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Dear Friends,

For many years folks in these hills have blessed me and my family with plenty of friendship, business and support.

2007 marked the 25th anniversary of my business in Church Hill as a country lawyer. In those years, I've been humbled by your kindness. Taught to give back along the way, last year I tried to say extra "thank yous" in special ways to two groups near and dear to my heart - children and firefighters.

But deep within my soul there continues to be an inner voice saying "do more, give more, touch more lives." Two statements keep ringing in my mind. One came from United States Sen. Bill Frist's dad: "There's a lot of good to be done and a lot of ways to do it." The other is a simple Biblical principle: "to those who have been given much, much is expected." Well, I've been given much!

I have a heart for service and an idea as to how I might serve in the future. For the last few months, I've been flirting with the idea of volunteering for service in the Tennessee Senate. I was taught it's important to listen. Dad always said, "God gave you two ears but only one mouth for a reason!" So I've put thousands of miles on my truck in the last few months listening to and visiting with you, and friends like you, in Claiborne, Grainger, Hancock, Hawkins, Jefferson, and Union counties. I hope to personally meet you and visit along the way.

Here's what I've heard over and over again: deliver a message of common-sense conservatism - the message of mountain republicans - to Nashville. I hear a lot of folks say they are sick and tired - sick and tired of the same old politicians in leadership roles in Nashville, sick and tired of crooked senators, sick and tired of elected officials forgetting their roots, sick and tired of politicians staying in office too long, sick and tired of politicians saying one thing but doing another, sick and tired of partisan bickering, and sick and tired of decisions that seem to challenge good old common sense.

I'm convinced one volunteer can change things in Nashville and make a difference back in our hometowns like Maynardville, Rogersville, Sneedville, and Surgoinsville. My plan is simple: concentrate on doing a few things well  - things that really matter in making our own communities good places to call home, good places to work, and good places to raise our families.

I've made my mind up. I offer myself as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Tennessee's 4th Senate District.

I know a candidate is just one of many people needed to successfully carry a message of common sense conservatism. You'll have to tell me if we're in this together.  Will you be a volunteer? Will you put a sign in your yard when election time comes? Will you call a friend or two and repeat to them our message? As the old saying goes: "Will you put your money where your mouth is?"

As you may know, I'm no stranger to hard work. And, if you don't yet know, I promise that you'll see. But I can't do it alone. I need you to help. Will you send a little Church Hill down to Capitol Hill?

Thank you for taking your time to visit this site. And, please know that I deeply appreciate all that you've done so far.  In advance, may I also thank you for all you do in the future including your vote.

                                Sincerely,
   

 

 

An Introduction by Congressman Bill Jenkins    

                                                                                                                         

 

My Fellow East Tennesseans:

 

Mike Faulk is the 8th generation of his mother’s family that has called Hawkins County home. Mike is what some folks call a “Mountain Republican.”

 

The Scots-Irish blood that flows through his veins, like that of Ronald Reagan whose mother was Scots-Irish, in large measure defines who he is. Mike says he is an old fashioned, leave-me-alone, common-sense conservative and a self-sufficient, rugged individualist who believes in small-government and values individual liberty most highly.

 

His people are farmers and factory workers. Mike, too, has spent his share of time in hay fields, tobacco barns, and on factory floors.

 

He’s proof that the American dream is alive and well in Tennessee. Mike Faulk is the first of his family to graduate from college. His mother, Rose, will tell you he had to work his way through college, graduate school, and law school. But Faulk says there are plenty of folks who deserve the credit for helping him along his way.

 

I first met Mike during a political campaign in 1970 while he was still in high school and working at WMCH Radio in Church Hill. We became reacquainted in 1982 when he managed the Tennessee Supreme Court campaign for my friend, Tom Hull, who is now a retired Federal Judge from Greeneville.

 

At the end of that campaign, Mike decided to move his family home – to Church Hill to be a country lawyer. When you sit down at his office conference table you'll see a quote from another pretty fair country lawyer, Abraham Lincoln, which has guided Mike Faulk in his law practice in East Tennessee. It reads: "Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever you can . . . As a peacemaker the lawyer has a superior opportunity of being a good man. There will still be business enough."

 

His legal career has been exceptional. I know first hand. I was Circuit Court Judge in Hawkins County. A young lawyer named Mike Faulk became Hawkins County's first certified Civil Trial Specialist.

 

From t-ball coach to Juvenile Court Referee, to County Commissioner, to Vice-Chairman of the Hawkins County Republican Party and as the Vice-Chairman of the Tennessee Human Rights Commission, Mike Faulk has shown the heart of a servant.

 

I strongly recommend you take the time to get to know Mike by reading his story below. And get to know him personally. You'll find him easy to talk to, down to earth, and as hard working as they come.

