Jennifer Dailey-Provost

American politician
Jennifer Dailey-Provost
Member of the Utah House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 1, 2019
Preceded byRebecca Chavez-Houck
Constituency24th district (2019–2023)
22nd district (2023–present)
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic
EducationUniversity of Utah (BS)
Westminster College (MBA)

Jennifer Dailey-Provost is an American politician serving as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from the 22nd district. Elected in November 2018, she assumed office on January 1, 2019.

Education

Dailey-Provost earned a Bachelor of Science degree in marketing from the David Eccles School of Business at the University of Utah and an MBA from Westminster College.[1]

Career

Dailey-Provost was executive director of Utah Academy of Family Physicians, where she lobbied for family medicine and primary care.[2]

In the 2018 general election for the Utah House of Representatives, she defeated Republican candidate Scott Rosenbush, with 77% of the vote.[3]

Political positions and significant legislation

In 2019, Rep. Dailey-Provost sponsored end-of-life legislation in the 2019 legislative session, but the bill did not receive a hearing.[4][5] In 2022, she tried again, but the bill was defeated 2-9 in committee.[6]

In 2021, Rep. Dailey-Provost sponsored a bill that would "allow women held in jails to be able to stay on their prescribed birth control, with the goal to prevent unwanted pregnancies".[7] The bill passed the legislature and was signed by Governor Cox into law.[8]

References

  1. ^ "Rep. Dailey-Provost, Jennifer". Utah House of Representatives. Retrieved 2021-08-17.
  2. ^ "The front-runner of the liberal District 22 (formerly House District 24) race promises she would cross party lines if elected". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 2021-08-17.
  3. ^ "Election results as of late Tuesday for Utah races, issues". Deseret News. 2018-11-07. Retrieved 2021-08-17.
  4. ^ Staff, Jim Spiewak, KUTV (2019-01-10). "Utah lawmaker's bill would allow terminally ill patients the right to end their own life". WKRC. Retrieved 2021-08-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "H.B. 121 End of Life Prescription Provisions". Utah State Legislature. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  6. ^ Imlay, Ashley. "Utah lawmakers nix bill to allow physician-assisted death for those with terminal illness". Deseret News. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  7. ^ Jacobs, Becky. "Utah legislator tries again to pass bill allowing women in jails to stay on birth control". Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  8. ^ "H.B. 102 Contraception for Inmates". Utah State Legislature. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
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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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