POLITICO Honors Judiciary Committee Chairman Smith for Patent Reform Legislation
Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. House
Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-TX) will be honored tonight as a Policymaker of the Year" for his work on the America Invents Act a bill that updates Americas patent system to encourage innovation job creation and economic growth. Congressman Smith is one of two members of the House of Representatives to receive the award from POLITICO a national publication covering Capitol Hill.
This bill brings our patent system into the 21st century reduces frivolous litigation and streamlines the approval of patents. These reforms will help the innovators and job creators of today launch the products and businesses of tomorrow" said the Texas Congressman and honoree.
The enactment of the
America Invents Act is a victory for Americas innovators and job creators who rely on our patent system to develop new products" Smith said.
Sponsored by Chairman Smith and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) the
America Invents Act (H.R. 1249)
is the only major tech legislation to become law in 2011. The bill was approved by both the House of Representatives and Senate with overwhelming bipartisan support and was signed into law by President Obama on September 16 2011.
Congressman Smith has led efforts in Congress on patent reform for more than six years.
POLITICO issued the following statement regarding Chairman Smith and Chairman Leahys work on patent reform in advance of tonights event:
If politics is truly the art of the possible then Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy and House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith made art out of
politics this year by shepherding through the first major patent reform law in six decades.
The Vermont Democrat and the Texas Republican faced some steep odds: a bitterly divided Congress jurisdictional concerns of competing committees and disputes between the pharmaceutical and tech lobbies. But in the end their America Invents Act became the only major piece of tech legislation passed in 2011 and offered proof that a bipartisan approach to legislation can still work."
He will receive the award for Policymaker of the Year in Technology along with Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) at an event hosted by POLITICO in Washington D.C. Other policymakers to be honored at the event include EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson

Policymaker of the Year in energy; and Representative Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) Policymaker of the Year in health care.
Tonights event is open to the media. Members of the media interested in attending or covering the event can contact Kim Smith in Chairman Smiths office at kim.smith@mail.house.gov.
The
America Invents Act implements a first-inventor-to-file standard for patent approval creates a post-grant review system to eliminate bad patents and helps the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) address the backlog of patent applications.
The new law is supported by many national organizations and businesses.