Minnesota Senate, District 67
American legislative district
Minnesota Senate , District 67 , encompasses portions of Ramsey County .[ 1] It has formerly included Kittson , Marshall , Roseau , Pennington , and Dakota counties. The district is currently served by Democratic-Farmer-Labor Senator Foung Hawj .[ 2]
List of senators
Session
Senator
Party
Term start
Term end
Home
Counties represented
39th
Nels S. Hegnes[ 3]
Nonpartisan Election
January 5, 1915
January 1, 1923
Argyle
Kittson Marshall Roseau
40th
41st
42nd
43rd
A.M. Landby[ 4]
Nonpartisan Election-Liberal Caucus
January 2, 1923
January 5, 1931
Swift
44th
45th
46th
47th
William L. Petersen[ 5]
Nonpartisan Election
January 6, 1931
January 7, 1935
Lancaster
48th
49th
Richard Rice[ 6]
January 8, 1935
January 2, 1939
Alvarado
50th
51st
Eric Friberg[ 7]
January 3, 1939
January 6, 1947
Roseau
52nd
53rd
54th
55th
Donald Sinclair[ 8]
Nonpartisan Election - Conservative Caucus
January 7, 1947
January 1, 1973
Stephen
56th
57th
58th
59th
60th
61st
62nd
63rd
64th
65th
Kittson Marshall Pennington Roseau
66th
67th
68th
William McCutcheon[ 9]
January 2, 1973
May 1, 1980
Saint Paul
Dakota Ramsey
69th
Nonpartisan Election - Democratic-Farmer-Labor Caucus
70th
Democratic-Farmer-Labor
71st
72nd
Marilyn Lantry[ 10]
January 6, 1981
January 7, 1991
73rd
74th
75th
76th
77th
Randy Cameron Kelly [ 11]
January 8, 1991
January 2, 2002
Ramsey
78th
79th
80th
81st
82nd
83rd
Mee Moua [ 12]
February 4, 2002
January 3, 2011
84th
85th
86th
87th
John M. Harrington[ 13]
January 4, 2011
September 3, 2012
88th
Foung Hawj [ 14]
January 8, 2013
Current
89th
90th
91st
92nd
93rd
Recent elections
2016
The candidate filing deadline was May 31, 2016. The primary election took place on August 9, 2016; both incumbent Foung Hawj and Krysia Weidell ran unopposed.[ 15] [ 16] The general election was held on November 8, 2016, resulting in Hwaj's victory.[ 17] [ 18]
2012
Elections for the Minnesota State Senate occurred after state-wide redistricting from 2010. The signature-filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was June 5, 2012. Foung Hawj defeated Tom Dimon and Robert Humphrey in the Democratic primary, and defeated Mike Capistrant in the general election.[ 19] [ 20]
References
^ "Senate District 67" (PDF) . GIS. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Senator Foung Hawj (DFL) District 67" . Minnesota Senate. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Hegnes, Nels S. "N.S." " . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 1, 2018 .
^ "Landby, A.M." Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 1, 2018 .
^ "Petersen, William L." Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 1, 2018 .
^ "Rice, Richard" . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 1, 2018 .
^ "Friberg, Eric" . Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Sinclair, Donald" . Minnesota Legislative Reference, Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "McCutcheon, William" . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Lantry, Marilyn M." Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Kelly, Randy Cameron" . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Moua, Mee" . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Harrington, John M." Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Hawj, Foung" . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Minnesota State Primary: Tuesday, August 9, 2016" . Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved October 30, 2018 .
^ "MN Election Results (Primary)" . Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "General election results, 2016" . Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved October 30, 2018 .
^ "MN General Election Results" . Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .
^ "Official 2012 General Election Results" . Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved October 30, 2018 .
^ "Official 2012 General Election Results" . Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved December 2, 2018 .