Christopher Bouchat

Last updated

Carmelita Seda-Carothers
(div. 1997)

April Elizabeth Shook
(div. 2007)
Christopher Eric Bouchat
Christopher Eric Bouchat (53555227757).jpg
Bouchat in 2023
Member of the MarylandHouseofDelegates
from the 5th district
Assumed office
January 11, 2023
Servingwith Chris Tomlinson and April Rose
Children2 [1] [note 1]
Residence(s) Woodbine, Maryland, U.S.
Education Catonsville Community College
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
OccupationWelder
Website Campaign website

Christopher Eric Bouchat (born October 2, 1967) is an American politician. He is a member of the Maryland House of Delegates for District 5, which encompasses Carroll County, Maryland. He was previously a member of the Carroll County Board of Commissioners from 2018 to 2022, representing District 4 in southwest Carroll County. [3]

Contents

Background

Bouchat graduated from St. Augustine's Catholic School (now St. Augustine Elementary School) and Howard High School. He attended the Howard Vocational-Technical Center, where he earned a welding certificate, Catonsville Community College, where he earned a degree in business administration, and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, where he earned a degree in political science. Bouchat worked as a welder with Patrick Aircraft Tank Systems in Columbia, Maryland, [4] before starting his own welding business in 1994. [3] [5]

Political involvement

Bouchat first became involved in politics in 1992, when he ran for the United States House of Representatives in Maryland's 3rd congressional district. [6] In 1994, he unsuccessfully ran for the Maryland Senate in District 12, receiving 37 percent of the vote in the Republican primary. [7]

From 2003 to 2004, Bouchat served on the Baltimore County Republican Central Committee. [3]

In 2006, Bouchat ran for the Carroll County Board of Commissioners, challenging the three incumbent Republican commissioners. [1] He once again ran for the Carroll County Board of Commissioners in 2010. [8]

In October 2013, Bouchat filed to run for the Maryland House of Delegates in District 9A, seeking to succeed outgoing state delegate Gail H. Bates. [9] [10] Bouchat was the top vote-getter in the Carroll County part of the district, but lost the primary to Howard County Republicans Warren Miller and Trent Kittleman, both of whom went on to win the general election. [11]

Bouchat (far back) with other members of the Carroll County Board of Commissioners and Governor Larry Hogan, 2019 Governor at MACO Crab Feast (48575057296).jpg
Bouchat (far back) with other members of the Carroll County Board of Commissioners and Governor Larry Hogan, 2019

In 2018, Bouchat ran for the Carroll County Board of Commissioners in District 4, seeking to succeed outgoing county commissioner Richard Rothschild. He won the Republican primary in June, receiving 44.1 percent of the vote. [12] He defeated Democrat Paul Johnson in the general election, receiving 65.5 percent of the vote, [13] and was sworn in on December 4, 2018. [14] On July 26, 2019, Bouchat announced that he would not seek re-election to a second term in 2022. [15]

In March 2020, Bouchat expressed interest in running for the Maryland General Assembly. [16] In December, Bouchat filed to fill a vacancy in the Maryland House of Delegates that was left vacant by the resignation of state delegate Warren Miller. [17] His candidacy was endorsed by former state delegates Al Redmer Jr. and Donald E. Murphy. [18] On January 6, 2021, fellow candidate Reid Novotny was selected to fill the rest of Miller's term. [19] In 2022, Bouchat filed to run for the Maryland House of Delegates in District 9A, but was later redrawn into District 5. [20] Bouchat won the Republican primary on July 20, receiving 12.1 percent of the vote. [21] He ran unopposed in the general election. [22]

Redistricting lawsuits

In 2012, Bouchat filed a lawsuit challenging the state's legislative redistricting plan, in which he pleaded to the Maryland Court of Appeals to establish a new legislative body that would have each county represented by two state senators and for the county's population to determine its number of state delegates, each belonging to a single-member district. [23] The Court of Appeals issued an order upholding the state's redistricting plan, denying Bouchat's arguments against it. [24] In January 2013, Bouchat appealed the case by filing a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of the United States. [25] The Supreme Court denied the petition on April 15. [26]

In early 2015, Bouchat filed a lawsuit in the Carroll County Circuit Court challenging the state's legislative redistricting plan, which was dismissed after the judge determined that the court did not have jurisdiction over the matter. [8] In August 2015, Bouchat again filed a lawsuit challenging the state's legislative redistricting plan, blaming the composition of District 9A for his loss in the 2014 elections. [11]

In the legislature

Bouchat was sworn into the Maryland House of Delegates on January 11, 2023. [27] He is a member of the House Judiciary Committee. [28] Bouchat does not intend to run for re-election in 2026, instead expressing interest in a run for statewide office. [29] [30]

