Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Jimmy Dixon (politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician from North Carolina
For other people named James Dixon, seeJames Dixon (disambiguation).

Jimmy Dixon
Member of theNorth Carolina House of Representatives
from the4th district
Assumed office
January 1, 2011
Preceded byRussell Tucker
Personal details
BornJames William Dixon
(1945-02-11)February 11, 1945 (age 80)
Political partyRepublican
ResidenceWarsaw, North Carolina
Alma materWake Forest University (BS)
OccupationTurkey farmer
Websitewww.jimmydixon.org

James William Dixon (born February 11, 1945)[1] is aRepublican member of theNorth Carolina House of Representatives. A farmer fromWarsaw, North Carolina, Dixon has represented the 4th district (including constituents inDuplin andWayne counties) since 2011.

Early life and education

[edit]

Dixon was born inFriendship, North Carolina. He graduated from James Kenan High School in Warsaw where he excelled in football. He attendedWake Forest University on a football scholarship and graduated in 1969 with a B.S. degree.[2]

Electoral history

[edit]

Dixon did not hold any political office before winning election to the State House in 2010.[3]

2020

[edit]
North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district general election, 2020[4]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent){{{votes}}}65.72%
DemocraticChristopher Schulte11,09934.28%
Total votes32,381100%
Republicanhold

2018

[edit]
North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district Republican primary election, 2018[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent)2,76583.64%
RepublicanNathan Ray Riggs54116.36%
Total votes3,306100%
North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district general election, 2018[6]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent)13,54662.87%
DemocraticDa'Quan Marcell Love7,51534.88%
ConstitutionKevin E. Hayes4862.26%
Total votes21,547100%
Republicanhold

2016

[edit]
North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district general election, 2016[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent)24,646100%
Total votes24,646100%
Republicanhold

2014

[edit]
North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district general election, 2014[8]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent)15,933100%
Total votes15,933100%
Republicanhold

2012

[edit]

Dixon and fellow incumbent RepublicanEfton Sager were both drawn into the same district after district lines were changed followingcensusredistricting.[9] Dixon defeated Sager, 62.30%–37.70%, in the Republican primary.[10] Dixon went on to win re-election with 65% of the vote over Democratic challenger Rebecca H. Judge andConstitution Party nominee, who ran officially as aLibertarian, Kevin "Kenny" E. Hayes[11][12]

North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district Republican primary election, 2012[10]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent)4,87362.30%
RepublicanEfton Sager (incumbent)2,94937.70%
Total votes7,822100%
North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district general election, 2012[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon (incumbent)20,37165.04%
DemocraticRebecca H. Judge9,89631.60%
LibertarianKevin E. Hayes1,0533.36%
Total votes31,320100%
Republicanhold

2010

[edit]

Democratic incumbentRussell Tucker announced that he was retiring and would not seek re-election. Jimmy Dixon decided to run and was unopposed in the Republican primary. In the general election, he went on to face Democratic physician Mott Blair, who also was unopposed in his party primary.[13]

Together, they spent over $250,000.[14] Dixon defeated Blair by just 477 votes out of the 17,531 cast.[15]

North Carolina House of Representatives 4th district general election, 2010[15]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanJimmy Dixon9,00451.36%
DemocraticMott Blair8,52748.64%
Total votes17,531100%
Republicangain fromDemocratic

2008

[edit]

In 2008 Dixon ran unsuccessfully as a Democrat for a seat on the Duplin County Board of Commissioners. He was defeated in a Democratic runoff by Frances Parks.[16]

Duplin County Board of Commissioners 1st district Democratic primary election, 2008[17]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticFrances Parks77539.80%
DemocraticJimmy Dixon72837.39%
DemocraticSnodie B. Wilson29215.00%
DemocraticWinston Jennings1527.81%
Total votes1,947100%

Committee assignments

[edit]

[18]

