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Melissa Hortman

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Preceded by
  
Stephanie Olsen

Name
  
Melissa Hortman

Children
  
2

Role
  
Politician

Occupation
  
attorney, legislator

Spouse
  
Mark Hortman

Religion
  
Catholic


Melissa Hortman minnesotapublicradioorgprojectsongoingpolitic

Born
  
May 27, 1970 (age 53) Fridley, Minnesota (
1970-05-27
)

Political party
  
Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party

Alma mater
  
Boston University University of Minnesota Law School

Party
  
Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party

Residence
  
Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, United States

Education
  
University of Minnesota, Blaine High School, Boston University, University of Minnesota Law School

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Melissa Hortman (born May 27, 1970) is a Minnesota politician and the minority leader of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represents District 36B, which includes portions of Anoka and Hennepin counties in the Twin Cities metropolitan area.

Contents

Melissa Hortman wwwhouselegstatemnushinfomemberimgls9036Bjpg

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Education

Hortman graduated from Blaine High School in Blaine, Minnesota in 1988. She earned bachelor's degrees in Political Science and Philosophy from Boston University, graduating magna cum laude in 1991, and earned a Juris Doctor from the University of Minnesota Law School, cum laude, in 1995.

Minnesota House of Representatives

Hortman won her first term by narrowly defeating Republican incumbent Stephanie Olsen in the 2004 general election by 402 votes out of over 20,000 cast. She had previously lost to Olsen in the 2002 election. She has been re-elected every two years since then.

In her first term, Hortman was an outspoken advocate for the Northstar Commuter Rail line, which runs through her district. She also supported a new stadium for the Minnesota Twins. She has been an advocate of environmental issues and in the effort to bring the 2020 Summer Olympics to Minnesota. She is adamantly pro-choice, is not a supporter of the 2nd Amendment, and does not agree with the state requiring legal identification to vote.

After the 2006 election, Hortman was chosen by her peers to serve as one of eight assistant majority leaders in the House. She was again chosen to serve in this capacity after the 2008 elections. She has also served as speaker pro tempore for many of the House sessions. She served as a minority whip during the 2011-2012 legislative session. She was elected by her caucus to be minority leader following the 2016 election.

Honors and accolades

Hortman has won awards for her bipartisan work from the 2020 Caucus. She has also won awards from Conservation Minnesota.

References

Melissa Hortman Wikipedia