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Marty Joe Murray

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician (born 1989)
Marty Joe Murray
Murray in 2024
Member of the Missouri House of Representatives
from the 78th district
Assumed office
January 8, 2025
Succeeded byRasheen Aldridge
Personal details
Party Democratic
University of Missouri
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Websitemartyjoemurray.com

Marty Joe Murray Jr (born 1989)[1] is an American politician who was elected as a member of the Missouri House of Representatives for the 78th district in 2024.[2] Murray spent the majority of his professional career working in Project Management and Business Analytics in Corporate America.[3] Murray became the youngest member of the Project Management Institute's Metro St. Louis chapter to obtain a Project Management Professional (PMP) certification. In 2020 he was recognized by the PMIMSL Chapter for the Emerging Leader Award.[4]

Education

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Murray attended Thornwood High School lettering in varsity at tailback his sophomore year. He later transferred to Eisenhower High School (Decatur, Illinois) and graduated in 2007.

In 2023 Murray was recognized for the Young Alumni Achievement Award[5] . As a graduate from Southern Illinois University Carbondale's College of Business and Analytics, Murray, a first-generation college student, held campus leadership positions in organizations including Undergraduate Student Government, Black Affairs Council and the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute. During his time with the Paul Simon Institute, he served as ambassador and was awarded the Vince Demuzio Governmental Internship, where he worked for then-Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan. In 2015, Murray became the youngest person ever enrolled in the Executive MBA program at the University of Missouri where he received his master’s in business administration.

Career

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In August 2016, Marty beat a 23-year incumbent for the 7th ward Democratic Committeeman seat[6] . Shortly after the election he was elected as the Chairman of Missouri’s 78th legislative district committee, Vice Chair of the 1st congressional district committee and State Committeeman representing Missouri’s 5th Senatorial District to the Missouri Democratic Party. Murray became an elected member of the Missouri House of Representatives for the 78th district in 2024.[7] .

In 2025m Murray served on several committees including Administration and Accounts, Budget, Financial Institutions, and Subcommittee on Appropriations - General Administration.

Left to Right: Rep. Doug Clemens, Rep. Gretchen Bangert, Rep. Philip Oehlerking, Gov. Mike Kehoe, Senator Sandy Crawford, Rep. Bill Owen, Rep. Marty Joe Murray

During his freshman term in office he amended Senate Bill 98 (Crawford) [8] to include a provision that strengthens employee protections and supports small businesses. Murray also partnered with Republican Representative Travis Wilson in a bipartisan effort to introduce an "office-conversion" tax-credit bill. At a House hearing, the duo highlighted widespread support from development, business and municipal sectors for a proposal to offer a 25 % tax credit for converting large, long-vacant office buildings into residential, retail or mixed commercial uses. This move aimed at revitalizing downtown St. Louis and other Missouri communities[9] .The bill's intent was to address the commercial vacancy that was accelerated by the global pandemic and rise in remote work.

