Adrian Dickey

Adrian Jeremy Dickey (born October 23, 1973) is an American politician and a senator for the state of Iowa for District 44.[1]

Adrian Dickey
Member of the Iowa Senate
from the 44th district
Assumed office
January 9, 2023
Preceded byMariannette Miller-Meeks
ConstituencyDistrict 44 - (2023-Present)
District 41 - (2021-2023)
Personal details
Born
Adrian Jeremy Dickey

(1973-10-23) October 23, 1973
Packwood, Iowa, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Residence(s)Packwood, Iowa, U.S.
OccupationDickey Transport, president

Personal life

Dickey, the son of former longtime Packwood mayor Dave Dickey, was born in Packwood, Iowa in 1973. He resides there with his family.[2]

In 2022, a TikTok user published videos saying she had cut ties with her father, a "Republican state senator", for advocating the Iowa Supreme Court to overturn abortion rights in the Planned Parenthood v. Reynolds (2022) decision, and for voting to pass House File 2416, which banned trans women and girls from female sports. According to the poster, she is Adrian Dickey's daughter, Korynn.[3][4]

Political career

With Dave Loebsack's retirement, Mariannette Miller-Meeks resigned from her Iowa Senate, District 41 seat to fill the vacancy for Iowa's 2nd congressional district.[5] A special election was called for by Iowa governor Kim Reynolds to fill the vacancy left by Miller-Meeks.[6] Republican Packwood native Adrian Dickey defeated Democratic challenger Mary Stewart to win the vacant Iowa senate seat in January 2021.[7]

Electoral history

2021

Iowa's 41st senate district special election [8]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Adrian Dickey 5,091 55.03
Democratic Mary Stewart 4,111 44.07
Write-ins
Total votes 9,202 100
Republican hold

2022

2022 Iowa's 44th senate district primary elections [9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Adrian Dickey 5,362 99.63
Write-ins 20 0.37
Total votes 5,382 100
2022 Iowa's 44th senate district general election [10]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Adrian Dickey 15,318 66.49
Democratic Rich Taylor 7,699 33.42
Write-ins 22 0.10
Total votes 23,039 100
Republican hold

References


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