Bill McCollum
Ira William "Bill" McCollum, Jr. (born
July 12,
1944) is a former
Republican Congressman from
Florida.
Born and raised in
Florida, McCollum attended the University of Florida, where he was inducted into the University of Florida Hall of Fame (the most prestigious honor a student leader could receive at UF), and served as president of
Florida Blue Key. McCollum began his professional career in the
United States Navy's Judge Advocate General Corps from
1969 to
1972. In
1973 McCollum entered private practice in
Orlando, and immediately became involved in local politics, serving as Chairman of the Seminole County Republican Party from
1976-
1980. In 1980 McCollum was elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives from a district including
Walt Disney World and most of Orlando.
McCollum gained national attention in
1998-
1999 as one of the
House Managers of
President Bill Clinton's
impeachment trial, and in
2000 launched an unsuccessful bid for the seat of retiring Republican Senator
Connie Mack, narrowly losing to former Congressman
Bill Nelson.
McCollum made his second run for the Senate in the
U.S. Senate election, 2004. During the early months of 2004, he competed with former
Bush administration official
Mel Martinez for the position of Republican front-runner: by mid-summer, businessman
Doug Gallagher began approaching McCollum and Martinez in support as well. McCollum stressed his own experience on homeland security issues, and contrasted his position on
tort reform against Martinez's background as a plaintiff's lawyer. Inexplicably, McCollum, who was considered one of the most conservative members of Congress for many years, was lambasted by Martinez as "the darling of homosexual extremists" due to his one-time vote in favor of gay
hate crimes legislation. Connie Mack appeared with McCollum at a press conference to denounce Martinez's bigotry, but Martinez went on to win the
primary on August 31 by a wide margin, defeating McCollum in most parts of Florida with the exception of the Tampa Bay area. After several days McCollum endorsed Martinez for the general election.
On
October 10,
2005 McCollum was reported to be running for the office of Attorney General of the State of Florida. [
1]