Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

Lesia Liss

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician (born 1966)
Lesia Liss
Member of the Michigan House of Representatives
from the 28th district
In office
2009–2013
Preceded byLisa Wojno
Succeeded byJon Switalski
Personal details
Born
Lesia Batschynsky

(1966年08月11日) August 11, 1966 (age 58)
Hamtramck, Michigan
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Mark Liss, divorced
EducationUniversity of Michigan–Dearborn (B.A.)
OccupationEmergency department nurse, politician

Lesia Liss (born August 11, 1966, née Batschynsky) is an American politician from the state of Michigan. In 2008, she was elected as a Democrat to the Michigan State House of Representatives. Prior to serving in the legislature, Liss was an emergency department nurse for 22 years. She was married to former Warren City Councilman Mark Liss.[1]

Biography

[edit ]

Lesia Batschynsky was born on August 11, 1966, to Marta and George Batschynsky, a Ukrainian immigrant, in Hamtramck, Michigan. In 1971, Lesia, her parents, and her brother Roman Batschynsky moved to Warren, Michigan, where Lesia has lived ever since. She attended South Elementary and Butcher Junior High, both in Warren. In 1984, Batschynsky graduated from Charles S. Mott High School. She went on to receive her associate degree in Nursing from Henry Ford Community College in Detroit, Michigan in 1995. In 2007 she earned a bachelor's degree in Hispanic Studies from The University of Michigan-Dearborn. Liss worked as a Registered Emergency Room Nurse in the Henry Ford Health System.[citation needed ]

Lesia met the man who became her now former husband, Mark Liss, in 1992, and married in August 1993. In 2007 Mark was elected to his first term to the Warren City Council. Both Lesia and Mark are of Ukrainian descent and are active in the Ukrainian Community. Liss is fluent in Ukrainian, Spanish, and English. She is Ukrainian Orthodox and attends St. Mary the Protectress Church in Southfield, Michigan.[1]

Political career

[edit ]

Lesia Liss was involved in supporting her then husband Mark's successful campaign for Warren City Council in 2007. The same year, she announced her intention to seek the 28th State House District, located in South-Western Macomb County and including about two-thirds of the city of Warren and all of the city of Center Line. It was being vacated by Democratic incumbent Lisa Wojno, who was barred from running for re-election because of term-limits.

Liss faced seven other Democrats in the primary. She won by a fairly large margin on election day, carrying about 31.3% of the vote. Her nearest opponent received only about 22.2%. In the general election she faced Republican Jason Balaska. The 28th District is one of the most Democratic districts in Macomb County. Democrats usually dominate in this district. Liss defeated Balaska on election day by a margin of 70.5%-29.5%.

She took office on January 1, 2009. She sat on the Family and Children Services, Health Policy, Labor, Military and Veteran Affairs and Homeland Security, and Government Operations (vice chair) Committees.[1]

Electoral history

[edit ]
  • 2008 campaign for State House
    • Lesia Liss (D), 70%
    • Jason Balaska (R), 30%
  • 2008 campaign for State House, Democratic Primary
    • Lesia Liss (D), 31%
    • Gloria Sankuer (D), 22%
    • John Vostoris (D), 17%
    • Terry Wisniewski (D), 10%
    • Marlon Brown (D), 8%
    • Roy Gillette (D), 5%
    • Paul Clark (D), 4%
    • Alan Shepperd (D), 3%

