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David A. Reid

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician
David Reid
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
Assumed office
January 10, 2018
Preceded byTag Greason
Constituency32nd district (2018–2024)
28th district (2024–present)
Personal details
Born
David Alan Reid

(1962年01月14日) January 14, 1962 (age 63)
Lexington, Virginia, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseBarbara Reid
EducationNortheastern Oklahoma State University (BA)
National Intelligence University (MS)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/serviceUnited States Navy Reserve
Years of service1988–2011
RankCommander
AwardsNavy Commendation Medal
Navy Achievement Medal

David Alan Reid (born January 14, 1962) is an American politician and retired US Navy Reserve commander. Reid was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates in 2017. He is a Democrat representing the 28th District, which includes much of eastern Loudoun County in Northern Virginia.

Early life and education

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Reid grew up in Rockbridge County, Virginia, before moving to the United Methodist Children's Home in Richmond, Virginia in 1972.[1] After six years, Reid and his youngest brother were adopted and moved to Tahlequah, Oklahoma, with a foster family.[2]

Reid earned a BA in political science from Northeastern Oklahoma State University. He also holds a master's diploma in strategic intelligence from the Joint Military Intelligence College located at the Defense Intelligence Agency in Washington, D.C. [3]

Career

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Reid served 23 years in the US Navy Reserve, as a naval intelligence officer, where he retired as a commander (O-5) in 2011. While in the navy, Reid made two deployments to South Korea and one deployment to Iceland.[1]

Political career

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Reid ran for the Virginia House of Delegates in the 2017 elections for the 32nd district, defeating incumbent Thomas "Tag" Greason by a margin of 17%.[4] [5] Reid was unchallenged in the 2019 election.[5] Reid faced a challenge from Republican Scott Pio in 2021, winning with 57.09% of the vote.[5] Due to redistricting in 2024, Reid then represented the 28th district.[5] He faced a challenge from Republican Paul Lott in the 2023 election, winning with 61.20% of the vote.[5]

On November 14, 2023, Reid announced his campaign for Virginia's 10th congressional district.[6]

Reid authored a memoir in April 2024 titled "Virginia Grit: From Poverty to Policymaker, Creating Opportunity for Everyone."[7]

Date Election Candidate Party Votes %
Virginia House of Delegates, 32nd district
Nov 7, 2017[8] General David Reid Democrat 17,865 58.47%
Thomas "Tag" Greason Republican 12,653 41.41%
Nov 5, 2019 [9] General David Reid Democrat 20,462 92.6%
Nov 2, 2021[10] General David Reid Democrat 23,284 57.09%
H. Scott Pio Republican 16,208 39.74%
Virginia House of Delegates, 28th district
Nov 7, 2023[11] General David Reid Democrat 17,583 61.20%
Paul Lott Republican 11,048 38.45%
United States House of Representatives, Virginia's 10th district
Jun 18, 2024[12] Primary Suhas Subramanyam Democratic 13,504 30.4%
Dan Helmer 11,784 26.6%
Atif Qarni 4,768 10.7%
Eileen Filler-Corn 4,131 9.3%
Jennifer Boysko 4,016 9.0%
David Reid 1,419 3.2%
Michelle Maldonado 1,412 3.2%
Adrian Pokharel 1,028 2.3%
Krystle Kaul 982 2.2%
Travis Nembhard 722 1.6%
Marion Devoe 386 0.9%
Mark Leighton 224 0.5%

