Nathan Ballentine

American politician
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Nathan Ballentine
Personal details
Born (1970-12-10) December 10, 1970 (age 53)
Columbia, South Carolina, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Alma materUniversity of South Carolina,
Columbia

Nathan Ballentine (born December 10, 1970) is a Republican member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, United States, representing the House District 71 since 2005.

Early years and family

Nathan was born in Richland County and has two children.[citation needed] He works for Movement Mortgage in Columbia, South Carolina.[citation needed]

South Carolina House of Representatives

On June 8, 2004, Ballentine defeated the 16-year incumbent, Rick Quinn, who served as the House Majority Leader.[citation needed]

Ballentine was elected Vice Chairman of the Medical, Military, Public and Municipal Affairs committee during his freshman year (2005). He focussed on healthcare in his first two years. Following re-election (2007–2008) he worked on fiscal issues.[citation needed]

During 2009 and 2010, Ballentine was the chief cosponsor, with then-Representative Nikki Haley, pushing for more accountability with On-The-Record Voting.[citation needed] That bill ultimately died in the Senate; but not before the House made a rule change and passed the bill with no dissenting votes. In 2011 Ballentine became lead sponsor for the On-The-Record Voting Bill.

In the 2010 session, Balllentine's Campaign Finance Disclosure Bill became law. The bill requires every elected official (from school board, to county office holders, etc.) to file their campaign disclosure report on-line.

During his career in the South Carolina General Assembly, Ballentine has served on the Education and Public Works Committee, the House Ethics Committee, the Joint Transportation Review Screening Committee, and has been named a Friend of the Taxpayer and Taxpayer Hero every year he has served in Columbia.[citation needed]

Ballentine is the Chairman of the Regulations Subcommittee in the House Agriculture, Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs Committee.

Ballentine does not keep his State House salary, donating it to community groups and organizations.[citation needed]

References

External links

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Speaker of the House
Jay Lucas (R)
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Tommy Pope (R)
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Gary Simrill (R)
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Todd Rutherford (D)
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  67. G. Murrell Smith Jr. (R)
  68. Heather Ammons Crawford (R)
  69. Chris Wooten (R)
  70. Jermaine Johnson (D)
  71. Nathan Ballentine (R)
  72. Seth Rose (D)
  73. Chris R. Hart (D)
  74. Todd Rutherford (D)
  75. Heather Bauer (D)
  76. Leon Howard (D)
  77. Kambrell Garvin (D)
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  81. Bart T. Blackwell (R)
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  84. Melissa Lackey Oremus (R)
  85. Jay Kilmartin (R)
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  89. Micah Caskey (R)
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  95. Gilda Cobb-Hunter (D)
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