Brady Brammer

American politician
Brady Brammer
Member of the Utah House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 1, 2019
Preceded byMike Kennedy
Constituency27th district (2019–2023)
54th district (2023–present)
Personal details
Political partyRepublican
SpouseNicki[1]
Children5[1]
Alma materBrigham Young University[2]
OccupationAttorney[2]

Brady Brammer is an American politician. He is a Republican representing the 54th district in the Utah House of Representatives.

Political career

In 2018, Brammer ran for election to the District 27 seat in the Utah House of Representatives, which was being vacated by fellow Republican Mike Kennedy.[3] He defeated Jared Carman in the Republican primary with 57.5% of the vote, and went on to win the general election with 75.6% of the vote. He is running for re-election in 2020.[4]

In February 2020, Brammer proposed a bill to require warning labels for pornography.[5] A version of the bill became law in April.[6]

As of October 2020, Brammer sits on the following committees:[2]

  • Infrastructure and General Government Appropriations Subcommittee
  • House Business and Labor Committee
  • House Judiciary Committee
  • Government Operations Interim Committee
  • Judiciary Interim Committee
  • Legislative Policy Summit

Electoral record

2018 Republican primary: Utah House of Representatives, District 27[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Checked Brady Brammer 3,940 57.5%
Republican Jared Carman 2,917 42.5%
2018 general election: Utah House of Representatives, District 27[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Checked Brady Brammer 12,050 75.6%
Democratic Elisabeth Luntz 3,050 19.1%
Libertarian Joseph Geddes Buchman 497 3.1%
Independent American Curt Crosby 344 2.2%

References

  1. ^ a b "Brady Brammer's Biography". Vote Smart. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  2. ^ a b c "Representative Brady Brammer". Utah House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Utah Democrats had a very good night in legislative races on Tuesday". UtahPolicy.com. 6 November 2018. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b c "Brady Brammer". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  5. ^ DeMille, David (4 February 2020). "Utah lawmaker proposes warning label for pornography". St. George Spectrum & Daily News. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  6. ^ Stauffer, McKenzie (2 April 2020). "Porn warning label is now law without Utah governor's signature". kutv.com. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
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65th State Legislature (2023)
Speaker of the House
Mike Schultz (R)
Majority Leader
Jefferson Moss (R)
Minority Leader
Angela Romero (D)
  1. Thomas Peterson (R)
  2. Mike Petersen (R)
  3. Dan Johnson (R)
  4. Kera Birkeland (R)
  5. Casey Snider (R)
  6. Matthew Gwynn (R)
  7. Ryan Wilcox (R)
  8. Jason Kyle (R)
  9. Cal Musselman (R)
  10. Rosemary Lesser (D)
  11. Katy Hall (R)
  12. Mike Schultz (R)
  13. Karen Peterson (R)
  14. Karianne Lisonbee (R)
  15. Ariel Defay (R)
  16. Trevor Lee (R)
  17. Stewart Barlow (R)
  18. Paul Cutler (R)
  19. Raymond Ward (R)
  20. Melissa Garff Ballard (R)
  21. Sandra Hollins (D)
  22. Jennifer Dailey-Provost (D)
  23. Brian King (D)
  24. Joel Briscoe (D)
  25. Angela Romero (D)
  26. Matt MacPherson (R)
  27. Anthony Loubet (R)
  28. Tim Jimenez (R)
  29. Bridger Bolinder (R)
  30. Judy Weeks-Rohner (R)
  31. Brett Garner (D)
  32. Sahara Hayes (D)
  33. Doug Owens (D)
  34. Carol Spackman Moss (D)
  35. Mark Wheatley (D)
  36. James Dunnigan (R)
  37. Ashlee Matthews (D)
  38. Cheryl Acton (R)
  39. Ken Ivory (R)
  40. Andrew Stoddard (D)
  41. Gay Lynn Bennion (D)
  42. Robert Spendlove (R)
  43. Steve Eliason (R)
  44. Jordan Teuscher (R)
  45. Susan Pulsipher (R)
  46. Jeff Stenquist (R)
  47. Mark Strong (R)
  48. James Cobb (R)
  49. Candice Pierucci (R)
  50. Stephanie Gricius (R)
  51. Jefferson Moss (R)
  52. Cory Maloy (R)
  53. Kay Christofferson (R)
  54. Brady Brammer (R)
  55. Jon Hawkins (R)
  56. Val Peterson (R)
  57. Nelson Abbott (R)
  58. Keven Stratton (R)
  59. Mike Kohler (R)
  60. Tyler Clancy (R)
  61. Marsha Judkins (R)
  62. Norm Thurston (R)
  63. Stephen Whyte (R)
  64. Jeff Burton (R)
  65. Doug Welton (R)
  66. Steven Lund (R)
  67. Christine Watkins (R)
  68. Scott Chew (R)
  69. Phil Lyman (R)
  70. Carl Albrecht (R)
  71. Rex Shipp (R)
  72. Joseph Elison (R)
  73. Colin Jack (R)
  74. R. Neil Walter (R)
  75. Walt Brooks (R)


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