Summary
Current Position: Governor of Oregon
Affiliation: Democrat
Kotek served eight terms as the state representative from the 44th district of the Oregon House of Representatives from 2007 to 2022, as majority leader of the Oregon House of Representatives from 2011 to 2013, and as Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives from 2013 to 2022.
Before being elected to office, Kotek worked as a public policy advocate for the Oregon Food Bank and then as policy director of Children First for Oregon.[19] She co-chaired the Human Services Coalition of Oregon during the 2002 budget crisis and co-chaired the Governor’s Medicaid Advisory Committee.
OnAir Post: Tina Kotek – OR
News
About
Source: Government page
We all deserve opportunity. That’s why I fight for every Oregonian.
On November 8, 2022, Tina Kotek made history along with Maura Healey of Massachusetts, becoming the first openly lesbian governors elected in American history.
Throughout Tina’s professional career as an advocate for those in need, she has carried the value of service instilled in her by her parents to get real results for Oregonians.
Tina’s grandparents came from Eastern Europe in the early part of the last century to find opportunity and a better life. Her parents were proud first-generation Americans. They believed in hard work, being informed citizens, and encouraging their children to follow their dreams.
Tina moved to Oregon from the East Coast in 1987, and fell in love with the beauty of the state and the openness of the people. She finished her undergraduate degree at the University of Oregon, graduating without student debt because of a Pell grant, work study assistance, and affordable tuition.
Tina came out as a lesbian in her early twenties. While it wasn’t always easy, each experience coming out to others strengthened her resilience. While getting her graduate degree, Tina fought for and won domestic partnership rights for faculty and students at the University of Washington.
When Tina returned to Oregon after graduation, she took a job at Oregon Food Bank, attracted to their mission to end hunger, not just feed people. As a person of faith with a belief in the inherent value of everyone, she knew she had found her calling as an advocate for others. Tina continued her advocacy for children when she joined Children First for Oregon as their policy director.
Tina’s experience working at nonprofits on behalf of Oregon’s most vulnerable led her to run for public office and serve in the Oregon Legislature. In her first term, she rewrote the state’s poverty program for low-income families while also playing a key role in making historic progress for the LGBTQ+ community by passing statewide protections and access to benefits.
In 2013, Tina was honored to be elected by her peers to be the Speaker of the House — becoming the nation’s first openly lesbian House Speaker. In nearly a decade leading the Oregon House, she worked tirelessly to expand economic security for more families, combat climate change, and help Oregonians navigate an unprecedented pandemic. In 2022, she made history again, joining Maura Healey of Massachusetts in becoming the first openly lesbian governors elected in American history.
As Governor, Tina will be a leader who puts people first, who prioritizes justice and equity, who brings people together, and who inspires all of us to reach for a better future.
Governor Kotek and her wife Aimee Kotek Wilson, a social worker, have been together for 19 years and have one dog.
Personal
Full Name: Tina Kotek
Gender: Female
Family: Wife: Aimee
Birth Date: 09/30/1966
Birth Place: York, PA
Home City: Portland, OR
Source: https://justfacts.votesmart.org/candidate/biography/46559/tina-kotek
Vote Smart
MAIS, International Studies/Comparative Religion, University of Washington, 1998
BS, Religious Studies, University of Oregon, 1990
Source: Former Co-Speaker Pro Tempore, Oregon State House of Representatives Former Democratic Whip, Oregon State House of Representatives Governor, State of Oregon, 2023-Present Representative, Oregon State House of Representatives, District 44, 2007-2022 Speaker, Oregon State House of Representatives, 2013-2022 Candidate, Oregon State House of Representatives, District 43, 2004 Policy Director, Children First for Oregon, 2003-2006 Public Policy Advocate, Oregon Food Bank, 1998-2002 Office of the Governor 900 Court Street, Suite 254 Telephone: 503-378-4582 Email: Government page Source: none To learn more, go to this wikipedia section in this post. Source: Open Secrets Source: Government page Christine Kotek (/ˈkoʊtɛk/ KOH-tek;[1] born September 30, 1966) is an American politician serving as the 39th governor of Oregon since 2023. A member of the Democratic Party, Kotek served eight terms as the state representative from the 44th district of the Oregon House of Representatives from 2007 to 2022, as majority leader of the Oregon House of Representatives from 2011 to 2013, and as Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives from 2013 to 2022. She won the 2022 Oregon gubernatorial election, defeating Republican nominee Christine Drazan and independent candidate Betsy Johnson.