Skyler Rude

American politician
Skyler Rude
Member of the Washington House of Representatives
from the 16th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 14, 2019
Serving with Mark Klicker
Preceded byTerry Nealey
Personal details
Born
Skyler David Rude

1986 (age 37–38)
Walla Walla, Washington, U.S
Political partyRepublican
Residence(s)Walla Walla, Washington, U.S.
Alma materWalla Walla Community College
Western Governors University
Professionpolitician, insurance agent
WebsiteLegislative website

Skyler David Rude (born 1986)[1] is an American politician. A Republican, he has served in the Washington House of Representatives since January 3, 2019. He was elected in 2018 to succeed retiring Republican Terry Nealey.[2] Rude is the only openly gay Republican in the Washington State House.[3]

Career

Rude is regarded as a moderate and bipartisan Republican, identifying as a fiscal conservative.[3] He Rude serves on a number of committees, including the Legislative Evaluation and Accountability Program Committee, Joint Higher Education Committee, Joint Task Force on Community and Technical College Counselors, the Capitol Furnishings Preservation Committee, the LGBTQ Commission, and the National Conference of State Legislature's Nuclear Legislative Working Group. He has also been appointed to serve on an internal task force tasked with exploring remote-testimony for committee hearings in the state House."[4]

In 2019, Rude co-sponsored House Resolution 4621 which encourages the state House to pursue a remote-testimony pilot program, as well as directs the Executive Rules Committee to take up the matter by Oct. 1, 2019.[5]

Awards

  • 2020 Guardians of Small Business. Presented by NFIB.[6]

Personal life

Previous to being a state representative, he was on the Walla Walla Parks and Recreation Advisory Board and College Place. He was Senator Maureen Walsh's legislative assistant and advocated for sexual harassment prevention.[7] He is openly gay.[8]

References

  1. ^ "Legislative Manual 2021–2022" (PDF). Washington State Legislature.
  2. ^ Culverwell, Wendy (October 31, 2018). "Naked voters and other tales from the 16th district campaign trail". www.tri-cityherald.com.
  3. ^ a b Gannon, Sean (19 July 2020). "Incumbent Rude faces Coburn for 16th District state representative seat". Union-Bulletin.com. Retrieved 2021-12-08.
  4. ^ "About Rep. Skyler Rude". Skyler Rude.
  5. ^ "House approves remote testimony resolution cosponsored by Rep. Rude". Skyler Rude. March 21, 2019.
  6. ^ "44 Washington Legislators Named Guardians of Small Business". nfib.com. July 15, 2020. Retrieved September 13, 2021.
  7. ^ "WA Rep. Skyler Rude". Millennial Action Project.
  8. ^ Gannon, Sean (November 5, 2020). "Republicans sweep Washington's 16th Legislative District". Whitman Wire. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
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68th State Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Laurie Jinkins (D)
Speaker pro tempore
Tina Orwall (D)
Majority Leader
Joe Fitzgibbon (D)
Minority Leader
Drew Stokesbary (R)
  1. Davina Duerr (D)
    Shelley Kloba (D)
  2. Andrew Barkis (R)
    J. T. Wilcox (R)
  3. Marcus Riccelli (D)
    Timm Ormsby (D)
  4. Suzanne Schmidt (R)
    Leonard Christian (R)
  5. Bill Ramos (D)
    Lisa Callan (D)
  6. Mike Volz (R)
    Jenny Graham (R)
  7. Jacquelin Maycumber (R)
    Joel Kretz (R)
  8. Stephanie Barnard (R)
    April Connors (R)
  9. Mary Dye (R)
    Joe Schmick (R)
  10. Clyde Shavers (D)
    Dave Paul (D)
  11. David Hackney (D)
    Steve Bergquist (D)
  12. Keith Goehner (R)
    Mike Steele (R)
  13. Tom Dent (R)
    Alex Ybarra (R)
  14. Chris Corry (R)
    Gina Mosbrucker (R)
  15. Bruce Chandler (R)
    Bryan Sandlin (R)
  16. Mark Klicker (R)
    Skyler Rude (R)
  17. Kevin Waters (R)
    Paul Harris (R)
  18. Stephanie McClintock (R)
    Greg Cheney (R)
  19. Jim Walsh (R)
    Joel McEntire (R)
  20. Peter Abbarno (R)
    Ed Orcutt (R)
  21. Strom Peterson (D)
    Lillian Ortiz-Self (D)
  22. Beth Doglio (D)
    Jessica Bateman (D)
  23. Tarra Simmons (D)
    Greg Nance (D)
  24. Mike Chapman (D)
    Steve Tharinger (D)
  25. Kelly Chambers (R)
    Cyndy Jacobsen (R)
  26. Spencer Hutchins (R)
    Michelle Caldier (R)
  27. Laurie Jinkins (D)
    Jake Fey (D)
  28. Mari Leavitt (D)
    Dan Bronoske (D)
  29. Melanie Morgan (D)
    Sharlett Mena (D)
  30. Jamila Taylor (D)
    Kristine Reeves (D)
  31. Drew Stokesbary (R)
    Eric Robertson (R)
  32. Cindy Ryu (D)
    Lauren Davis (D)
  33. Tina Orwall (D)
    Mia Gregerson (D)
  34. Emily Alvarado (D)
    Joe Fitzgibbon (D)
  35. Dan Griffey (R)
    Travis Couture (R)
  36. Julia Reed (D)
    Liz Berry (D)
  37. Sharon Tomiko Santos (D)
    Chipalo Street (D)
  38. Julio Cortes (D)
    Mary Fosse (D)
  39. Sam Low (R)
    Carolyn Eslick (R)
  40. Debra Lekanoff (D)
    Alex Ramel (D)
  41. Tana Senn (D)
    My-Linh Thai (D)
  42. Alicia Rule (D)
    Joe Timmons (D)
  43. Nicole Macri (D)
    Frank Chopp (D)
  44. Brandy Donaghy (D)
    April Berg (D)
  45. Roger Goodman (D)
    Larry Springer (D)
  46. Gerry Pollet (D)
    Darya Farivar (D)
  47. Debra Entenman (D)
    Chris Stearns (D)
  48. Vandana Slatter (D)
    Amy Walen (D)
  49. Sharon Wylie (D)
    Monica Stonier (D)


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