,896 on hand.[66] For the period from September 28 to October 27, 2018, Toth raised $24,279, spent $30,722, and had $51,629 on hand.[67] On Election Day, Toth defeated McGill 67% to 33%, a two to one margin.[68]

2020 Texas House campaign[]

Toth was unopposed in the March 3, 2020 Republican primary. He faced Democrat Lorena Perez McGill again in the 2020 general election in November. He defeated McGill by a two to one margin, 67% to 33% in 2018.

During the election, he was part of a group of Texas Republicans who filed lawsuits in both state and federal courts seeking to invalidate about 127,000 drive-thru cast votes in Harris County, Texas.[69] Toth said that the county exceeded their state constitutional authority by allowing drive-thru voting as an alternative to walk-in voting during the COVID-19 pandemic, a change that Toth argued that should have only been decided by the Texas Legislature. Democrats said that this would disenfranchise everybody who cast drive-thru votes in good faith.[70][71] The Texas Supreme Court dismissed the motion without issuing an order or opinion.[69] Federal Judge Andrew Hanen ruled that the plaintiffs did not have standing to sue.[72] After the lawsuits, nine of the ten drive-thru voting sites were shut down by Harris County officials.[73]

On November 3, 2020, Toth again defeated McGill 66.5% to 33.5%, a two to one margin.[74] McGill raised $44,828, but she spent $58,422.[75]

Personal life[]

Toth and his wife, Babette Jayne Toth (born 1957), have three children and two grandchildren.[76] They have resided in Montgomery County since 1997.[5]

Election results[]

2020 general election for Texas 15th district state representative
General election results, November 3, 2020[77]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Toth 71,527 66.49
Democratic Lorena Perez McGill 36,049 33.51
Total votes 107,576 100
2018 general election for Texas 15th district state representative
General election results, November 6, 2018[68]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Toth 52,895 67.17
Democratic Lorena Perez McGill 25,843 32.82
Total votes 78,738 100
2018 Republican primary for Texas 15th district state representative
Republican primary election results, March 6, 2018[78]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Toth 13,097 78.38
Republican Mary "Jackie" Waters 3,612 21.62
Total votes 16,709 100
2016 Republican primary for Texas 8th Congressional district
Republican primary election results, March 1, 2016[52][79]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Brady (incumbent) 64,745 53.39
Republican Steve Toth 45,298 37.36
Republican Craig McMichael 6,021 4.97
Republican Andre Dean 5,196 4.29
Total votes 121,260 100
2014 special election runoff for Texas 4th district state senator
Republican special election runoff results, August 5, 2014[80]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brandon Creighton 15,232 67.38
Republican Steve Toth 7,373 32.62
Total votes 22,605 100
2014 special election for Texas 4th district state senator
Republican special election results, May 10, 2014[43][81]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brandon Creighton 13,705 45.18
Republican Steve Toth 7,193 23.71
Republican Gordy Bunch 6,612 21.80
Republican Michael Galloway 2,818 9.29
Total votes 30,328 100
2012 general election for Texas 15th district state representative
General election results, November 8, 2012[40]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Toth 57,520 86.64
Libertarian Sterling Russell 8,872 13.36
Total votes 66,392 100
2012 Republican primary for Texas 15th district state representative
Republican primary election results, May 29, 2012[38][39]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Toth 9,630 56.48
Republican Rob Eissler (incumbent) 7,420 43.52
Total votes 17,050 100

References[]

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  81. ^ Special Election Results[permanent dead link], Secretary of State of Texas, May 10, 2014.

External links[]

Texas House of Representatives
Preceded by
Rob Eissler
Texas State Representative from District 15 (The Woodlands in Montgomery County)
2013–2015
Succeeded by
Mark Keough
Preceded by
Mark Keough
Texas State Representative from District 15 (The Woodlands in Montgomery County)
2019–
Incumbent
Retrieved from ""