Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Stephen M. Sweeney (born June 11, 1959) is an American politician and labor leader who served in the New Jersey Senate from 2002 to 2022, representing the 3rd legislative district.
Steve Sweeney, who lost his longtime state Senate seat two years ago, had a better night this time around. Sweeney celebrated as a fellow Democrat, John Burzichelli of Paulsboro, won back the 3rd ...
Missouri's 9th congressional district was a US congressional district, dissolved in 2013, that last encompassed rural Northeast Missouri, the area known as "Little Dixie," along with the larger towns of Columbia, Fulton, Kirksville and Union, Boone, Franklin, and a portion of St. Charles County comprise the highest voting centers of the mostly rural district.
The members of the 2024 Electoral College met on December 17, 2024, the first Tuesday after the second Wednesday of December as per the Electoral Count Reform and Presidential Transition Improvement Act of 2022. [2] Candidates and their four electors on a ballot in Ada County, Idaho.
Steve Sweeney, 64, posted a video online to announce his political comeback bid to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy in the 2025 election. Sweeney served as the state Senate ...
The district includes all of Franklin County and portions of St. Louis, St. Charles, and Warren counties. [4] Following redistricting in 2010, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that the district now included more Democratic-leaning voters than it had its 2001–2010 boundaries, but still leaned Republican as a whole. [5]
Bridget Bowman and Ben Kamisar and Mark Murray and Scott Bland and Steve Kornacki and Kristen Welker and Chet Hill and Joe Murphy and JoElla Carman and Nigel Chiwaya September 6, 2024 at 10:00 AM
Seat E Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history 17th: August 10, 1821 – March 3, 1823 John Scott (Ste. Genevieve) Democratic-Republican [a] Elected early in 1820. Re-elected in 1822. Re-elected in 1824. Lost re-election.