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ a b c "Rep. Lesia Liss's Bio". Michigan House Democrats. Archived from the original on 12 July 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
[edit ]
103nd Legislature (2025–2027)
Speaker of the House
Matt Hall (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Rachelle Smit (R)
Majority Floor Leader
Bryan Posthumus (R)
Minority Leader
Ranjeev Puri (R)
  1. Tyrone Carter (D)
  2. Tullio Liberati (D)
  3. Alabas Farhat (D)
  4. Karen Whitsett (D)
  5. Regina Weiss (D)
  6. Natalie Price (D)
  7. Tonya Myers Phillips (D)
  8. Helena Scott (D)
  9. Joe Tate (D)
  10. Veronica Paiz (D)
  11. Donavan McKinney (D)
  12. Kimberly Edwards (D)
  13. Mai Xiong (D)
  14. Mike McFall (D)
  15. Erin Byrnes (D)
  16. Stephanie Young (D)
  17. Laurie Pohutsky (D)
  18. Jason Hoskins (D)
  19. Samantha Steckloff (D)
  20. Noah Arbit (D)
  21. Kelly Breen (D)
  22. Matt Koleszar (D)
  23. Jason Morgan (D)
  24. Ranjeev Puri (D)
  25. Peter Herzberg (D)
  26. Dylan Wegela (D)
  27. Rylee Linting (R)
  28. Jamie Thompson (R)
  29. James DeSana (R)
  30. William Bruck (R)
  31. Reggie Miller (D)
  32. Jimmie Wilson Jr. (D)
  33. Morgan Foreman (D)
  34. Nancy Jenkins-Arno (R)
  35. Jennifer Wortz (R)
  36. Steve Carra (R)
  37. Brad Paquette (R)
  38. Joey Andrews (D)
  39. Pauline Wendzel (R)
  40. Matthew Longjohn (D)
  41. Julie Rogers (D)
  42. Matt Hall (R)
  43. Rachelle Smit (R)
  44. Steve Frisbie (R)
  45. Sarah Lightner (R)
  46. Kathy Schmaltz (R)
  47. Carrie Rheingans (D)
  48. Jennifer Conlin (D)
  49. Ann Bollin (R)
  50. Jason Woolford (R)
  51. Matt Maddock (R)
  52. Mike Harris (R)
  53. Brenda Carter (D)
  54. Donni Steele (R)
  55. Mark Tisdel (R)
  56. Sharon MacDonell (D)
  57. Thomas Kuhn (R)
  58. Ron Robinson (R)
  59. Doug Wozniak (R)
  60. Joseph Aragona (R)
  61. Denise Mentzer (D)
  62. Alicia St. Germaine (R)
  63. Jay DeBoyer (R)
  64. Joseph Pavlov (R)
  65. Jaime Greene (R)
  66. Josh Schriver (R)
  67. Phil Green (R)
  68. David Martin (R)
  69. Jasper Martus (D)
  70. Cynthia Neeley (D)
  71. Brian BeGole (R)
  72. Mike Mueller (R)
  73. Julie Brixie (D)
  74. Kara Hope (D)
  75. Penelope Tsernoglou (D)
  76. Angela Witwer (D)
  77. Emily Dievendorf (D)
  78. Gina Johnsen (R)
  79. Angela Rigas (R)
  80. Phil Skaggs (D)
  81. Stephen Wooden (D)
  82. Kristian Grant (D)
  83. John Wesley Fitzgerald (D)
  84. Carol Glanville (D)
  85. Bradley Slagh (R)
  86. Nancy De Boer (R)
  87. Will Snyder (D)
  88. Greg VanWoerkom (R)
  89. Luke Meerman (R)
  90. Bryan Posthumus (R)
  91. Pat Outman (R)
  92. Jerry Neyer (R)
  93. Tim Kelly (R)
  94. Amos O'Neal (D)
  95. Bill G. Schuette (R)
  96. Timothy Beson (R)
  97. Matthew Bierlein (R)
  98. Gregory Alexander (R)
  99. Mike Hoadley (R)
  100. Tom Kunse (R)
  101. Joseph Fox (R)
  102. Curt VanderWall (R)
  103. Betsy Coffia (D)
  104. John Roth (R)
  105. Ken Borton (R)
  106. Cam Cavitt (R)
  107. Parker Fairbairn (R)
  108. David Prestin (R)
  109. Karl Bohnak (R)
  110. Gregory Markkanen (R)

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /