Michael Patrick Carroll

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Assemblyman Michael Patrick Carroll
Assemblyman Michael Patrick Carroll

Michael Patrick Carroll (b. April 8, 1958, Fayetteville, North Carolina) is an American Republican Party politician, who has served in the New Jersey General Assembly since 1996, where he represents the 25th legislative district.

He was the Assembly's Republican Parliamentarian from 2002-2006. Carroll serves in the Assembly on the Higher Education Committee and the Housing and Local Government Committee.[1]

The April 2003 issue of New Jersey Monthly magazine cited Carroll as the "Most Conservative" member of the New Jersey Legislature. The magazine cited Carroll's "...missionary zeal and his talent for articulating his stances on behalf of individual and property rights, the sanctity of family—including unborn children—and the cult of Reaganism..." in elaborating on their choice.[2]

In 2008, his response to a proposed New Jersey resolution about apologizing for slavery was: "But, on a current note, if slavery was the price that a modern American's ancestors had to pay in order to make one an American, one should get down on one's knees every single day and thank the Lord that such price was paid,".[3]

An attorney, Carroll was also an adjunct professor at the County College of Morris.

Carroll attended the Delbarton School. He graduated with a B.A. in 1980 from Johns Hopkins University in History/Political Science and was awarded a J.D. in 1983 from Rutgers School of Law—Newark.[1]

Married to Sharon Anderson whom he met at a restaurant in her teenage years, and has six children named Sean Michael, James Patrick, Brian Christopher, Jane Eleanor, Benjamin Franklin, and Robert Edward Lee.[4] Carroll was born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and currently resides in Morris Township.[5]

[edit] District 25

Each of the forty districts in the New Jersey Legislature has one representative in the New Jersey Senate and two members in the New Jersey General Assembly. The other representatives from the 25th District for the 2008-2009 Legislative Session are:

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Current members of the New Jersey General Assembly
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1: Albano (D), Milam (D)
2: Amodeo (R), Polistina (R)
3: Burzichelli (D), Fisher (D)
4: Love (D), Moriarty (D)
5: Cruz-Perez (D), Roberts (D)
6: Greenwald (D), Lampitt (D)
7: Conaway (D), Conners (D)
8: Addiego (R), Rudder (R)
9: Rumpf (R), Van Pelt (R)
10: Holzapfel (R), Wolfe (R)

11: Angelini (R), Rible (R)
12: Casagrande (R), O'Scanlon (R)
13: Handlin (R), Thompson (R)
14: DeAngelo (D), Greenstein (D)
15: Gusciora (D), Watson Coleman (D)
16: Biondi (R), Coyle (R)
17: Chivukula (D), Egan (D)
18: Barnes (D), Diegnan (D)
19: Vas (D), Wisniewski (D)
20: Cohen (D), Cryan (D)

21: Bramnick (R), Munoz (R)
22: Green (D), Stender (D)
23: Doherty (R), Karrow (R)
24: Chiusano (R), McHose (R)
25: Carroll (R), Merkt (R)
26: DeCroce (R), Webber (R)
27: Jasey (D), McKeon (D)
28: Caputo (D), Tucker (D)
29: Coutinho (D), Spencer (D)
30: Dancer (R), Malone (R)

31: Chiappone (D), Smith (D)
32: Prieto (D), Quigley (D)
33: Ramos (D), Rodriguez (D)
34: Giblin (D), Oliver (D)
35: Evans (D), Pou (D)
36: Scalera (D), Schaer (D)
37: Huttle (D), Johnson (D)
38: Voss (D), Wagner (D)
39: Rooney (R), Vandervalk (R)
40: Rumana (R), Russo (R)

Democrat (48 seats) | Republican (32 seats)