Harriet Drummond
American politician
Harriet Drummond | |
---|---|
Member of the Alaska House of Representatives from the 18th district | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 18, 2013 | |
Preceded by | Bill Stoltze |
Personal details | |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Democratic |
Alma mater | Cornell University |
Website | harrietdrummond |
Harriet A. Drummond (born 1952) is an American politician and a Democratic member of the Alaska House of Representatives since January 18, 2013 who has represented District 16.[1] She ran to represent District 17 in the Alaska legislature and lost to William Fields, by 752 votes.[2]
Education
Drummond earned her BS from Cornell University.[3]
Elections
- 2012 With Republican Representative Bill Stoltze redistricted to District 11, Drummond won the District 16 August 28, 2012 Primary with 1,280 votes (88.58%),[4] and won the three-way November 6, 2012 General election with 3,434 votes (56.45%) against Republican nominee Jimmy Crawford and Independent Phil Isley, who had run in the 2010 election.[5]
References
- ^ "Harriet Drummond". Juneau, Alaska: Alaska Legislature. Archived from the original on June 10, 2009. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
- ^ 2022 Alaska State House - District 17 Election Results Election Date, Indianapolis Star, November 30, 2022. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
- ^ "Representative Harriet Drummond's Biography". Project Vote Smart. Retrieved October 29, 2013.
- ^ "State of Alaska 2012 Primary Election August 28, 2012 Official Results". Juneau, Alaska: State of Alaska Division of Elections. Retrieved October 29, 2013.
- ^ "State of Alaska 2012 General Election November 6, 2012 Official Results". Juneau, Alaska: State of Alaska Division of Elections. Retrieved October 29, 2013.
External links
- Official page Archived 2009-06-10 at the Wayback Machine at the Alaska Legislature
- Campaign site
- Profile at Vote Smart
- Harriet Drummond at 100 Years of Alaska's Legislature
- v
- t
- e
Members of the Alaska House of Representatives
33rd Alaska Legislature (2023)
- Speaker of the House
- ▌Cathy Tilton (R)
- Majority Leader
- ▌Dan Saddler (R)
- Minority Leader
- ▌Calvin Schrage (I)
- ▌Dan Ortiz (I)
- ▌Rebecca Himschoot (I)
- ▌Andi Story (D)
- ▌Sara Hannan (D)
- ▌Louise Stutes (MCR)
- ▌Sarah Vance (R)
- ▌Justin Ruffridge (R)
- ▌Ben Carpenter (R)
- ▌Laddie Shaw (R)
- ▌Craig Johnson (R)
- ▌Julie Coulombe (R)
- ▌Calvin Schrage (I)
- ▌Andy Josephson (D)
- ▌Alyse Galvin (I)
- ▌Tom McKay (R)
- ▌Jennie Armstrong (D)
- ▌Zack Fields (D)
- ▌Cliff Groh (D)
- ▌Genevieve Mina (D)
- ▌Andrew Gray (D)
- ▌Donna Mears (D)
- ▌Stanley Wright (R)
- ▌Jamie Allard (R)
- ▌Dan Saddler (R)
- ▌DeLena Johnson (R)
- ▌Cathy Tilton (R)
- ▌David Eastman (NCR)
- ▌Jesse Sumner (R)
- ▌George Rauscher (R)
- ▌Kevin McCabe (R)
- ▌Maxine Dibert (D)
- ▌Will Stapp (R)
- ▌Mike Prax (R)
- ▌Frank Tomaszewski (R)
- ▌Ashley Carrick (D)
- ▌Mike Cronk (R)
- ▌Bryce Edgmon (CI)
- ▌Conrad McCormick (CD)
- ▌Neal Foster (CD)
- ▌Thomas Baker (R)
- Majority Coalition (23)
- ▌Republican (20)
- ▌Coalition Democrat (2)
- ▌Coalition Independent (1)
- Minority Caucus (16)
- ▌Democratic (11)
- ▌Minority Caucus Republican (1)
- ▌Independent (4)
- Others
- ▌Non-Caucusing Republican (1)
This article about an Alaska politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e