In February 2023, Bouchat, a member of the Frederick County Delegation, said that he would not vote or make any motions during the delegation's weekly meetings. In an email to The Frederick News-Post , he said that delegation members who represent districts mostly in Washington or Carroll counties were in violation of a Maryland Supreme Court ruling if they voted in Frederick County Delegation meetings. Only 2.6 percent of District 5 residents, or about 3,500 people, live in Frederick County. [31] In 1995, an opinion from the Attorney General of Maryland stated that county delegations are "not subject to the 'one-person/one-vote' requirement" of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. [29]

In March 2023, Bouchat sent a letter to his House Republican colleagues in which he questioned their tactics during floor debates, asserting that they were being too performative during floor debates and urging them to "look inward for corrective measures that increase our future success rates". Later that week, six of the most vocal members of the House Republican Caucus released a letter criticizing Bouchat's comments, arguing that the party was able to reach its 50-seat minority in 2014 by speaking out against Democratic taxes and spending. Bouchat agreed that Republicans should contest Democrats in the 2026 legislative elections, but said "we need to stop annoying them" until then. [5]

Personal life

Bouchat divorced his first wife, Carmelita Seda-Carothers, in 1997, defending himself in court during the divorce proceedings. [25] That same year, Bouchat was convicted of second-degree assault in a domestic abuse with Seda-Carothers. In July 2007, he divorced his second wife, April Elizabeth Shook, who claimed that Bouchat had physically and verbally assaulted her as they sought their divorce. Her abuse claims were thrown out by Judge Thomas Stansfield after no evidence proving the abuse could be produced. In September, Bouchat filed a lawsuit against Shook, charging her claim that he had physically abused her destroyed his campaign. [32]

In February 2014, the Internal Revenue Service placed a $42,526 tax lien on Bouchat, which was the result of embezzlement by his daughter, Tawni Bouchat, whom he had employed as a bookkeeper at his own business. The lien led him to initiate criminal charges against Tawni for stealing $21,120 from his company, which she was found guilty of in January 2015. In November 2018, after winning election to the Carroll County Board of Commissioners, Bouchat settled the tax lien by paying $13,000 to the IRS. [33]

Tawni Bouchat died of a fentanyl overdose in 2017, which he says "threw me into a depression, it threw me into alcoholism, so I always advise people out there when you've suffered a loss of someone very close you are extremely vulnerable to become an addict yourself." [2]

Political positions

COVID-19 pandemic

In April 2020, Bouchat voted against closing the Northern Landfill in Westminster, Maryland for 15 days to reduce risk of spreading COVID-19. [34] Later that month, he voted to reopen the landfill early with reduced hours and restrictions preventing residents outside the county from using it. [35]

In June 2020, Bouchat attended and spoke at a Reopen Maryland rally in Westminster to protest the state's COVID-19 restrictions. [36] At the rally, he suggested allowing businesses to set their own policies on when people need to wear masks. [37] In July 2020, he wrote an op-ed for the Carroll County Times that questioned the value of wearing masks in public. [38] His remarks on the COVID-19 pandemic were criticized by Robert Wack, the deputy health officer for the Carroll County Health Department, who wrote in a letter to the Carroll County Times later that month that Bouchat's "dangerously ignorant opinions are a direct threat to the health and well-being of the county". [39]

In August 2021, Bouchat suggested that the Board of Commissioners boycott the annual Maryland Association of Counties Summer Conference over its masking recommendations, saying that he had cancelled his attendance to the event after learning about the policy. [40] He later told Maryland Matters that he did not oppose masks or vaccines, but opposed mandates. [41] In December 2021, Bouchat was the only commissioner to vote against instituting a modified mask policy at Carroll County government facilities, which required unvaccinated county government employees to wear a mask while indoors. [42] In February 2022, Bouchat declined to attend the State of the County address at the Carroll Arts Center, which was attended by all other county commissioners, because of its indoor mask-wearing requirement. He instead opted to protest outside the building by handing out copies of a written speech to those walking in. [43]

Government

In July 2019, Bouchat introduced a bill that would place a question on the 2020 ballot that, if approved, would change Carroll County's form of government from a commission to a charter. [44] After the Board of Commissioners voted to hold off on discussions on converting to a charter government, Bouchat announced that he would not seek re-election to a second term as county commissioner in 2022. [15] In November 2020, Bouchat voted to pass a resolution that would establish a nine-member committee to write a charter; the resolution failed to pass in a 2-3 vote. [45]