[2][3] As an openly lesbian woman, Kotek has made history several times through her electoral success. She became the first openly lesbian woman elected speaker of a U.S. state house in 2013, and was the longest-serving Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives.[4] In 2022, she became one of the first two openly lesbian women (alongside Maura Healey) and the third openly LGBT person (alongside Healey and after her predecessor Kate Brown and Jared Polis) elected governor of a U.S. state, as well as the third woman elected governor of Oregon (after Barbara Roberts and Kate Brown).[5] As speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives and governor, Kotek has spearheaded legislation to increase housing production in Oregon to alleviate the state’s housing crisis. In 2019, as speaker, she spearheaded legislation to make Oregon the first state to remove single-family-exclusive zoning across the state, permitting duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes in residential neighborhoods previously zoned exclusively for single-family homes. In 2024, as governor, her top legislative priority was putting $376 million toward housing production, as well as easing the rules for housing development. Kotek was born on September 30, 1966, in York, Pennsylvania, to Jerry Albert Kotek[6] and Florence (née Matich).[7][8][9] Her father was of Czech ancestry and her mother’s parents were Slovenes.[10] Her grandfather František Kotek[11] was a baker from Týnec nad Labem.[12][13][14] Kotek graduated second in her class from Dallastown Area High School.[15] She attended Georgetown University, but left without graduating.[15] She then worked in commercial diving and as a travel agent.[15] In 1987, Kotek moved to Oregon. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in religious studies from the University of Oregon in 1990.[16][17][18][19] She then studied at the University of Washington, earning a master’s degree in international studies and comparative religion.[15] Before being elected to office, Kotek worked as a public policy advocate for the Oregon Food Bank and then as policy director of Children First for Oregon.[20] She co-chaired the Human Services Coalition of Oregon during the 2002 budget crisis and co-chaired the Governor’s Medicaid Advisory Committee. In 2004, Kotek lost the Democratic primary for Oregon House District 43. In 2006, she won a three-way Democratic primary for Oregon House District 44, which includes North and Northeast Portland. In the general election, she defeated her Republican opponent with nearly 80% of the vote. Kotek ran unopposed for reelection in 2008.[21] In 2010, she faced a Democratic primary challenge but won over 85% of the vote.[22] Kotek won the 2010 general election with almost 81% of the vote.[23] She was reelected every two years through 2020.[24] Kotek rose in the House leadership, serving as the Democratic whip in the 2009 legislative session. In the 2011 session, she was co-speaker pro tempore with Republican Andy Olson due to the House’s 30–30 partisan split. In June 2011, the House Democratic Caucus chose Kotek as its leader (succeeding Dave Hunt).[25] After Democrats won a House majority in the 2012 election, they nominated Kotek for speaker of the House for the 2013 legislative session.[26] She was elected to the position, becoming the first out lesbian in the nation to serve as a legislative speaker.[27][28] She was reelected for in 2015, 2017, 2019, and 2021.[29][30] She is Oregon’s longest-serving speaker of the House.[31] In December 2016, Kotek became the chair of the board of directors of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee.[32] She left the post in July 2019.[33] In 2020, Republicans worked with Democrats to redraw the districts following the 2020 U.S. census with equal representation from the Democratic and Republican parties as a compromise to have the Republicans stop the use of quorum rule restrictions to stall legislation.[34][35] Kotek later reversed her decision and restored the Democratic majority on the committee redrawing the congressional districts.[36][37] In January 2022, Kotek announced her resignation from the House to focus on her campaign.[38] She was succeeded as speaker by Dan Rayfield[39] and in the 44th district by Travis Nelson.[40] During her time as speaker, Kotek introduced legislation to allow for more housing construction in Oregon.[41] In 2017, she unsuccessfully pushed for legislation to permit duplexes in residential neighborhoods that were previously exclusively zoned for single-family housing.