 

                                                                 Your friend,

                                                            

                                                                 Bill Jenkins

 

 

 

ABOUT MIKE

 

Born in Kingsport on September 10, 1953, Mike Faulk was the first of three children born to Glade Faulk and Rosella Dykes Faulk. Mike had two half-brothers, too. Talk to Mike Faulk for more than two minutes and you’ll hear about his pride and joy – his two exceptional children, Katy and Andy.

 

In his early years Mike delivered newspapers, bagged groceries, butchered meat, stocked shelves, worked tobacco and hay fields and disc jockeyed at local radio station WMCH all while he was in high school. His classmates, as a harbinger of things to come, elected Mike Faulk as Mr. Church Hill High School.

 

Mike says attending the University of Tennessee at Martin (UTM) was a godsend. Any place bigger and he may never have graduated. With the Mississippi River, Kentucky Lake and Reelfoot Lake all nearby, there were plenty of opportunities for a college boy like Mike to hunt and fish. Learned from his dad, he’s always had a great love for the outdoors.

 

Faulk graduated from UTM in 1975 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration as an economics major.

 

Before graduating from college the political bug bit him. In the spring of 1974 Faulk was popularly elected as the President of the UT Martin student body. In the fall of that year another young politician, Lamar Alexander, from Maryville, recruited Mike and Mike’s student government vice-president and best friend, Art Swann, also from Maryville, to jointly head Lamar's campus campaign for Governor.

 

From UT Martin it was off to Memphis for a Masters Degree in Public Administration and a law degree. While in Memphis, Faulk taught economics and business law at Draughons Junior College, worked as a Management Analyst in the Shelby County, Tennessee Office of Budget and Management, and served Chancellor Robert Hoffmann as his courtroom clerk.

 

Alexander recognized the talent he saw in Faulk back in 1974 and asked Mike to run his 1978 campaign for Governor in House District 91 in Memphis while Mike was still in law school. Graduating in 1979 from law school, Memphis State University gave the Kirby Bowling Award to its most outstanding labor law student – Mike Faulk.

  

After two years of practice as a labor lawyer and starting a family in Memphis, Faulk accepted the call of the Tennessee Republican Party to serve as the statewide campaign manager for the three GOP candidates for the Tennessee Supreme Court in 1982 that included east Tennessee’s own Tom Hull who later became a federal judge in Greeneville.

 

Apparently Congressman Bill Jenkins isn't the only one who thinks Faulk is an exceptional lawyer. He is one of only a handful of northeast Tennessee attorneys known as a civil trial specialist certified by the National Board of Trial Advocacy. Practicing as a solo attorney since August 1996, Faulk maintains a peer review rating of AV - indicating very high to pre-eminent legal ability and very high ethical standards as established by confidential opinions from members of the Bar.

Mike Faulk was first elected to Who’s Who in American Law in 1987-1988. In 1993 he was chosen as one of America’s Leading Lawyers and was listed as one of the Outstanding Lawyers of America in both 2002 & 2003. Just recently Law & Politics named Faulk as one of the 2007 Super Lawyers of the Mid-South.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   

Tennessee Governor Lamar Alexander appointed Faulk to the Tennessee Human Rights Commission in 1985 where he served a six-year term. From 1989 to 1991, Faulk was the Vice-Chairman of the State Commission. The Juvenile Court Judge for Hawkins County, Tennessee, the Honorable G. Reese Gibson, appointed Faulk to serve as Juvenile Court Referee in 1986. Mike conducted Court in that post until 1989. 

He is a past-President of the Hawkins County, Tennessee Bar Association and served a term on the Board of Directors of Legal Services of Upper East Tennessee, Inc.

Faulk is admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States of America in Washington, DC, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals headquartered in Cincinnati, and the United States District Courts in Tennessee. He is licensed to practice in all courts of the State of Tennessee. Mike served the Town of Mt. Carmel and the City of Church Hill as their city attorney for many years.

As the years passed, Mike Faulk's practice evolved. He has been called the state's leading authority on alcohol-related injuries. In fact he penned the cover story for the May 2007 Tennessee Bar Journal, "One Too Many." He writes extensively on the subject and actively promotes the prevention of drunk-driving by freely giving of his time to teach classes for the Town of Mt. Carmel's alcohol server training program, offering seminars to businesses on the same subject, and providing public service announcements to local cable television.

You know, a lot of folks don't care for lawyers. We all know lawyers whose behavior makes us feel that way. Many times when a lawyer offers himself for public office his opponents try to say the lawyer's personal views are the same as his client's views. Fred Thompson is going through some of that right now.  But Mike Faulk has made his reputation by suing drunk drivers. It's called dram shop law.

