Davis was born in Marquette, Michigan. His family moved to St. Ignace soon after his birth, where he attended public schools. He graduated from LaSalle High School in 1950. He attended Northern Michigan University, Hillsdale College, and the College of Mortuary Sciences at Wayne State University. Before entering politics, Davis served as Funeral Director at the Davis Funeral Home in St. Ignace.
In early 1992, Davis was implicated in the House banking scandal or congressional check-kiting scandal. The Congress ran its own bank and allowed members who wished to do so to frequently write overdrawn or insufficient fund checks to their account. Davis was one of the most notorious of these, writing many overdrawn checks. There was no illegality, though, since the bank allowed members overdraft protection.
For the elections of 1992, after redistricting due to the 1990 census, most of what had been 11th congressional district became Michigan's 1st congressional district, while the 11th district was apportioned to represent a part of the Metro Detroit area. In 1992, DemocratBart Stupak was elected from 1st district, succeeding Davis as the U.S. representative for the U.P. and Northern Michigan. Stupak, coincidentally, defeated Philip Ruppe, the man Davis replaced as congressman in 1978. Davis lived in Gaylord, Michigan.
Post-Congressional career and life
He became a lobbyist for K&L Gates. He was active in the Bush campaign, having served on the Michigan Bush Committee, and was a friend and former colleague of Vice President Dick Cheney.
According to the Chicago Sun-Times of May 31, 1989, Davis revealed that he hired a woman with whom he lived for his committee staff, but he said he had not violated House rules. He acknowledged recommending that Brook Ball, 27, 29 years his junior, be hired for the House Merchant Marine staff. However, in 1987 Davis was still married to his third wife, DC-based network radio and TV news anchor/journalist Marty Davis, whom he married in 1976. The couple reconciled five months after their 1989 divorce until 1992. He married Ball in 1992, who survives him, as do his four children.
Davis died at a hospice in Arlington, Virginia at age 77 of heart and kidney failure.[1][2][3]
Robert is interred at Protestant Cemetery, Mackinac Island, Michigan, USA.