Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kimberly O. Johnson is an American politician. She is a former member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from the 64th District, serving since 2020. She is a member of the Democratic party. [1] She was defeated by Republican challenger Fawn Pedalino in the 2022 general election. [2]
Pages in category "21st-century members of the New Jersey Legislature" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 358 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Resigned to become Assistant Attorney General of New Jersey for Bergen County. Frank William Towey Jr. Democratic: 12th: 1937 – 1939 Elected in 1936. Lost re-election to R. Kean. Edward W. Townsend: Democratic: 7th: 1911 – 1913 Elected in 1910. Redistricted to the 10th district. 10th: 1913 – 1915 Redistricted from the 7th district and re ...
New Jersey has a well-earned reputation as a home to backroom political dealing. Many progressives were cheered this weekend when Tammy Murphy withdrew from a closely watched Senate primary, since ...
Elections are held the first Tuesday after November 1. Before 1914, they were chosen by the New Jersey Legislature, and before 1935, their terms began March 4. The state's current senators are Democrats Cory Booker (serving since 2013) and Andy Kim (serving since 2024). Frank Lautenberg was New Jersey's longest-serving senator (1982–2001 ...
A fed-up New Jersey politician stormed out of a Homeland Security briefing about the drone phenomenon taking over the state — calling the meeting an “amateur hour” that provided “no ...
In June 2008, Governor Jon Corzine nominated Ricketts, then a resident of Highland Park, New Jersey, to serve as the Commissioner of the Department of Children and Families ("DCF"). [1] Corzine had created the DCF only two years prior as part of a settlement with the advocacy group Children's Rights which had sued the state of New Jersey. [4]
In 1776, the first constitution of New Jersey was drafted. Written during the American Revolution, it created a basic framework for state government and allowed "all inhabitants of this Colony, of full age, who are worth fifty pounds proclamation money" [2] to vote (including blacks, spinsters, and widows); married women could not own property under common law.