By no means does being an attorney define Mike's life in East Tennessee.

Mike is an outdoorsman and conservationist. For over a decade he served as the Chairman of the Holston River Chapter of Ducks Unlimited raising thousands of dollars for wildlife conservation. He is an active member of the Holston Valley Sportsman's Club and a long-time NRA member who exercises his Second Amendment right on a regular basis. And, Mike Faulk has been a Cherokee Lake clean-up volunteer in both Hawkins and Grainger Counties. He enjoys whitewater rafting and snow skiing. He is an avid hunter and fisherman. His love for our great outdoors is often seen in the wildlife articles he writes for hunting and fishing publications that you may read at his sportsman's blog, Strum Island Journal

Kids love Mike and Mike loves kids. A t-ball and little girls softball coach, Mike taught 2nd graders Sunday School for five years at his home church, Oak Grove Baptist, in Mt. Carmel. He routinely takes time during lunch hours to read to kids in the local libraries' summer reading programs. Besides being Hawkins County's Juvenile Court referee for years and Volunteer High School's Mock Trial Team coach, Mike was the founder of a highly successful program in Hawkins & Hancock Counties to fight childhood obesity called "Get a Hit: Stay Fit."

Faulk served a term on the Hawkins County Commission during which the county began a new building program resulting in a new elementary school and the renovation of other county schools. A new, safer highway, Bradley Creek Road, to a regional landfill was built and the Commission increased appropriations for volunteer first responders - all without voting for a tax increase. Since his time on the County Commission, Faulk has continued his commitment to the volunteer firefighters of Hawkins County by donating computers and raising funds to provide insurance coverage for the brave men and women who risk their lives daily to protect life and property.

Mike Faulk's approach to life came from advice from his dad: "There'll always be someone smarter. Just make sure they don't out work you." And so it has been for 54 years. Mike Faulk won't be outworked. And now he's ready to work for you!

 

 


 

Mike Faulk will post his positions on the popular issues of our day as this campaign unfurls. There'll be plenty of time to get into specifics between now and November 2008. But to know his mind set, to know his philosophy, you have to know where he comes from . . .

Mountain Republicans

I can't separate my politics from my heritage or my upbringing.

The generations of my family who have called these mountains home for two centuries have been fiercely independent-minded folk. They were self-sufficient, free thinkers. They wanted to be left alone to live their lives as freely as their conscience dictated. They surely didn't want to be told what to do by anyone - especially not by the government. And rarely have they ever turned to government for help.

My secular personal priorities are really pretty simple. Take care of your loved ones first and then your neighbors. Then take care of the young, the old, and those who can't take care of themselves with the time, money and resources you have left.

Dad wasn't one to lecture. The way he led his life was lecture enough. He grew extra garden so he'd have plenty to share with the widows that lived nearby. When a neighbor's house burned, we gathered up our extra clothes that would fit their children. He volunteered at the Rescue Squad and the Optimist Club and served on the City Council.

He believed - in the long run - hard work always pays off. Any government program or tax that provides a disincentive to work is suspect in my book and has to be closely scrutinized.

It seems to me his priorities and mine make a pretty good model for government, too. 

I don't believe in no government. And, I don't believe in do nothing government. But I do believe in a lean, limited government with low taxes.

To me government's role is to do the things that we can't do individually for ourselves.

While we're a government of laws and not men, the sheer volume of laws our legislature is trying to pass is troubling. Every piece of new legislation has to be viewed with an eye toward the liberty and freedom it may impede. I'm reminded of a quote from James Madison: "It will be of little avail to the people that the laws are made by men of their own choice if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood."

I think we strayed from the intended role of government when someone got the idea that government needs to be all things to all people. I believe government should do the essentials and do them well instead of spreading our tax money too thin.

That's just common sense to me.

Common Sense Spending and Taxing

I really have trouble with raising taxes over $200 million when state government has a $1.5 billion surplus as happened this last session of the Tennessee General Assembly. That vote underscores the reason for my opposition to a state income tax. There will always be those who justify taking more and more of your money for good causes. A state income tax makes it easer for them to do just that.

While some seem to think a state income tax is a more equitable tax, I believe one of Tennessee's best attributes is its reputation as a low-tax state. Simply, an income tax means more taxes, less for you to spend as you see fit, and more goverment.

We can do a better job on providing the essentials if we'll just use some restraint in our spending on non-essentials and have the courage to decide what the really important things are. As the saying goes, "Show me how you spend your time and your money and I'll know what your priorities are."

Do the Essential Things Well

What are the essentials? What makes our home towns good places to live? We'll address these on the campaign trail but I want to go to Nashville to help convince others that we ought to do the essentials well and stop trying to be all things to all people.