In January 2021, Bouchat recused himself as a non-voting member of the county's Planning and Zoning Commission, and soon after filed motions to eliminate the non-voting positions from the county's Board of Education and Planning and Zoning Commission. [46] Both motions failed to gain a second and were not voted upon. [47]

Redistricting

In September 2022, Bouchat said he supported a constitutional amendment to the Constitution of Maryland establishing a 188-member redistricting commission to draw Maryland's congressional and legislative maps, with each of its members elected proportionally to a county's population and in non-partisan elections. [48]

Social issues

In June 2020, Bouchat joined a Black Lives Matter protest in Westminster. [49] Later that month, he proposed creating a heritage commission to recognize the history and achievements of African Americans in Carroll County. [50]

In February 2022, Bouchat distributed copies of a printed speech at the annual State of the County address, in which he wrote that he believed that the board of commissioners would benefit from not being made up of "old Caucasian males," calling on women to "step up and take control of our local government". [43]

State and national politics

In 2016, Bouchat ran as an unaffiliated candidate to the Republican National Convention in Maryland's 8th congressional district. He said that he would vote for Donald Trump on the first ballot if the voters sent him to the Convention, and hoped that Trump would pick John Kasich as his running mate. [51]

In January 2021, Bouchat condemned the January 6 United States Capitol attack and compared the presidential transition to what happens with the Board of Commissioners: [52]

I just ask people to step back, take a deep breath and allow things to unfold and allow the transition of power to take place. Even though I did not vote for the president-elect, he is our president and everyone must respect that, just as my colleagues are setting the example now. We transitioned from President Wantz to President Rothstein. That is a wonderful thing.

In 2022, Bouchat endorsed former Maryland Secretary of Commerce Kelly Schulz for governor. [53]

Taxes

In March 2023, Bouchat voted against an amendment that would remove a provision that indexed the state's gas tax to the consumer price index. The amendment failed by a 38-90 vote, with Bouchat being the only House Republican to vote against it. [5]

Electoral history

Maryland's 3rd congressional district Republican primary election, 1992 [54]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican William T. S. Bricker 3,667 24.2
Republican Mark Kevin White3,30721.9
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat2,65917.6
Republican Fredric M. Parker1,88512.5
Republican Wyatt A. Rogers1,71411.3
Republican Joseph M. Werner Jr.1,0136.7
Republican Edward Lerp8905.9
Maryland Senate District 12 Republican primary election, 1994 [55]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican David P. Maier 3,021 63.3
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat1,74836.7
Carroll County Commissioner Republican primary election, 2006 [56]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Julia Walsh Gouge 7,100 17.1
Republican Dean L. Minnich 6,300 15.1
Republican Michael D. Zimmer 6,053 14.5
Republican Perry L. Jones, Jr.5,70313.7
Republican Mary Kowalski4,34410.4
Republican Douglas Eugene Myers3,5328.5
Republican Douglas Howard3,1387.5
Republican David Greenwalt2,8026.7
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat2,2055.3
Republican Wade Emory Miracle4391.1
Carroll County Commissioner District 4 Republican primary election, 2010 [57]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Richard S. Rothschild 1,391 36.5
Republican Perry Leroy Jones, Jr.79520.9
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat76320.0
Republican David Jones71118.7
Republican Hank Martin1503.9
Maryland House of Delegates District 9A Republican primary election, 2014 [58]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Warren E. Miller 3,354 29.2
Republican Trent Kittleman 2,574 22.4
Republican Frank Mirabile2,50921.8
Republican Kyle Lorton1,62014.1
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat1,42612.4
Carroll County Commissioner District 4 Republican primary election, 2018 [59]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat 1,155 44.1
Republican W. Paul Burkett89734.3
Republican Bret D. Grossnickle42216.1
Republican Sean Shaffer1435.5
Carroll County Commissioner District 4 election, 2018 [60]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat 9,981 65.5
Democratic Paul Johnson5,22134.3
Write-in 280.2
Maryland House of Delegates District 5 Republican primary election, 2022 [61]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican April Rose 8,636 22.6
Republican Chris Tomlinson 6,847 17.9
Republican Christopher Eric Bouchat 4,620 12.1
Republican Sallie B. Taylor4,47011.7
Republican Stephen A. Wantz4,37311.4
Republican Dennis E. Frazier3,5639.3
Republican Scott Willens3,7659.8
Republican Scott Jendrek1,9935.2
Maryland House of Delegates District 5 election, 2022 [62]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican April Rose 33,971 33.11
Republican Christopher Bouchat 33,286 32.44
Republican Chris Tomlinson 32,485 31.66
Write-in 2,8722.80

Notes and references

Notes

  1. One child is deceased. [2]

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