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Kristi Pursell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician
Kristi Pursell
Member of theMinnesota House of Representatives
from the 58A district
Assumed office
January 3, 2023
Preceded byTodd Lippert
Personal details
Born (1981-02-13)February 13, 1981 (age 44)
Rochester, Minnesota
Political partyDemocratic (DFL)
SpouseMichael
Children2
ResidenceNorthfield, Minnesota
EducationSt. Olaf College (BA)
University of Minnesota, Duluth
Occupation
WebsiteGovernment websiteCampaign website

Kristi Achor Pursell (born February 9, 1981) is an American politician serving in theMinnesota House of Representatives since 2023. A member of theMinnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), Pursell represents District 58A in southernMinnesota, which includes the city ofNorthfield and parts ofDakota,Rice, andScott Counties.[1][2]

Early life, education and career

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Pursell was born inRochester, Minnesota, and graduated fromSt. Olaf College with a bachelor's degree in English and environmental studies. She also received a graduate certificate in environmental education from theUniversity of Minnesota Duluth.[1]

Pursell served five years as the executive director of Clean River Partners, an environmental nonprofit organization based in Northfield. She has also been a leader in grassroots organizations, including the Land Stewardship Project, ISAIAH MN, andTakeAction MN.[3] She worked as executive director of the Cannon River Watershed Partnership.[4]

Minnesota House of Representatives

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Pursell was first elected to theMinnesota House of Representatives in2022. She ran for an open seat created by legislative redistricting and the retirement of one-termDFL incumbentTodd Lippert.[1]

Pursell serves as vice-chair of the Agriculture Finance and Policy Committee and sits on the Elections Finance and Policy, Environment and Natural Resources Finance and Policy, and Education Finance Committees.[1]

Political positions

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Pursell authored a bill that would restore a citizens' oversight board to theMinnesota Pollution Control Agency that would be able to approve or deny agency policy. The previous board was eliminated in an end-of-session deal in 2015.[5] According to Pursell, she introduced the bill, which ran into opposition from rural legislators, because "I've heard from many Minnesotans who feel like the MPCA treats industry as its clients rather than centering people and our natural environment".[6]

In 2023, Pursell authored bipartisan legislation that would fund rural broadband infrastructure across the state. In final negotiations, DFL leadership announced $100 million in rural broadband spending, which Pursell called "the largest commitment the state has made to date for broadband".[7]

Electoral history

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2022 Minnesota State House - District 58A[8]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic (DFL)Kristi Pursell11,36254.48
RepublicanGary Bruggenthies9,48145.46
Write-in130.06
Total votes20,856100.0
Democratic (DFL)hold
2024 Minnesota State House - District 58A[9]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanRita Hillmann Olson12,06747.48
Democratic (DFL)Kristi Pursell (incumbent)13,32552.43
Write-in220.09
Total votes25,414100.00
Democratic (DFL)hold

Personal life

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Pursell lives inNorthfield, Minnesota, with her husband, Michael, and has two children.[1]

References

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  1. ^abcde"Pursell, Kristi - Legislator Record - Minnesota Legislators Past & Present".www.lrl.mn.gov. Retrieved2023-02-27.
  2. ^"Rep. Kristi Pursell (58A) - Minnesota House of Representatives".www.house.mn.gov. Retrieved2023-02-27.
  3. ^THOMPSON, PAMELA."Clean River Partners executive director announces bid for House of Representatives seat".Southernminn.com. Retrieved2022-11-11.
  4. ^Bjorhus, Jennifer (April 16, 2021)."Conservationists mend fragmented habitat in Cannon River area of Minnesota".Star Tribune. Retrieved2023-08-12.
  5. ^Way, Ron (March 27, 2023)."OPINION EXCHANGE | Restore citizen voices to Minnesota Pollution Control Agency process".Star Tribune. Retrieved2023-08-12.
  6. ^Orenstein, Walker (2023-03-15)."Critical of MPCA, some Minnesota DFLers want citizens board back".MinnPost. Retrieved2023-08-12.
  7. ^Orenstein, Walker (2023-03-24)."How far will Minnesota lawmakers' $100 million broadband spending plan go?".MinnPost. Retrieved2023-08-12.
  8. ^"2022 Results for State Representative District 58A".Minnesota Secretary of State. RetrievedFebruary 25, 2023.
  9. ^"2024 Results for All State Representative Races".Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved18 November 2024.

