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Charlotte Jean Pritt: Difference between revisions

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'''Charlotte Jean Pritt''' {{2016is}} a [[Mountain Party]] candidate for [[governor of West Virginia]] in 2016.<ref name=candlist>http://apps.sos.wv.gov/elections/candidate-search/ ''Washington Secretary of State,'' "Candidate listing by office," accessed August 4, 2016]</ref> {{SEP 2016 general election status West Virginia|Intro=Charlotte Jean Pritt}}
'''Charlotte Jean Pritt''' {{2016is}} a [[Mountain Party]] candidate for [[governor of West Virginia]] in 2016.<ref name=candlist>http://apps.sos.wv.gov/elections/candidate-search/ ''Washington Secretary of State,'' "Candidate listing by office," accessed August 4, 2016]</ref> {{SEP 2016 general election status West Virginia|Intro=Charlotte Jean Pritt}}



Latest revision as of 14:06, 18 December 2025

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Charlotte Jean Pritt
Prior offices:
West Virginia State Senate

West Virginia House of Delegates
Education
High school
Sissonville High School
Bachelor's
Marshall University
Graduate
Marshall University

Charlotte Jean Pritt was a Mountain Party candidate for governor of West Virginia in 2016.[1] She was defeated in the general election on November 8, 2016.

Biography

Email editor@ballotpedia.org to notify us of updates to this biography.

Pritt was elected to the West Virginia House of Representatives as a Democrat in 1984 and served for two two-year terms. She won election to the state Senate in 1988 and again in 1990.[2] Pritt left the Senate in 1992 to run unsuccessfully for governor. She also unsuccessfully ran for governor again in 1996 and for secretary of state in 2000. Following her defeat in the 2000 election, Pritt opened an education and wellness consulting firm. Pritt also changed party affiliations after her tenure in state government, serving as the executive chair of the Mountain Party, West Virginia's Green Party affiliate, from 2012 to 2014.[3][4]

Political career

West Virginia State Senate (1989-1992)

Pritt served two terms as a Democrat in the West Virginia State Senate, first winning election in 1988.

West Virginia House of Representatives (1985-1989)

Pritt served two terms as a Democrat in the West Virginia House of Representatives, first wining election in 1984.

Elections

2016

Main article: West Virginia gubernatorial election, 2016

Pritt ran as a Mountain Party candidate in the 2016 election for governor of West Virginia. She will compete with Jim Justice (D), Bill Cole (R), David Moran (Lib.), and Constitution Party candidate Phil Hudok in the November 8 general election.[1]

General election results

Jim Justice defeated Bill Cole, Charlotte Jean Pritt, David Moran, and Phil Hudok in the West Virginia governor election.

West Virginia Governor, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Jim Justice 49.09% 350,408
     Republican Bill Cole 42.30% 301,987
     Mountain Party Charlotte Jean Pritt 5.89% 42,068
     Libertarian David Moran 2.15% 15,354
     Constitution Party Phil Hudok 0.57% 4,041
Total Votes 713,858
Source: West Virginia Secretary of State

2000

Pritt ran as a Democrat for secretary of state; she was defeated by Joe Manchin (D) in the Democratic primary.

1996

Pritt made a second bid for the governorship in 1996, running as a Democrat and winning the party's primary election against fellow Democrat (and future U.S. Senator) Joe Manchin. She lost the general election to Republican Cecil Underwood by a margin of less than 40,000 votes.

1992

Pritt ran for governor of West Virginia as a Democrat in 1992 and was defeated by incumbent Governor Gaston Caperton in the Democratic primary election. She then filed to run as an independent candidate and again competed with and lost to Capteron in the November general election.


Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Charlotte Jean Pritt West Virginia Governor. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes