Rose Pugliese

American politician

Rose Pugliese
Minority Leader of the Colorado House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 24, 2024
Preceded byMike Lynch
Member of the Colorado House of Representatives
from the 14th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 9, 2023
Preceded byShane Sandridge
Personal details
Political partyRepublican
EducationVillanova University (BA)
St. John's University (JD)
WebsiteCampaign website

Rose Pugliese is a state representative from El Paso County, Colorado. A Republican, Pugliese represents Colorado House of Representatives District 14, which, after 2020 reapportionment, encompasses northern El Paso County, including much of the city of Colorado Springs.[1]

Background

Pugliese is an attorney. She earned a bachelor's degree from Villanova University and a Juris Doctor degree from St. John's University School of Law.[2]

Political career

Pugliese served two terms as Mesa County Commissioner from 2013 to 2021.[3] She moved from Mesa County to Colorado Springs in late 2020.[4] In the 2023–2024 General Assembly session, Pugliese served as assistant minority leader until January 2024, when she was elected minority leader following the resignation of Mike Lynch from the position.[5][6]

Elections

In the 2022 Colorado House of Representatives election, Pugliese defeated her Democratic Party opponent, winning 27,250 votes (60.67%) to her opponent's 17,665 votes (39.33%).[7]

References

  1. ^ Colorado Independent Legislative Redistricting Commission (October 15, 2021). "Colorado House District 14 (2021)" (PDF). State of Colorado. Retrieved November 20, 2022.
  2. ^ "Colorado State House District 14 candidate Q&A: The race features Democrat Rob Rogers and Republican Rose Pugliese". The Denver Post. October 14, 2022. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  3. ^ "Justman and Pugliese bid farewell to Mesa County". Western Slope Now. Grand Junction, Colorado. January 4, 2021. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  4. ^ Luning, Ernest (March 18, 2022). "Republican state Rep. Shane Sandridge ends bid for 3rd term". Colorado Politics. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  5. ^ Ventrelli, Marissa (January 26, 2024). "Colorado House Republicans pick Ty Winter as assistant leader". Colorado Politics. Archived from the original on January 26, 2024. Retrieved January 26, 2024.
  6. ^ Goodland, Marianne (November 10, 2022). "Colorado House Republicans pick Mike Lynch as minority leader". Colorado Politics. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  7. ^ "Colorado election results: November 8, 2022, general election state representative district 14". Colorado Secretary of State. State of Colorado. n.d. Retrieved November 21, 2022.

External links

  • Legislative website
  • Campaign website
Colorado House of Representatives
Preceded by
Mike Lynch
Minority Leader of the Colorado House of Representatives
2024–present
Incumbent
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Statewide political officials of Colorado
U.S. senators
State governmentSenate
  • Steve Fenberg, President
  • James Coleman, President pro tempore
  • Robert Rodriguez, Majority Leader
  • Paul Lundeen, Minority Leader
House
Supreme Court
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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)
Josh 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)
Rose Pugliese (R)
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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74th General Assembly (2023–2024)
Speaker of the House
Julie McCluskie (D)
Speaker pro tempore
Chris Kennedy (D)
Majority Leader
Monica Duran (D)
Minority Leader
Rose Pugliese (R)
  1. Javier Mabrey (D)
  2. Steven Woodrow (D)
  3. Meg Froelich (D)
  4. Tim Hernández (D)
  5. Alex Valdez (D)
  6. Elisabeth Epps (D)
  7. Jennifer Bacon (D)
  8. Leslie Herod (D)
  9. Emily Sirota (D)
  10. Junie Joseph (D)
  11. Karen McCormick (D)
  12. Kyle Brown (D)
  13. Julie McCluskie (D)
  14. Rose Pugliese (R)
  15. Scott Bottoms (R)
  16. Stephanie Vigil (D)
  17. Regina English (D)
  18. Marc Snyder (D)
  19. Jennifer Parenti (D)
  20. Don Wilson (R)
  21. Mary Bradfield (R)
  22. Ken DeGraaf (R)
  23. Monica Duran (D)
  24. Lindsey Daugherty (D)
  25. Tammy Story (D)
  26. Meghan Lukens (D)
  27. Brianna Titone (D)
  28. Sheila Lieder (D)
  29. Shannon Bird (D)
  30. Chris Kennedy (D)
  31. Julia Marvin (D)
  32. Manny Rutinel (D)
  33. William Lindstedt (D)
  34. Jenny Willford (D)
  35. Lorena Garcia (D)
  36. Mike Weissman (D)
  37. Chad Clifford (D)
  38. David Ortiz (D)
  39. Brandi Bradley (R)
  40. Naquetta Ricks (D)
  41. Iman Jodeh (D)
  42. Mandy Lindsay (D)
  43. Bob Marshall (D)
  44. Anthony Hartsook (R)
  45. Lisa Frizell (R)
  46. Tisha Mauro (D)
  47. Ty Winter (R)
  48. Gabe Evans (R)
  49. Judy Amabile (D)
  50. Mary Young (D)
  51. Ron Weinberg (R)
  52. Cathy Kipp (D)
  53. Andrew Boesenecker (D)
  54. Matt Soper (R)
  55. Rick Taggart (R)
  56. Rod Bockenfeld (R)
  57. Elizabeth Velasco (D)
  58. Marc Catlin (R)
  59. Barbara McLachlan (D)
  60. Stephanie Luck (R)
  61. Eliza Hamrick (D)
  62. Matthew Martinez (D)
  63. Richard Holtorf (R)
  64. Ryan Armagost (R)
  65. Mike Lynch (R)


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