External links

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1A.
John Burkel (R)
1B.
Steve Gander (R)
2A.
Bidal Duran Jr. (R)
2B.
Matt Bliss (R)
3A.
Roger Skraba (R)
4A.
Heather Keeler (DFL)
4B.
Jim Joy (R)
5A.
Krista Knudsen (R)
5B.
Mike Wiener (R)
6A.
Ben Davis (R)
6B.
Josh Heintzeman (R)
7A.
Spencer Igo (R)
7B.
Cal Warwas (R)
8A.
Peter Johnson (DFL)
8B.
Alicia Kozlowski (DFL)
9A.
Jeff Backer (R)
9B.
Tom Murphy (R)
10A.
Ron Kresha (R)
10B.
Isaac Schultz (R)
11A.
Jeff Dotseth (R)
11B.
Nathan Nelson (R)
12A.
Paul Anderson (R)
12B.
Mary Franson (R)
13A.
Lisa Demuth (R)
13B.
Tim O'Driscoll (R)
14A.
Bernie Perryman (R)
14B.
Dan Wolgamott (DFL)
15A.
Chris Swedzinski (R)
15B.
Paul Torkelson (R)
16B.
Dave Baker (R)
17A.
Dawn Gillman (R)
17B.
Bobbie Harder (R)
18A.
Erica Schwartz (R)
18B.
Luke Frederick (DFL)
19A.
Keith Allen (R)
19B.
Thomas Sexton (R)
20A.
Pam Altendorf (R)
20B.
Steven Jacob (R)
21A.
Joe Schomacker (R)
21B.
Marj Fogelman (R)
22A.
Bjorn Olson (R)
22B.
Terry Stier (R)
23A.
Peggy Bennett (R)
23B.
Patricia Mueller (R)
24A.
Duane Quam (R)
24B.
Tina Liebling (DFL)
25A.
Kim Hicks (DFL)
25B.
Andy Smith (DFL)
26A.
Aaron Repinski (R)
26B.
Greg Davids (R)
27A.
Shane Mekeland (R)
27B.
Bryan Lawrence (R)
28A.
Jimmy Gordon (R)
28B.
Max Rymer (R)
29A.
Joe McDonald (R)
29B.
Marion O'Neill (R)
30A.
Walter Hudson (R)
30B.
Paul Novotny (R)
31A.
Harry Niska (R)
31B.
Peggy Scott (R)
32A.
Nolan West (R)
32B.
Matt Norris (DFL)
33A.
Patti Anderson (R)
33B.
Josiah Hill (DFL)
34A.
Danny Nadeau (R)
34B.
Melissa Hortman (DFL)
35A.
Zack Stephenson (DFL)
35B.
Kari Rehrauer (DFL)
36A.
Elliott Engen (R)
36B.
Brion Curran (DFL)
37A.
Kristin Robbins (R)
37B.
Kristin Bahner (DFL)
38A.
Huldah Hiltsley (DFL)
38B.
Samantha Vang (DFL)
39A.
Erin Koegel (DFL)
39B.
Sandra Feist (DFL)
40A.
Kelly Moller (DFL)
40B.
David Gottfried (DFL)
41A.
Wayne Johnson (R)
41B.
Tom Dippel (R)
42A.
Ned Carroll (DFL)
42B.
Ginny Klevorn (DFL)
43A.
Cedrick Frazier (DFL)
43B.
Mike Freiberg (DFL)
44A.
Peter Fischer (DFL)
44B.
Leon Lillie (DFL)
45A.
Andrew Myers (R)
45B.
Patty Acomb (DFL)
46A.
Larry Kraft (DFL)
46B.
Cheryl Youakim (DFL)
47B.
Ethan Cha (DFL)
48A.
Jim Nash (R)
48B.
Lucy Rehm (DFL)
49A.
Laurie Pryor (DFL)
50A.
Julie Greene (DFL)
50B.
Steve Elkins (DFL)
51A.
Michael Howard (DFL)
51B.
Nathan Coulter (DFL)
52A.
Liz Reyer (DFL)
52B.
Bianca Virnig (DFL)
53A.
Mary Frances Clardy (DFL)
53B.
Rick Hansen (DFL)
54A.
Brad Tabke (DFL)
54B.
Ben Bakeberg (R)
55A.
Jessica Hanson (DFL)
55B.
Kaela Berg (DFL)
56A.
Robert Bierman (DFL)
56B.
John Huot (DFL)
57A.
Jon Koznick (R)
57B.
Jeff Witte (R)
58A.
Kristi Pursell (DFL)
58B.
Drew Roach (R)
59A.
Fue Lee (DFL)
59B.
Esther Agbaje (DFL)
60A.
Sydney Jordan (DFL)
60B.
Mohamud Noor (DFL)
61A.
Katie Jones (DFL)
61B.
Jamie Long (DFL)
62A.
Anquam Mahamoud (DFL)
62B.
Hodan Hassan (DFL)
B.
Emma Greenman (DFL)
64A.
Kaohly Her (DFL)
B.
Dave Pinto (DFL)
65A.
Samakab Hussein (DFL)
66A.
Leigh Finke (DFL)
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Athena Hollins (DFL)
67A.
Liz Lee (DFL)
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Jay Xiong (DFL)
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