[42] Her House Bill 2001, which sought to enable missing middle housing, required cities of more than 10,000 and counties of more than 15,000 to allow fourplexes in neighborhoods previously zoned exclusively for single-family housing, and to permit accessory dwelling units and easier rules for subdividing existing homes. The bill passed in 2019, making Oregon the first state to abolish single-family exclusive zoning across the state.[43][42] On September 1, 2021, Kotek declared her candidacy in the 2022 Oregon gubernatorial election.[44] Her main opponent in the Democratic primary was State Treasurer Tobias Read. She won the Democratic primary on May 17, 2022.[45] In the general election, Kotek’s main opponents were Republican nominee and former state representative Christine Drazan and unaffiliated candidate and former state senator Betsy Johnson.[46] The election was on November 8. On November 9, The Oregonian, Willamette Week, and Oregon Public Broadcasting declared Kotek the winner of the race with 73% of ballots counted.[47][48] Kotek was sworn in on January 9, 2023.[49] On her first day in office, she declared a state of emergency due to homelessness.[50] She established a statewide goal of building 36,000 new housing units a year (up from the 22,000 that were being built in the state when she took office).[51] At the time she took office, Oregon was ranked as one of the states most severely underproducing housing relative to demand.[52] Kotek sold her Portland home and moved to the governor’s mansion, Mahonia Hall, in Salem.[53] In 2024, Kotek’s legislative priority was to boost housing production in Oregon. In March 2024, she signed bipartisan legislation to put $376 million toward housing production, including a $75 million revolving loan fund to enable localities to build affordable housing, $131 million for emergency housing, $123.5 to enable localities to acquire and develop shovel-ready housing, and $24.5 million to improve the energy efficiency and air quality in housing.[51] She initially proposed $500 million but legislators considered that too much.[54] Kotek and her wife, Aimee Wilson, met in 2005 and married in a private ceremony in 2017.[55] They have lived together in Portland’s Kenton neighborhood since 2005.[15][56] Kotek was one of the Oregon Legislative Assembly‘s few openly LGBTQ+ members and the first lesbian speaker of a state house.[57] Kotek considers herself a lapsed Catholic and attends an Episcopal church.[15] Political Experience
Professional Experience
Office
Salem, OR 97301-4047Contact
Web Links
Politics
Election Results
Finances
New Legislation
Issues
More Information
Wikipedia
Contents
Early life and education
Career
Oregon House of Representatives
Elections
Pre-speakership House career
Speakership
Governor of Oregon
2022 gubernatorial campaign
Tenure
Personal life
Electoral history
Oregon House of Representatives
[58]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 13,931 78.8 Republican Jay Kushner 3,645 20.6 Write-in 97 0.5 Total votes 17,673 100%
[59]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 20,044 97.6 Write-in 490 2.4 Total votes 20,534 100%
[60]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 16,517 80.9 Republican Kitty C Harmon 3,812 18.7 Write-in 75 0.4 Total votes 20,404 100%
[61]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 23,235 86.3 Republican Michael Harrington 3,557 13.2 Write-in 126 0.5 Total votes 26,918 100%
[62]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 19,760 85.5 Republican Michael H Harrington 3,151 13.6 Write-in 193 0.8 Total votes 23,104 100%
[63]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 23,288 79.7 Pacific Green Joe Rowe 5,700 19.5 Write-in 241 0.8 Total votes 29,229 100%
[64]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 27,194 89.1 Libertarian Manny Guerra 3,181 10.4 Write-in 155 0.5 Total votes 30,530 100%
[65]Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 32,465 87.2 Republican Margo Logan 4,643 12.5 Write-in 127 0.3 Total votes 37,235 100% Governor of Oregon
Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 275,301 57.6% Democratic Tobias Read 156,017 32.6% Democratic Patrick Starnes 10,524 2.2% Democratic George Carrillo 9,365 1.9% Democratic Michael Trimble 5,000 1.0% Democratic John Sweeney 4,193 0.9% Democratic Julian Bell 3,926 0.8% Democratic Dave Stauffer 2,302 0.5% Democratic Wilson Bright 2,316 0.5% Democratic Ifeanyichukwu Diru 1,780 0.4% Democratic Keisha Marchant 1,755 0.4% Democratic Genevieve Wilson 1,588 0.3% Democratic Michael Cross 1,342 0.3% Democratic David Beem 1,308 0.3% Democratic Peter Hall 982 0.2% Total votes 491,445 100% Party Candidate Votes % Democratic Tina Kotek 916,635 46.9% Republican Christine Drazan 849,853 43.5% Independent Betsy Johnson 168,363 8.6% Constitution Donice Noelle Smith 8,047 0.4% Libertarian R. Leon Noble 6,862 0.3% Write-Ins 2,113 0.1% Total votes 1,951,873 100% Democratic hold See also
References
Jerry is survived by… a daughter Tina Kotek and her partner Aimee Wilson of Portland Ore
Willamette Week
External links