Jack Rust
John Howson Rust Jr. is an American lawyer and politician from Fairfax County, Virginia, who twice served in the Virginia General Assembly and as Fairfax County's Commissioner of Accounts.
Early life and education
Although born in a hospital in Washington, D.C., in 1947, and was a lifelong Fairfax County resident. His parents were Jean Johnson and John H. Rust Three generations of his family practiced law in northern Virginia, and his father served as Fairfax's mayor as well as a delegate to Virginia's 1956 Constitutional Convention, and his grandfather, also John W. Rust, served in the Senate of Virginia.Rust attended grammar school during massive resistance and graduated from Fairfax High School after its integration. He attended the University of Virginia, receiving a bachelor's degree in 1969 and 1972 a J.D. degree from its law school. While there, he served on the board of editors of the Virginia Law Review and won election to the Order of the Coif. Following graduation and during the Vietnam War, Rust served in the U.S. Army.
Career
Following his admission to the Virginia Bar and military service, Rust worked as a lawyer in Fairfax in the family law firm, Rust & Rust, which in 1982 merged with another law firm to become McCandlish, Lillard, Rust & Church. From 1974 to 1978, Rust was the Fairfax city attorney. He also served as counsel to the Fairfax School Board.Virginia delegate
Rust first became one of Fairfax County's delegates in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1979, and won re-election in 1981 and thus served from 1980 to 1982. However, his second re-election attempt failed when Rust narrowly lost to Stephen E. Gordy in the Republican Party primary in what had become the 37th Virginia House of Delegates district following court-required adoption of single-member districts.Rust won a special election for the 37th district seat in 1996, and then a full two-year term in November 1997. Rust retained his seat in the 1999 elections, having been named Legislator of the Year by the Virginia Treasurers' Association, Tech Ten Legislator and Business Leader of the Year as well as Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce Chamber Champion. Following the 2000 United States census, Rust helped redraw electoral boundaries. Nonetheless, Rust lost his seat in the next election, defeated by Democrat Chap Petersen in 2001, and again in the 2003 election rematch.