Jennifer Konfrst

American politician
Jennifer Konfrst
Minority Leader of the Iowa House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
June 14, 2021
Preceded byTodd Prichard
Member of the Iowa House of Representatives
from the 32nd district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 14, 2019
Preceded byChris Hagenow
Personal details
Born (1973-12-24) December 24, 1973 (age 50)
Macomb, Illinois, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseLee
Children2
EducationDrake University (BA, MPA)

Jennifer Glover Konfrst (born December 24, 1973) is an American politician in the state of Iowa. A Democrat, she has been a member of the Iowa House of Representatives representing the 32nd district since 2019. She is the House minority leader, a position that she has held since 2021.

Early life

Konfrst was born on December 24, 1973, in Macomb, Illinois.[1] She grew up in Des Moines, Iowa, Fort Dodge, Iowa, and Webster, Florida.[2] She graduated with a bachelors of arts degree in journalism and mass communications and a masters of public administration from Drake University.[3] She worked for Iowa PBS for twelve years.[4][5] She is an associate professor of journalism and strategic political communication at Drake University.[1][6][7] She and her husband, Lee, have two children.[4]

Political career

She first ran to represent the 43rd district in the Iowa House of Representatives in 2016, but lost to Republican incumbent Chris Hagenow.[8][9] In 2018, Hagenow moved to the 19th district.[10] Konfrst ran again for the newly-open seat and won. She won re-election in 2020.[1][11] Konfrst sits on the administration and rules committee, the judiciary committee, the local government committee, the state government committee and the transportation committee.[1] She was the assistant minority leader in 2019 and 2020 and the minority whip in 2021. When Todd Prichard stepped down as the House minority leader in 2021, Konfrst was elected on June 14, 2021 as the new House minority leader. She is the first woman to hold this position in Iowa.[12][13]

In 2022 she ran for re-election and won in the 32nd district against Republican Mark Brown.[6]

Electoral record

2016 general election: Iowa House of Representatives, District 43[8]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Chris Hagenow 8,809 51.57%
Democratic Jennifer Konfrst 8,273 48.43%
2018 general election: Iowa House of Representatives, District 43[8]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jennifer Konfrst 8,852 56.7%
Republican Michael Boal 6,431 41.2%
Libertarian Chad Brewbaker 318 2.0%
Other/Write-in 11 0.1%

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Representative Jennifer Konfrst". The Iowa Legislature. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  2. ^ "What the candidates for Clive's House District 32 seat say about the issues". The Des Moines Register. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  3. ^ "Jennifer Konfrst's Biography". Vote Smart. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Iowa House Democrats elect Konfrst as leader". www.thegazette.com. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  5. ^ "JENNIFER KONFRST NAMED PBS COMMUNICATIONS PROFESSIONAL OF THE YEAR". About PBS - Main. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  6. ^ a b Gruber-Miller, Stephen. "Iowa House Democratic leader Jennifer Konfrst running for reelection". The Des Moines Register. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  7. ^ "Jennifer Glover Konfrst | Drake University". www.drake.edu. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  8. ^ a b c "Jennifer Konfrst". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  9. ^ "Iowa House District 43: Hagenow defeats challenger Konfrst". Des Moines Register. 8 November 2016. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  10. ^ "Iowa election 2018: Three look to replace Watts in House District 19". Des Moines Register. 29 October 2018. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  11. ^ Ryan, Mackenzie. "Democrat Jennifer Konfrst wins race to represent parts of Windsor Heights, Clive and West Des Moines". The Des Moines Register. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  12. ^ Akin, Katie (2021-06-03). "Iowa Rep. Jennifer Konfrst seeking House minority leader position". Iowa Capital Dispatch. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  13. ^ Akin, Katie (2021-06-15). "Rep. Jennifer Konfrst elected as Iowa House minority leader". Iowa Capital Dispatch. Retrieved 2022-10-30.

