Ted Vogt
| Ted Vogt | ||
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| Arizona House of Representatives District 30 | ||
| Former member | ||
| In office | ||
| March 16, 2010-2013 | ||
| Party | Republican | |
| Elections and appointments | ||
| Last election | November 6, 2012 | |
| Appointed | March 16, 2010 | |
| Term limits | Four consecutive terms | |
| Education | ||
| Bachelor's | Yale University, 1995 | |
| J.D. | University of Arizona Law School, 2010 | |
| Personal | ||
| Profession | Former Advertising Executive | |
| Websites | ||
| Office website | ||
| Campaign website | ||
Contents |
| The information about this individual is current as of when his or her last campaign ended. See anything that needs updating? Send a correction to our editors |
Vogt earned his BA from Yale University in 1995. He went on to receive his JD from the University of Arizona Law School in 2010.
Vogt is a former investment banker and a former advertising executive. He has also served in the United States Air Force as an intelligence officer. In 2008, he was employed by the office of the White House where he worked with homeland security issues. Vogt was a clerk for the office of Senator Jon Kyl of the Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism and Homeland Security for the United States Senate in 2009. He also worked in the Criminal Division of the United States Attorney's Office in Tucson in 2009.
Committee assignments
2011-2012
In the 2011-2012 legislative session, Vogt served on these committees:
- Higher Education, Innovation and Reform Committee, Arizona House of Representatives
- Judiciary Committee, Arizona House of Representatives
- Ways and Means Committee, Arizona House of Representatives, Vice Chair
2009-2010
In the 2009-2010 legislative session, Vogt served on these committees:
- Health and Human Services Committee, Arizona House of Representatives
- Public Employees, Retirement and Entitlement Reform Committee, Arizona House of Representatives
- Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Arizona House of Representatives
Elections
2012
Vogt ran for re-election in the 2012 election for Arizona House of Representatives District 10. He and Todd Clodfelter ran unopposed in the August 28, 2012, Republican primary. He was defeated in the general election, which took place on November 6, 2012.[1][2]
2010
Vogt won for election in 2010. He and David Gowan defeated Kurt Knurr and Doug Sposito in the August 24 primary election. They then defeated Democrat Andrea Dalessandro in the November 2 general election.[3][4]
| Arizona House of Representatives, District 30 General Election (2010) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidates | Votes | |||
| |
49,387 | |||
| |
45,237 | |||
| Andrea Dalessandro (D) | 38,093 | |||
Campaign donors
2010
In 2010, Vogt raised $58,194 in contributions. [5]
He contributed the most money to his campaign, $3,215.
Scorecards
Goldwater Institute
The Goldwater Institute releases its "Legislative Report Card" annually for all Arizona legislators. This report card tracks how legislators voted on key votes and assigns them a letter grade based on how closely their votes agree with the Institute's positions. The primary values emphasized in the ratings are whether votes expand or restrict liberty.[6]
2012
Vogt received a score of 62 out of 100 in the 2012 report card for a grade of B- according to the Goldwater Institute’s grading scale. This score was 6 lower than his score on the 2011 report card. Vogt’s 62 in 2012 was tied for the 27th highest grade among all 60 Arizona State Representatives.[6]
Recent news
This section displays the most recent stories in a google news search for the term "Ted + Vogt + Arizona + House"
Ted Vogt News Feed
- Ted Vogt appointed Az Veterans director - TucsonSentinel.com
- Brewer names former Rep. Vogt new veterans chief - CBS 5 - KPHO - KPHO Phoenix
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External links
- Ted Vogt's personal website
- Ted Vogt's official house profile
- Project Vote Smart legislative profile
- Project Vote Smart bio
- Campaign contributions: 2010
- Ted Vogt on Twitter
References
- ↑ Arizona Secretary of State - Primary candidate list
- ↑ Arizona Secretary of State, Official 2012 Primary Results
- ↑ Primary results
- ↑ General election results
- ↑ 2010 contributions
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Goldwater Institute "2012 Legislative Report Card for Arizona's 50th Legislature, First Regular Session," August 15, 2012
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Frank Antenori |
Arizona House District 30 March 16, 2010–2013 |
Succeeded by NA |
State of Arizona Phoenix (capital) | |
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- Former member, Arizona House of Representatives
- State representatives first elected in 2010
- Arizona
- House of Representatives candidate, 2010
- 2010 candidate
- Republican Party
- 2010 incumbent
- 2010 winner
- 2012 incumbent
- House of Representatives candidate, 2012
- 2012 primary (winner)
- 2012 general election (defeated)
- 2012 House of Representatives incumbent displaced by redistricting