2021-2022 session

[edit]
  • Appropriations (Vice Chair)
  • Appropriations - Agriculture and Natural and Economic Resources (Senior Chair)
  • Agriculture (Senior Chair)
  • Energy and Public Utilities
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Redistricting
  • Rules, Calendar, and Operations of the House

2019-2020 session

[edit]
  • Appropriations (Vice Chair)
  • Appropriations - Agriculture and Natural and Economic Resources (Senior Chair)
  • Agriculture (Senior Chair)
  • Energy and Public Utilities
  • Environment
  • Rules, Calendar, and Operations of the House

2017-2018 session

[edit]
  • Appropriations (Vice Chair)
  • Appropriations - Agriculture and Natural and Economic Resources (Chair)
  • Agriculture (Chair)
  • Environment
  • Education - K-12
  • Elections and Ethics Law
  • Regulatory Reform

2015-2016 session

[edit]
  • Appropriations (Vice Chair)
  • Appropriations - Agriculture and Natural and Economic Resources (Chair)
  • Agriculture (Chair)
  • Environment
  • Education - K-12
  • Elections
  • Regulatory Reform
  • Insurance

2013-2014 session

[edit]
  • Appropriations
  • Agriculture (Chair)
  • Environment
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Regulatory Reform

2011-2012 session

[edit]
  • Appropriations
  • Agriculture (Vice Chair)
  • Environment
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Judiciary

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Rep. James (Jimmy) W. Dixon". North Carolina Center for Public Policy Research. Archived fromthe original on March 31, 2017. RetrievedJune 5, 2012.
  2. ^"Bio". Jimmy Dixon for HD4. Archived fromthe original on April 15, 2013. RetrievedJune 3, 2012.
  3. ^Ovaska, Sarah."The New Crop – Rep. Jimmy Dixon". North Carolina Policy Watch. RetrievedJune 3, 2012.
  4. ^North Carolina State Board of Elections.
  5. ^North Carolina State Board of Elections.
  6. ^North Carolina State Board of Elections.
  7. ^[1]North Carolina State Board of Elections.
  8. ^[2]North Carolina State Board of Elections.
  9. ^Burrows, Sara (May 7, 2012)."Dixon and Sager Double-Bunked in House District 4".Carolina Journal Online. John Locke Foundation. RetrievedJune 5, 2012.
  10. ^ab"Primary Election May 8, 2012". North Carolina State Board of Elections. RetrievedJune 4, 2012.
  11. ^Kay, Lindell (November 6, 2012)."Dixon wins reelection in Duplin".Jacksonville Daily News. RetrievedNovember 30, 2012.
  12. ^ab"NC General Election Results 2012". NC State Board of Elections. RetrievedNovember 14, 2012.
  13. ^Hodge, Hope (November 3, 2010)."Dixon clinches House 4 race in nail biter".Jacksonville Daily News. RetrievedJune 3, 2012.
  14. ^Lindell, Kay (October 31, 2010)."$250,000 spent in House 4 race".Jacksonville Daily News. RetrievedJune 3, 2012.
  15. ^ab"General Election November 2, 2010". North Carolina State Board of Elections. RetrievedJune 3, 2012.
  16. ^Jordan, Dave (June 25, 2008)."Runoff elections results".WITN. RetrievedMay 7, 2013.
  17. ^North Carolina State Board of Elections.
  18. ^"James Dixon (North Carolina)". RetrievedJanuary 30, 2022.

External links

[edit]
North Carolina House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of theNorth Carolina House of Representatives
from the4th district

