This warms my weary heart, not just as a progressive American, but also as someone interested in workplace safety and environmental issues -- which were, in a perverted way, the orgin of the Tom Delay that we have learned to know and love:
DeLay wasn’t groomed for politics. After growing up in Texas and Venezuela (his father worked in the oil fields), he went to the University of Houston. Instead of going into medicine as his father wished, DeLay went to work for a pest control company.Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
In the extermination business, DeLay discovered what was to become his political raison d’ĂȘtre: opposition to government regulation. In the seventies the Environmental Protection Agency banned Mirex, a pesticide used to fight the fire ant. The E.P.A. found Mirex (a probable carcinogen that becomes more concentrated as it moves up the food chain) to be highly toxic to marine crustaceans, and also discovered its presence in mothers’ milk in Southeastern states. DeLay calls the Mirex ruling his first exposure to the E.P.A.’s blundering ways.
DeLay’s aversion to regulation might have pointed to a Congressional career built around an anti-environmental agenda.