What I'm For; What I'm Against

I'm against abortion and I'm for the death penalty. "Choice" is a concept I embrace. But there are few absolutes in this world. I'm convinced that one of the few times that "unbridled choice" shouldn't be an option concerns the life of the unborn. I've heard the argument that one can't be "pro-life" at the same time one is for the death penalty. The difference is simple in my book - the unborn represent innocent life. The criminal sentenced to die at the hands of the state involves just the opposite - the guilty.

I live - not just support - the Second Amendment every day. I go back to Dad's philosophy - take care of your family first. To me that means the use and possession of firearms for personal protection. And deep within me I know the hunter/gatherer gene is never more obvious than when I'm hunting with firearm in hand.

I like what First District Congressman David Davis says about illegal immigration - "'illegal' means 'illegal'". I'm not sure we need new federal laws. I do know the federal government needs to enforce the ones we have on the books now. Nor am I convinced we need to tie border security to a new immigration policy. It seems to me stopping illegal entry first is dictated by our need to protect ourselves. What we do with those here illegally is a second issue - related but not necessarily the same as safety and security. If the federal government doesn't act, the states are going to have to act. I certainly support funding training for state and local law enforcement officers to address illegals with whom they come into contact.

Come back and visit this page often to hear about my platform.

 

                                                                

 

             

Mike Faulk wants to meet you. Some of the many places and events where you can meet him include:

Mt. Carmel Block Party
June 27, 2008 5:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Main Street
Mt. Carmel, Tennessee

Tennessee is the Volunteer State. With months to go before a primary let alone a general election, it may seem the early involvement of volunteers isn't needed. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Campaigns are meant to peak at election time. But successful campaigns are built on strong foundations laid months in advance.

Right now you can help establish that strong foundation by getting "the talk right" as former Tennessee GOP Chairman Randle Richardson used to say. You can get started on your own  - by blogging, writing letters to newspapers, calling talk radio, and just chatting up the people!

As the campaign picks up momentum and we get closer to election days, there will be more to do. Please share a little about yourself by using the Contacts page. Many skills are needed. Let us know when you're ready, willing and able to start.

There will be many things to do. Do you know a good sign location? Tell us. Do you want to be a surrogate speaker? Mike can't be in two places at the same time. Will you host a small get together of family and friends to meet Mike? Will you put a bumper sticker on your car?

What you can do right now: Service as a volunteer in this endeavor is an investment. The more you invest, the greater the return. Even if it's a small amount, you can be invested in this campaign by contributing financially now. Before we can communicate our message of common-sense conservatism to all the voters of the 4th Senate District by letters, and flyers, and door hangers, and newspapers, and radio, and TV, we have to have the funds to do it. Donate now to begin your volunteer service.

Please fill out the Volunteer Information Form below:

Name:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip:
Phone:
Email:
*Occupation:
*Employer:
Display a Yard Sign:
Display a Bumper Sticker:
Work Events:
Raise Funds:
Write Letters to Newspaper Editors:
Call Talk Radio:
Send Newsletter:
Donate:
*required by campaign finance law

By investing in this campaign you can help in many ways.

While Tennessee law restricts contributions from registered lobbyists, a broad base of individual donors, when coupled with support from leaders and interest groups sharing similar philosophies, will help dispel the notion that campaigns are controlled exclusively by the fundraisers and the special interest groups. 

We're not going to tell you one thing and then do something else. A wide and varied contributor base is expected in this campaign including some political action committees and their spokesmen. But the most important contributor base consists of individuals such as yourself interested in restoring some common-sense conservatism to state government.

You can make your donation online using the form below.

Contributions made by mail should include your name, address, employer and occupation. Send a check today to:

Faulk for Senate Committee
P. O. Box 2080
Church Hill, TN 37642

Your contribution is not tax-deductible for federal income tax purposes.

An individual may contribute a maximum of $1,000 per election (the primary and general are separate elections). By submitting your contribution, you agree that the first $1,000 is designated for the primary, and any additional amount up to $1,000 is designated for the general election.
THANK YOU IN ADVANCE FOR YOUR GENEROSITY.


To donate online, please fill out the following information enabling us to complete our required campaign finance reporting requirements. You will then be redirected to the paypal site, to complete your donation.


Name:
Address:
City:
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Zip:
Phone:
Email:
*Occupation:
*Employer:
Display a Yard Sign:
Display a Bumper Sticker:
Work Events:
Raise Funds:
Write Letters to Newspaper Editors:
Call Talk Radio:
Send Newsletter:
Donate:
*required by campaign finance law

 

 


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PAID FOR BY FAULK FOR SENATE COMMITTEE
P. O. Box 2080 Church Hill, Tennessee 37642
Phone: 423-357-8088
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