References

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  1. ^ a b "David Reid". Local Candidates. Retrieved 2024年11月12日.
  2. ^ "From Humble Beginnings to House of Delegates - UMFS". UMFS. 2018年02月19日. Retrieved 2018年03月05日.
  3. ^ "David A. Reid". House History . Retrieved 2024年11月12日.
  4. ^ Greene, Renss (2017年01月06日). "Democrat Reid Announces House of Delegates Challenge". LoudounNow. Retrieved 2024年11月12日.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Reid, David: Overview - VPAP". Virginia Public Access Project. Retrieved 2018年03月05日.
  6. ^ Olivo, Antonio (November 14, 2023). "Virginia Del. David A. Reid joins race for Rep. Wexton's seat in Congress". Washington Post. Retrieved 2024年11月12日.
  7. ^ Reid, David (2024年04月16日). Virginia Grit: From Poverty to Policymaker, Creating Opportunity for Everyone. Clyde Hill Publishing. ISBN 979-8-9874076-9-1.
  8. ^ "Virginia Elections Database » Search Elections". Virginia Elections Database. Retrieved 2024年04月23日.
  9. ^ "Virginia Elections Database » Search Elections". Virginia Elections Database. Retrieved 2024年04月23日.
  10. ^ "Virginia Elections Database » Search Elections". Virginia Elections Database. Retrieved 2024年04月23日.
  11. ^ "Election Results: House of Delegates District 28". Virginia Public Access Project. Retrieved April 15, 2024.
  12. ^ Vakil, Caroline (2024年06月18日). "Suhas Subramanyam wins Virginia Democratic primary for Wexton's seat". The Hill. Retrieved 2024年11月11日.
162nd General Assembly (2024−2026)
Speaker of the House
Don Scott (D)
Majority Leader
Charniele Herring (D)
Minority Leader
Todd Gilbert (R)
  1. Patrick Hope (D)
  2. Adele McClure (D)
  3. Alfonso Lopez (D)
  4. Charniele Herring (D)
  5. Elizabeth Bennett-Parker (D)
  6. Rip Sullivan (D)
  7. Karen Keys-Gamarra (D)
  8. Irene Shin (D)
  9. Karrie Delaney (D)
  10. Dan Helmer (D)
  11. David Bulova (D)
  12. Holly Seibold (D)
  13. Marcus Simon (D)
  14. Vivian Watts (D)
  15. Laura Jane Cohen (D)
  16. Paul Krizek (D)
  17. Mark Sickles (D)
  18. Kathy Tran (D)
  19. Rozia Henson (D)
  20. Michelle Maldonado (D)
  21. Josh Thomas (D)
  22. Ian Lovejoy (R)
  23. Candi King (D)
  24. Luke Torian (D)
  25. Briana Sewell (D)
  26. Jas Jeet Singh (D)
  27. Atoosa Reaser (D)
  28. David Reid (D)
  29. Marty Martinez (D)
  30. Geary Higgins (R)
  31. Delores Riley Oates (R)
  32. Bill Wiley (R)
  33. Todd Gilbert (R)
  34. Tony Wilt (R)
  35. Chris Runion (R)
  36. Ellen Campbell (R)
  37. Terry Austin (R)
  38. Sam Rasoul (D)
  39. Will Davis (R)
  40. Joe McNamara (R)
  41. Chris Obenshain (R)
  42. Jason Ballard (R)
  43. Will Morefield (R)
  44. Israel O'Quinn (R)
  45. Terry Kilgore (R)
  46. Jed Arnold (R)
  47. Wren Williams (R)
  48. Eric Phillips (R)
  49. Danny Marshall (R)
  50. Tommy Wright (R)
  51. Eric Zehr (R)
  52. Wendell Walker (R)
  53. Tim Griffin (R)
  54. Katrina Callsen (D)
  55. Amy Laufer (D)
  56. Tom Garrett (R)
  57. David Owen (R)
  58. Rodney Willett (D)
  59. Buddy Fowler (R)
  60. Scott Wyatt (R)
  61. Michael Webert (R)
  62. Nick Freitas (R)
  63. Phillip Scott (R)
  64. Paul Milde (R)
  65. Joshua G. Cole (D)
  66. Bobby Orrock (R)
  67. Hillary Pugh Kent (R)
  68. Keith Hodges (R)
  69. Chad Green (R)
  70. Shelly Simonds (D)
  71. Amanda Batten (R)
  72. Lee Ware (R)
  73. Mark Earley Jr. (R)
  74. Mike Cherry (R)
  75. Carrie Coyner (R)
  76. Debra Gardner (D)
  77. Michael Jones (D)
  78. Betsy B. Carr (D)
  79. Rae Cousins (D)
  80. Destiny Levere Bolling (D)
  81. Delores McQuinn (D)
  82. Kim Taylor (R)
  83. Otto Wachsmann (R)
  84. Nadarius Clark (D)
  85. Marcia Price (D)
  86. A.C. Cordoza (R)
  87. Jeion Ward (D)
  88. Don Scott (D)
  89. Baxter Ennis (R)
  90. Jay Leftwich (R)
  91. Cliff Hayes (D)
  92. Bonita Anthony (D)
  93. Jackie Glass (D)
  94. Phil Hernandez (D)
  95. Alex Askew (D)
  96. Kelly Convirs-Fowler (D)
  97. Michael Feggans (D)
  98. Barry Knight (R)
  99. Anne Ferrell Tata (R)
  100. Robert Bloxom Jr. (R)

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