Terri Bonoff
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Terri Bonoff | |
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Member of the Minnesota State Senate
from the 43rd district |
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| In office 2005 - |
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| Born | August 1, 1957 Minneapolis, Minnesota |
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| Political party | Democratic Farmer Labor Party |
| Spouse | Matthew Knopf |
| Residence | Hopkins, Minnesota |
| Alma mater | Clark University |
| Occupation | marketing |
| Religion | Jewish |
Terri E. Bonoff (born August 1, 1957) is a Democratic Farmer Labor Party member of the Minnesota Senate, representing District 43 since a special election in November 2005. Her district includes portions of Minnetonka, Plymouth and Medicine Lake.
Bonoff serves as Vice Chair of the E-12 Budget Division, and as a member of the Education Committee, the Business, Industry and Jobs Committee, and the Transportation Budget and Policy Committee. Her stated legislative interests include education, transportation, health care and the environment.
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[edit] Personal life
Terri Bonoff grew up in Edina, Minnesota and later attended Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, earning a degree in Psychology and Sociology. After 18 years in business, she retired in 1999 as a marketing executive from Navarre Corporation. Prior to joining Navarre, Ms. Bonoff spent five years in the toy and video game business, first with Tonka Toys and later Toy Soldiers. In addition, Ms. Bonoff began her career in fashion retail with Jackson Graves, a family owned women's specialty store. Senator Bonoff chose to leave her business career to spend time with her husband and four children.
[edit] Political career
Bonoff won a 2005 special election against Plymouth Mayor Judy Johnson to fill the State Senate seat being vacated by incumbent Republican David Gaither. In 2006 she won a rematch with Johnson in a general election. Her slogan for both elections was "uniting the middle".
Prior to joining the Senate, she sat on the Minnetonka Planning Commission and lobbied at the Capitol as a volunteer for the Hopkins Legislative Action Commission. She became deeply involved in the community, eventually becoming President of the Hopkins Legislative Action Coalition, a guide at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and the President of Babe Ruth Baseball in Hopkins/Minnetonka.
[edit] 2008 campaign
Bonoff was a candidate for the 3rd congressional district seat held by the retiring Jim Ramstad.[1][2] In November 2007, EMILY's List endorsed her campaign.[3] The AFSCME union endorsed Bonoff on November 30, 2007. On April 12, 2008, Bonoff made good on her pledge and dropped out of the U.S. House race after Ashwin Madia was endorsed by the DFL party.[2]
[edit] Electoral history
- Minnesota Senate District 43 Election 2006
- Terri Bonoff (D) (inc.), 19159 votes, 51.93%
- Judy Johnson (R), 17697 votes, 47.96%
- Write In, 41 votes, 0.11%
- Minnesota Senate District 43 Special Election 2005
- Terri Bonoff (D), 5745 votes, 54.44%
- Judy Johnson (R), 4802 votes, 45.50%
- Write In, 6 votes, 0.06%
[edit] References
- ^ Democrat Bonoff to run for Congress in 3rd District. Minnesota Public Radio (2007-10-05). Retrieved on 2007-11-21.
- ^ a b Candidates lining up in the 6th, 3rd Congressional Districts. Minnesota Public Radio (2007-09-28). Retrieved on 2007-10-01.
- ^ EMILY's List Announces Endorsement of Terri Bonoff in Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District EMILY's List, November 26, 2007
[edit] External links
- Minnesota Senate - Senator Terri E. Bonoff official MN Senate website
- Minnesota Legislative Reference Library - Terri E. Bonoff
- Terri Bonoff for Congress official campaign site
- Minnesota Public Radio - Votetracker: Terri Bonoff voting record
- Project Vote Smart - Senator Terri Bonoff (MN) profile
- Follow the Money - Terri Bonoff
- 2006 campaign contributions

