Zach Duckworth

American politician
Zach Duckworth
Member of the Minnesota Senate
from the 57th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 5, 2021
Preceded byMatt Little
Personal details
Born (1987-07-01) July 1, 1987 (age 36)
Political partyRepublican
EducationUniversity of St. Thomas (MBA)

Zach Duckworth (born July 1, 1987) is an American politician and member of the Minnesota Senate. A Republican, he represents District 57 in the southern Twin Cities metropolitan area.

Early life, education, and career

Duckworth was born in Lakeville and graduated from Lakeville High School. He earned a BA and MBA from the University of Saint Thomas.

Minnesota Senate

Duckworth was elected to the Minnesota Senate in 2020, defeating Democratic-Farmer-Labor incumbent Matt Little.[1] Duckworth sits on the Senate housing, education, veterans, and metropolitan government committees, and serves as an assistant majority leader.[2]

Electoral history

2020 Election for Minnesota's 58th Senate District[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%
 RepublicanZach Duckworth29,41254.90%
 Democratic (DFL)Matt Little24,12945.04%
 n/aWrite-ins310.06%
Majority
 Republican gain from Democratic (DFL)

References

  1. ^ Wilmes, Sam. "Duckworth defeats Little in battleground state Senate race". Southernminn.com. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
  2. ^ "Duckworth sworn in for 2021-2022 legislative session". hometownsource.com. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
  3. ^ "Results for State Senator District 58". Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved January 18, 2021.

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to Zach Duckworth.
  • Zach Duckworth at Minnesota Legislators Past & Present
  • Senator Zach Duckworth official Minnesota Senate website
  • Duckworth for Senate official campaign website
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Members of the Minnesota Senate
93rd Minnesota Legislature (2023–2025)
President
Bobby Joe Champion (DFL)
President pro tempore
Ann Rest (DFL)
Majority Leader
Erin Murphy (DFL)
Minority Leader
Mark Johnson (R)
  1. Mark Johnson (R)
  2. Steven Green (R)
  3. Grant Hauschild (DFL)
  4. Rob Kupec (DFL)
  5. Paul Utke (R)
  6. Justin Eichorn (R)
  7. Robert Farnsworth (R)
  8. Jen McEwen (DFL)
  9. Jordan Rasmusson (R)
  10. Nathan Wesenberg (R)
  11. Jason Rarick (R)
  12. Torrey Westrom (R)
  13. Jeff Howe (R)
  14. Aric Putnam (DFL)
  15. Gary Dahms (R)
  16. Andrew Lang (R)
  17. Glenn Gruenhagen (R)
  18. Nick Frentz (DFL)
  19. John Jasinski (R)
  20. Steve Drazkowski (R)
  21. Bill Weber (R)
  22. Rich Draheim (R)
  23. Gene Dornink (R)
  24. Carla Nelson (R)
  25. Liz Boldon (DFL)
  26. Jeremy Miller (R)
  27. Andrew Mathews (R)
  28. Mark Koran (R)
  29. Bruce Anderson (R)
  30. Eric Lucero (R)
  31. Cal Bahr (R)
  32. Michael Kreun (R)
  33. Karin Housley (R)
  34. John Hoffman (DFL)
  35. Jim Abeler (R)
  36. Heather Gustafson (DFL)
  37. Warren Limmer (R)
  38. Susan Pha (DFL)
  39. Mary Kunesh-Podein (DFL)
  40. John Marty (DFL)
  41. Judy Seeberger (DFL)
  42. Bonnie Westlin (DFL)
  43. Ann Rest (DFL)
  44. Tou Xiong (DFL)
  45. Kelly Morrison (DFL)
  46. Ron Latz (DFL)
  47. Nicole Mitchell (DFL)
  48. Julia Coleman (R)
  49. Steve Cwodzinski (DFL)
  50. Alice Mann (DFL)
  51. Melissa Wiklund (DFL)
  52. Jim Carlson (DFL)
  53. Matt Klein (DFL)
  54. Eric Pratt (R)
  55. Lindsey Port (DFL)
  56. Erin Maye Quade (DFL)
  57. Zach Duckworth (R)
  58. Bill Lieske (R)
  59. Bobby Joe Champion (DFL)
  60. Kari Dziedzic (DFL)
  61. Scott Dibble (DFL)
  62. Omar Fateh (DFL)
  63. Zaynab Mohamed (DFL)
  64. Erin Murphy (DFL)
  65. Sandy Pappas (DFL)
  66. Clare Oumou Verbeten (DFL)
  67. Foung Hawj (DFL)