Background
Heflin was born in rural Shongaloo, Louisiana north of Minden, the parish seat of Webster Parish.
Heflin was born in rural Shongaloo, Louisiana north of Minden, the parish seat of Webster Parish.
His service extended for eleven terms, from 1983 to 2005. Heflin is the current director of the Center for Fiscal Policy at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a free-market think tank based in the capital city of Austin. The youngest of Sam C. Heflin and Lucille Lee Heflin"s three children, he has two older sisters living in Louisiana, Patsy H. McManus of Atlanta and Marie H. Hamby of Shreveport.
Their parents are interred at Cotton Valley Cemetery in Cotton Valley, also in Webster Parish.
In 1959 Heflin wed the former Janice Johnson (born c 1941). Talmadge and Janice Heflin reside in Driftwood in Hays County near San Marcos.
Heflin was employed in petrochemical construction and engineering for 24 years, having been a design engineer and a consultant. He formerly owned a small business in Houston.
He is a former deacon at the Alief First Baptist Church and current deacon at the First Baptist Church of Dripping Springs.
He served for seven years on the board of trustees of the Alief Independent School District. An elementary school in Alief was named in his honor in 1982. Between January 1993 and January 2003, when Democrats had majority control of the Texas House, Heflin was the only Republican member to have served on both the Ways and Means and the Appropriations committees.
Heflin became chairman of the Appropriations Committee in January 2003 and helped to close a $10 billion budget shortfall without raising taxes but with hundreds of millions of dollars in new and increased state fees.
He polled 13,144 votes (555 percent) to Democrat Andrew Tran, who received 10,530 (445 percent). However, his district had become more ethnically diverse, and in 2004, Heflin was narrowly defeated for reelection by the Democrat Hubert Vo, the first person of Vietnamese extraction elected to the Texas legislature.
Vo polled 20,695 votes (5003 percent) to Heflin"s 20,662 (4996 percent), a difference of 33 votes. Heflin failed to unseat Vo in 2006, a strongly Democratic year nationally but not particularly so in Texas.
Heflin polled 10,632 votes (4572 percent), or roughly half his raw vote from 2004, to Vo"s 12,621 (5427 percent) in a lower-turnout election.
Vo has since retained the House seat. From August 2007 through March 2008, Heflin was executive director of the Republican Party of Texas. He succeeded Jeff Fisher in the paid position.
In making the appointment, then Republican chairman Tina Benkiser cited Heflin"s "conservative leadership" and his legislative and business experience.
Heflin was a presidential elector for Republican candidate John McCain in the 2008 election. Upon his death, Talmadge will be eligible for interment at the Texas State Cemetery in Austin, a prerogative of all Texas state legislators.
In 1985, Heflin was a founding member of the Texas Conservative Coalition, a bipartisan group of state legislators who support conservative issue positions, limited government, free enterprise, and family values. By 2004, as chair of the Appropriations Committee, he was considered one of the most powerful members of the House and the Republicans" leading expert on budget issues.