2011–Present
Incumbent
157th General Assembly (2025–2026)
Speaker of the House
Destin Hall (R)
Speakerpro tempore
Mitchell Setzer (R)
Majority Leader
Brenden Jones (R)
Minority Leader
Robert Reives (D)
  1. Ed Goodwin (R)
  2. Ray Jeffers (D)
  3. Steve Tyson (R)
  4. Jimmy Dixon (R)
  5. Bill Ward (R)
  6. Joe Pike (R)
  7. Matthew Winslow (R)
  8. Gloristine Brown (D)
  9. Timothy Reeder (R)
  10. John Bell (R)
  11. Allison Dahle (D)
  12. Chris Humphrey (R)
  13. Celeste Cairns (R)
  14. Wyatt Gable (R)
  15. Phil Shepard (R)
  16. Carson Smith (R)
  17. Frank Iler (R)
  18. Deb Butler (D)
  19. Charlie Miller (R)
  20. Ted Davis Jr. (R)
  21. Ya Liu (D)
  22. William Brisson (R)
  23. Shelly Willingham (D)
  24. Dante Pittman (D)
  25. Allen Chesser (R)
  26. Donna McDowell White (R)
  27. Rodney Pierce (D)
  28. Larry Strickland (R)
  29. Vernetta Alston (D)
  30. Marcia Morey (D)
  31. Zack Forde-Hawkins (D)
  32. Bryan Cohn (D)
  33. Monika Johnson-Hostler (D)
  34. Tim Longest (D)
  35. Mike Schietzelt (R)
  36. Julie von Haefen (D)
  37. Erin Paré (R)
  38. Abe Jones (D)
  39. James Roberson (D)
  40. Phil Rubin (D)
  41. Maria Cervania (D)
  42. Mike Colvin (D)
  43. Diane Wheatley (R)
  44. Charles Smith (D)
  45. Frances Jackson (D)
  46. Brenden Jones (R)
  47. John Lowery (R)
  48. Garland Pierce (D)
  49. Cynthia Ball (D)
  50. Renee Price (D)
  51. John Sauls (R)
  52. Ben Moss (R)
  53. Howard Penny Jr. (R)
  54. Robert Reives (D)
  55. Mark Brody (R)
  56. Allen Buansi (D)
  57. Tracy Clark (D)
  58. Amos Quick (D)
  59. Alan Branson (R)
  60. Cecil Brockman (D)
  61. Pricey Harrison (D)
  62. John Blust (R)
  63. Stephen Ross (R)
  64. Dennis Riddell (R)
  65. Reece Pyrtle (R)
  66. Sarah Crawford (D)
  67. Cody Huneycutt (R)
  68. David Willis (R)
  69. Dean Arp (R)
  70. Brian Biggs (R)
  71. Kanika Brown (D)
  72. Amber Baker (D)
  73. Jonathan Almond (R)
  74. Jeff Zenger (R)
  75. Donny Lambeth (R)
  76. Harry Warren (R)
  77. Julia Craven Howard (R)
  78. Neal Jackson (R)
  79. Keith Kidwell (R)
  80. Sam Watford (R)
  81. Larry Potts (R)
  82. Brian Echevarria (R)
  83. Grant Campbell (R)
  84. Jeffrey McNeely (R)
  85. Dudley Greene (R)
  86. Hugh Blackwell (R)
  87. Destin Hall (R)
  88. Mary Belk (D)
  89. Mitchell Setzer (R)
  90. Sarah Stevens (R)
  91. Kyle Hall (R)
  92. Terry Brown (D)
  93. Ray Pickett (R)
  94. Blair Eddins (R)
  95. Todd Carver (R)
  96. Jay Adams (R)
  97. Heather Rhyne (R)
  98. Beth Gardner Helfrich (D)
  99. Nasif Majeed (D)
  100. Julia Greenfield (D)
  101. Carolyn Logan (D)
  102. Becky Carney (D)
  103. Laura Budd (D)
  104. Brandon Lofton (D)
  105. Tricia Cotham (R)
  106. Carla Cunningham (D)
  107. Aisha Dew (D)
  108. John Torbett (R)
  109. Donnie Loftis (R)
  110. Kelly Hastings (R)
  111. Paul Scott (R)
  112. Jordan Lopez (D)
  113. Jake Johnson (R)
  114. Eric Ager (D)
  115. Lindsey Prather (D)
  116. Brian Turner (D)
  117. Jennifer Balkcom (R)
  118. Mark Pless (R)
  119. Mike Clampitt (R)
  120. Karl Gillespie (R)
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jimmy_Dixon_(politician)&oldid=1301650846"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp