Sen.-elect Jacky RosenJacklyn (Jacky) Sheryl RosenThe Hill’s Coronavirus Report: Mnuchin sees ‘strong likelihood’ of another relief package; Warner says some businesses ‘may not come back’ at The Hill’s Advancing America’s Economy summit The Hill’s Coronavirus Report: CDC Director Redfield responds to Navarro criticism; Mnuchin and Powell brief Senate panel Hillicon Valley: Experts raise security concerns about online voting | Musk finds supporter in Trump | Officials warn that Chinese hackers targeting COVID-19 research groups MORE (D-Nev.)
DATE OF BIRTH: Aug. 2, 1957
Click Here: Bape Kid 1st Camo Ape Head rompersRESIDENCE: Henderson, Nev.
OCCUPATION: Lawmaker
EDUCATION: A.A.S., Clark County Community College; B.A., University of Minnesota
FAMILY: Husband, Larry; one daughter
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Rep. Jacky Rosen (D) is joining the Senate after unseating Republican Sen. Dean HellerDean Arthur HellerOn The Trail: Democrats plan to hammer Trump on Social Security, Medicare Lobbying World Democrats spend big to put Senate in play MORE (Nev.).
Rosen’s ascension to the Senate will give Nevada its second female senator in its history. It’s also the first time the state has been represented by two women in the Senate and makes Nevada the seventh state to have had two female senators simultaneously.
Rosen’s jump to the Senate comes after she joined the House of Representatives in 2017. Rosen had no political experience when she ran for the House seat but was backed by then-Senate Minority Leader Harry ReidHarry Mason ReidHarry Reid says he’s cancer free White House gets jolt from strong jobs report Murkowski, Mattis criticism ratchets up pressure on GOP over Trump MORE (D-Nev.), who kept a tight grip on the state’s Democratic politics.
She was previously the president of a synagogue and a software designer.
While Heller and Rosen seesawed in the polls through much of the summer, polls late in the contest showed Rosen slowly gaining the edge.
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Rep.-elect Susie Lee (D-Nev.-03)
DATE OF BIRTH: Nov. 7, 1966
RESIDENCE: Las Vegas
OCCUPATION: Nonprofit executive
EDUCATION: M.S., Carnegie Mellon University
FAMILY: Husband, Dan; two children
Susie Lee is keeping Nevada’s 3rd District in the Democratic column.
Lee defeated perennial GOP candidate Danny Tarkanian to replace Rep. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), who won her bid for Senate.
Lee is a nonprofit executive who first moved to Las Vegas in 1993 and has been active in education policy. She was a policy adviser for then-Mayor Jan Laverty Jones and became founding director of After-School All-Stars, which serves more than 7,000 students.
In 2010, she became president of Communities in Schools Nevada, which works to keep students from dropping out of schools. Under her leadership, the organization grew and now assists 64,000 students in 63 schools around the state.
She also helped found a homeless crisis center and an investment group for women that’s helped build up nonprofit groups.
Lee first ran for office in 2016 in Nevada’s 4th District but fell short in the Democratic primary.
Rep.-elect Steven HorsfordSteven Alexander HorsfordRep. Steven Horsford wins Democratic House primary in Nevada Overnight Defense: Army now willing to rename bases named after Confederates | Dems demand answers on ‘unfathomable’ nuke testing discussions | Pentagon confirms death of north African al Qaeda leader Top Democrats demand answers on Trump administration’s ‘unfathomable’ consideration of nuclear testing MORE (D-Nev.-04)
DATE OF BIRTH: April 29, 1973
RESIDENCE: Las Vegas
OCCUPATION: Businessman
EDUCATION: Attended University of Nevada
FAMILY: Wife, Sonya; three children
Steven Horsford is back in in the halls of Congress. Horsford was first elected to represent Nevada’s 4th District in 2012 and served one term. He lost his reelection bid in 2014 to former Rep. Cresent Hardy (R), who was himself unseated two years later by Rep. Ruben KihuenRuben Jesus KihuenRep. Steven Horsford wins Democratic House primary in Nevada Members spar over sexual harassment training deadline Nevada Dem sanctioned for sexual misconduct announces city council bid MORE (D).
Kihuen, though, announced earlier this year that he would not seek reelection amid sexual misconduct allegations. That set up a rematch between Horsford and Hardy.
Horsford cruised through a packed six-candidate Democratic primary, getting nearly two-thirds of the vote before winning the general election.
Horsford has made history in his Nevada political career. He first won election to the state Senate in 2004, and in just a few years rose to become the state’s first black majority leader. When he won election to the House in 2012 he became the first African-American to represent Nevada in Congress.