References

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  1. ^ Pfeil, Alyse (March 19, 2024). "Two Democrats running to fill vacant St. Louis seat in Missouri House". STLtoday.com. Retrieved February 14, 2025.
  2. ^ "Marty Joe Murray". Ballotpedia. Retrieved February 14, 2025.
  3. ^ "Marty Murray Jr". www.linkedin.com. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  4. ^ Staff (February 4, 2020). "Marty Joe Murray Jr. Wins Project Management Institute award for Emerging Leaders". www.stlamerican.com. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  5. ^ "Previous Distinguished Alumni Award Recipients". siualumni.com. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  6. ^ Rosenbaum, Jason (August 3, 2016). "On the Trail: Following Up on The 10 Big Questions from Missouri's Primaries". stlpr.org. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  7. ^ "Marty Joe Murray". Ballotpedia. Retrieved February 14, 2025.
  8. ^ "Senate Bill 98". www.senate.mo.gov. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  9. ^ Phillips, Nicholas (February 26, 2025). "Office Conversion Tax Credit Plan finds broad backing in Jefferson City". stlmag.com. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
103rd General Assembly (2025–2026)
Speaker of the House
Jonathan Patterson (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Chad Perkins (R)
Majority Leader
Lane Roberts (R)
Minority Leader
Ashley Aune (D)
  1. Jeff Farnan (R)
  2. Mazzie Christensen (R)
  3. Danny Busick (R)
  4. Greg Sharpe (R)
  5. Louis Riggs (R)
  6. Ed Lewis (R)
  7. Peggy McGaugh (R)
  8. Josh Hurlbert (R)
  9. Dean Van Schoiack (R)
  10. Bill Falkner (R)
  11. Brenda Shields (R)
  12. Mike Jones (R)
  13. Sean Pouche (R)
  14. Ashley Aune (D)
  15. Ken Jamison (D)
  16. Chris Brown (R)
  17. Bill Allen (R)
  18. Eric Woods (D)
  19. Wick Thomas (D)
  20. Mike Steinmeyer (R)
  21. Robert Sauls (D)
  22. Yolanda Young (D)
  23. Michael Johnson (D)
  24. Emily Weber (D)
  25. Pattie Mansur (D)
  26. Tiffany Price (D)
  27. Melissa Douglas (D)
  28. Jerome Barnes (D)
  29. Aaron Crossley (D)
  30. Jonathan Patterson (R)
  31. Ron Fowler (R)
  32. Jeff Coleman (R)
  33. Carolyn Caton (R)
  34. Kemp Strickler (D)
  35. Keri Ingle (D)
  36. Anthony Ealy (D)
  37. Mark Sharp (D)
  38. Martin Jacobs (D)
  39. Mark Meirath (R)
  40. Chad Perkins (R)
  41. Doyle Justus (R)
  42. Jeff Myers (R)
  43. Kent Haden (R)
  44. John Martin (R)
  45. Kathy Steinhoff (D)
  46. David Tyson Smith (D)
  47. Adrian Plank (D)
  48. Tim Taylor (R)
  49. Jim Schulte (R)
  50. Gregg Bush (D)
  51. Mark Nolte (R)
  52. Brad Pollitt (R)
  53. Terry Thompson (R)
  54. Brandon Phelps (R)
  55. Bill Irwin (R)
  56. Michael Davis (R)
  57. Rodger Reedy (R)
  58. Willard Haley (R)
  59. Rudy Veit (R)
  60. Dave Griffith (R)
  61. Bruce Sassmann (R)
  62. Sherri Gallick (R)
  63. Tricia Byrnes (R)
  64. Deanna Self (R)
  65. Wendy Hausman (R)
  66. Marlene Terry (D)
  67. Tonya Rush (D)
  68. Kem Smith (D)
  69. Scott Miller (R)
  70. Stephanie Boykin (D)
  71. LaDonna Appelbaum (D)
  72. Doug Clemens (D)
  73. Raychel Proudie (D)
  74. Marla Smith (D)
  75. Chanel Mosley (D)
  76. Marlon Anderson (D)
  77. Kimberly-Ann Collins (D)
  78. Marty Joe Murray (D)
  79. LaKeySha Bosley (D)
  80. Elizabeth Fuchs (D)
  81. Steve Butz (D)
  82. Nick Kimble (D)
  83. Ray Reed (D)
  84. Del Taylor (D)
  85. Yolonda Fountain Henderson (D)
  86. Jeff Hales (D)
  87. Connie Steinmetz (D)
  88. Holly Jones (R)
  89. George J. Hruza (R)
  90. Mark Boyko (D)
  91. Jo Doll (D)
  92. Michael Burton (D)
  93. Bridget Walsh Moore (D)
  94. Jim Murphy (R)
  95. Vacant
  96. Brad Christ (R)
  97. David Casteel (R)
  98. Jaclyn Zimmermann (D)
  99. Ian Mackey (D)
  100. Philip Oehlerking (R)
  101. Ben Keathley (R)
  102. Richard West (R)
  103. Dave Hinman (R)
  104. Terri Violet (R)
  105. Colin Wellenkamp (R)
  106. Travis Wilson (R)
  107. Mark Matthiesen (R)
  108. Mike Costlow (R)
  109. John Simmons (R)
  110. Vacant
  111. Cecelie Williams (R)
  112. Renee Reuter (R)
  113. Phil Amato (R)
  114. Vacant
  115. Bill Lucas (R)
  116. Dale Wright (R)
  117. Becky Laubinger (R)
  118. Mike McGirl (R)
  119. Brad Banderman (R)
  120. John Hewkin (R)
  121. Bill Hardwick (R)
  122. Tara Peters (R)
  123. Jeff Vernetti (R)
  124. Don Mayhew (R)
  125. Dane Diehl (R)
  126. Jim Kalberloh (R)
  127. Ann Kelley (R)
  128. Christopher Warwick (R)
  129. John Black (R)
  130. Bishop Davidson (R)
  131. Bill Owen (R)
  132. Crystal Quade (D)
  133. Melanie Stinnett (R)
  134. Alex Riley (R)
  135. Betsy Fogle (D)
  136. Stephanie Hein (D)
  137. Darin Chappell (R)
  138. Burt Whaley (R)
  139. Bob Titus (R)
  140. Jamie Gragg (R)
  141. Hannah Kelly (R)
  142. Jeff Knight (R)
  143. Bennie Cook (R)
  144. Tony Harbison (R)
  145. Bryant Wolfin (R)
  146. Barry Hovis (R)
  147. John Voss (R)
  148. David Dolan (R)
  149. Vacant
  150. Cameron Parker (R)
  151. Steve Jordan (R)
  152. Hardy Billington (R)
  153. Keith Elliott (R)
  154. David Evans (R)
  155. Matthew Overcast (R)
  156. Brian Seitz (R)
  157. Mitch Boggs (R)
  158. Scott Cupps (R)
  159. Dirk Deaton (R)
  160. Vacant
  161. Lane Roberts (R)
  162. Bob Bromley (R)
  163. Cody Smith (R)

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