Dennis Alan Smith (born January 19, 1938) is an American businessman and former United States congressman from the state of Oregon. A native of the state, he served in the Air Force before working in the airline industry and taking over the family's newspaper business. A Republican, he served ten years in Congress from 1981 until 1991. His father was former Oregon Governor Elmo Smith.
He joined the United States Air Force in 1958, and served until 1960, when he joined the Oregon Air National Guard.[1] Smith then earned a bachelor of arts degree from Willamette in 1961.[1] He returned to the Air Force in 1962 and remained there until 1967,[1] serving as a fighter pilot in the Vietnam War.[2] In the war, he flew the F-4C Phantom and completed about 180 missions.[2] Smith remained in the aviation field as a flight engineer and co-pilot for a commercial airline, flying from 1967 until 1976.[1]
In 1968, he also took over the family's newspaper business when his father died.[2] He worked for Pan American Airlines, and in 1974 was chosen by fellow employees to serve as the union's lobbyist in Washington, DC.[2] He was inducted into the Oregon Aviation Hall of Honor in 2009.[3]
For his first term, Smith represented a vast district that stretched from his home in the state capital, Salem, all the way to the Idaho border. When the 1980 census gave Oregon another congressional district, Smith's home in Salem, along with much of the western portion of the old 2nd, was placed in the newly created 5th district. He was elected from this district in 1982 and was reelected three more times. While in the House, Smith served on the Budget, the Interior and Insular Affairs, and Veterans' Affairs committees.
Smith was comfortably reelected in 1984 and 1986. In 1988, however, he was nearly defeated by Democratic State RepresentativeMike Kopetski, winning by only 707 votes. Kopetski sought a rematch in 1990 and won by attacking Smith for his ties to several collapsed savings and loans.[4] While still serving in Congress, Smith established and headed Oregonians Against Crime, which placed Oregon's 1988 Anti-crime Bill on the ballot by initiative petition and successfully campaigned for its passage. In 1994, Smith was the Republican nominee for Governor of Oregon, but lost to Democratic state Senate President John Kitzhaber.