Denny rehberg biography of michael
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Editor’s note: To find the most up-to-date information on who is running for office in Montana, including questionnaire responses and tools for finding who will be on your ballot, check out our 2024 Election Guide.
Check out the 2024 Election Guide
Montana’s 2024 ballot will host a suite of consequential elections — among them a race that could decide the balance of the U.S. Senate, two open seats on the Montana Supreme Court, two U.S. House races, the governorship, and a bevy of other statewide offices. And, for good measure, there may be some major ballot measures thrown in too. With less than a year to election day, campaign announcements are coming fast and furious from seasoned politicians and grassroots activists alike.
It’s enough to bewilder a political junkie, much less a more casual observer. So Montana Free Press has combed through our campaign filings, email inboxes and press clippings in an effort to round up some basic cliff notes on the Montana
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Denny Rehberg
American politician (born 1955)
Dennis Ray Rehberg[1] (born October 5, 1955) is an American politician and member of the Republican Party. He served as the lieutenant governor of Montana from 1991 to 1997 and as the U.S. representative for Montana's at-large congressional district from 2001 to 2013. Rehberg was the Republican nominee for the United States Senate in 1996 and 2012, losing to Democratic incumbents högsta Baucus 49% to 44% and Jon Tester 48% to 44%, respectively.[2] He subsequently became a co-chairman at Mercury, a Washington D.C.lobbying firm.[3]
Early life, education, and ranching career
[edit]Rehberg was born in Billings, Montana, the son of Patricia Rae (née Cooley) and Jack Dennis Rehberg. His ancestry includes German, Irish, and Scottish.[4] He attended Billings West High School and Montana State University before transferring to Washington State University where he earned his Bachelor of Arts in public
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| Member Name | Birth Death |
|---|---|
| Paul Gerhart HATFIELD, församling, MT (1928-2000) | 1928-2000 |
| Joseph Kemp TOOLE, Congress, MT (1851-1929) | 1851-1929 |
| Albert James CAMPBELL, Congress, MT (1857-1907) | 1857-1907 |
| James Francis OâCONNOR, Congress, MT (1878-1945) | 1878-1945 |
| Rick HILL, Congress, MT (1946) | 1946 |
| Thomas James WALSH, Congress, MT (1859-1933) | 1859-1933 |
| Thomas Henry CARTER, församling, MT (1854-1911) | 1854-1911 |
| O’CONNELL, Jerry namn, Congress, MT (1909-1956) | 1909-1956 |
| Scott LEAVITT, Congress, MT (1879-1966) | 1879-1966 |
| Burton Kendall WHEELER, Congress, MT (1882-1975) | 1882-1975 |
| James Michael CAVANAUGH, Congress, MT (1823-1879) | 1823-1879 |
| O’CONNOR, James Francis, Congress, MT (1878-1945) | 1878-1945 |
| Martin MAGINNIS, Congress, MT (1841-1919) | 1841-1919 |
| John Patrick WILLIAMS, församling, MT (1937) | 1937 |
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