External links

Iowa House of Representatives
Preceded by Minority Leader
2021–present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Brian Meyer
32nd District
2023 – present
Succeeded by
Preceded by 43rd District
2019 – 2023
Succeeded by
Eddie Andrews
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Majority leaders
Mark Wright (R)
David Moon (D)
Mike Moran (D)
Jamie Long (DFL)
[to be determined] (R)
Sue Vinton (R)
Ray Aguilar (R)*
Jason Osborne (R)
Mike Lefor (R)
Bill Seitz (R)
Tammy West (R)
Ben Bowman (D)
Emily Long (D)
Federal districts:
Territories:
Rory Respicio (D)*
Ed Propst (D)
Kenneth Gittens (D)*
Political party affiliations
Republican: 28 states
Democratic: 21 states, 3 territories, 1 district
Popular Democratic: 1 territory
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Minority leaders
Anthony Daniels (D)
James Gallagher (R)
Jennifer Konfrst (D)
Vic Miller (D)
Derrick Graham (D)
Matt Hall (R)
Kim Abbott (D)
Vacant*
Zac Ista (D-NPL)
Mike Yin (D)
Federal districts:
None*
Territories:
Chris Duenas (R)*
Patrick San Nicolas (R)
Dwayne DeGraff (I)*
Political party affiliations
Democratic: 27 states
Republican: 21 states, 2 territories
Independent: 1 state
New Progressive: 1 territory
An asterisk (*) indicates a unicameral body.
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Statewide political officials of Iowa
U.S. senators
State government
State Senate
State House
Supreme Court
(appointed, retained by election)
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90th General Assembly (January 9, 2023 – January 12, 2025)
Speaker
Pat Grassley (R)
Speaker pro tempore
John Wills (R)
Majority Leader
Matt Windschitl (R)
Minority Leader
Jennifer Konfrst (D)
  1. J. D. Scholten (D)
  2. Robert Henderson (R)
  3. Thomas Jeneary (R)
  4. Skyler Wheeler (R)
  5. Zach Dieken (R)
  6. Megan Jones (R)
  7. Mike Sexton (R)
  8. Ann Meyer (R)
  9. Henry Stone (R)
  10. John Wills (R)
  11. Brian Best (R)
  12. Steven Holt (R)
  13. Ken Carlson (R)
  14. Jacob Bossman (R)
  15. Matt Windschitl (R)
  16. David Sieck (R)
  17. Devon Wood (R)
  18. Tom Moore (R)
  19. Brent Siegrist (R)
  20. Joshua Turek (D)
  21. Brooke Boden (R)
  22. Stan Gustafson (R)
  23. Ray Sorensen (R)
  24. Joel Fry (R)
  25. Hans Wilz (R)
  26. Austin Harris (R)
  27. Kenan Judge (D)
  28. David Young (R)
  29. Brian Meyer (D)
  30. Megan Srinivas (D)
  31. Mary Madison (D)
  32. Jennifer Konfrst (D)
  33. Ruth Ann Gaines (D)
  34. Ako Abdul-Samad (D)
  35. Sean Bagniewski (D)
  36. Austin Baeth (D)
  37. Barb Kniff McCulla (R)
  38. Jon Dunwell (R)
  39. Rick Olson (D)
  40. Bill Gustoff (R)
  41. Molly Buck (D)
  42. Heather Matson (D)
  43. Eddie Andrews (R)
  44. John Forbes (D)
  45. Brian Lohse (R)
  46. Dan Gehlbach (R)
  47. Carter Nordman (R)
  48. Phil Thompson (R)
  49. Beth Wessel-Kroeschell (D)
  50. Ross Wilburn (D)
  51. Dave Deyoe (R)
  52. Sue Cahill (D)
  53. Dean Fisher (R)
  54. Joshua Meggers (R)
  55. Shannon Latham (R)
  56. Mark Thompson (R)
  57. Pat Grassley (R)
  58. Charley Thomson (R)
  59. Sharon Steckman (D)
  60. Jane Bloomingdale (R)
  61. Timi Brown-Powers (D)
  62. Jerome Amos Jr. (D)
  63. Michael Bergan (R)
  64. Anne Osmundson (R)
  65. Shannon Lundgren (R)
  66. Steve Bradley (R)
  67. Craig Johnson (R)
  68. Chad Ingels (R)
  69. Tom Determann (R)
  70. Norlin Mommsen (R)
  71. Lindsay James (D)
  72. Charles Isenhart (D)
  73. Elizabeth Wilson (D)
  74. Eric Gjerde (D)
  75. Bob Kressig (D)
  76. Derek Wulf (R)
  77. Jeff Cooling (D)
  78. Sami Scheetz (D)
  79. Tracy Ehlert (D)
  80. Art Staed (D)
  81. Luana Stoltenberg (R)
  82. Bobby Kaufmann (R)
  83. Cindy Golding (R)
  84. Thomas Gerhold (R)
  85. Amy Nielsen (D)
  86. David Jacoby (D)
  87. Jeff Shipley (R)
  88. Helena Hayes (R)
  89. Elinor Levin (D)
  90. Adam Zabner (D)
  91. Brad Sherman (R)
  92. Heather Hora (R)
  93. Gary Mohr (R)
  94. Mike Vondran (R)
  95. Taylor Collins (R)
  96. Mark Cisneros (R)
  97. Ken Croken (D)
  98. Monica Kurth (D)
  99. Matthew Rinker (R)
  100. Martin Graber (R)


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