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William Ralph Keffer (born September 15, 1958) [1] is an attorney in Dallas, Texas, who was from 2003 to 2007 a Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 107. [2] His older brother, Jim Keffer , is a still-serving Republican House member from District 60 in Eastland , near Abilene , Texas.
Keffer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Notable people with the surname include: Bill Keffer (born 1958), American attorney and politician
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Bill Keffer: Republican 2002 108: Dan Branch: Republican 2003 109: Helen Giddings: Democrat 1993 110: Jesse W. Jones: Democrat 1993 111: Yvonne Davis: Democrat 1993 112: Fred Hill Republican 1989 113: Joe Driver: Republican 1993 114: Will Ford Hartnett: Republican 1991 115: Jim Jackson: Republican 2005 116: Trey Martinez Fischer: Democrat 2001 ...
Keffer's younger brother, William R. "Bill" Keffer, a Dallas lawyer who was born in Upton County in 1958, was from 2003 to 2007 a member of the Texas House from District 107 in the Lake Highlands section of northern Dallas County. [7] Bill Keffer lost a Republican runoff election in District 114 on July 31, 2012, to Jason Villalba.
Bill Keffer (born 1958), Dallas lawyer who served in Texas House (District 107), 2003–2007; Jim Keffer (born 1953), Eastland businessman and current Republican member of Texas House (District 60); brother of Bill Keffer; Isaac Herbert Kempner (1873–1967), Mayor of Galveston, founder of Imperial Sugar
Bill Keffer (B.A. 1981) – member of the Texas House of Representatives (2003–2007) [52] Sharon Keller – Presiding Judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; Bob McFarland (J.D. 1966) – member of the Texas Senate (1983–1991), President pro tempore of the Texas Senate (1989) [53]
The 78th Texas Legislature met from January 14 to June 2, 2003 in regular session, and in three called sessions in 2003, and a fourth called session in 2004. All members of the House of Representatives and all members of the Senate (15 to two-year terms, 16 to four-year terms) were elected in the 2002 general election, with seats apportioned among the 2000 United States census.