Greg Gianforte

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Greg Gianforte
Greg Gianforte 115th congress.jpg
25th Governor of Montana
From: January 4, 2021 - present
Lieutenant Kristen Juras
Predecessor Steve Bullock
Successor Incumbent (no successor)
U.S. Representative from Montana's At-large Congressional District
From: June 21, 2017 –2021
Predecessor Ryan Zinke
Successor Matt Rosendale
Information
Party Republican
Spouse(s) Susan Gianforte
Religion Non-denominational Protestant[1]

Gregory Richard “Greg” Gianforte (born April 17, 1961, age 65) is a businessman, engineer, and conservative Republican serving as the current Governor of Montana since 2021, formerly served as U.S. representative from Montana's at-large district in the United States House of Representatives.

It was announced in early June 2019 that Gianforte officially filed to run in the 2020 Montana gubernatorial election rather than run for re-election to a second full House term.[2] he is current governor of Montana since January 2021.

U.S. House of Representatives

2017 special election

After Ryan Zinke, the then-representative from Montana's at-large district, was nominated and confirmed to become the Secretary of the Interior in the Trump administration, a special election was triggered in 2017 to fill the seat for the rest of the term. Gianforte ran for the seat, winning with around 50% of the vote.[3]

2018 election

Rep Gianforte ran for re-election to a full House term in the 2018 midterm elections, winning with just under 51% of the vote.[4]

Tenure

Gianforte co-sponsored a bill introduced in February 2017 that would repeal the Obamacare-installed IPAB.[5]

Being strongly pro-life, Rep. Gianforte joined his House Republican colleagues in co-sponsoring the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act.[6]

Gianforte voted against the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018.[7]

A fiscal conservative, Gianforte voted in June 2018 in favor of cutting wasteful government spending.[8]

Gianforte voted in favor of the First Step Act.[9]

Rep. Gianforte voted against the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019.[10]

Gianforte voted against the impractical Democrat-led H.R.3 legislation.[11]

An opponent of the impeachment coup,[12] Gianforte voted against the sham impeachment articles brought against Donald Trump,[13] asserting that Democrats had “impeachment fever”.

Gianforte voted against removing the ratification deadline for the ERA.[14]

In late July 2020, Rep. Gianforte voted to remove Civil War-era statues, concurring with 71 other House Republicans as well as all Democrats.[15]

Political views

A strong conservative, Gianforte is pro-life, pro-gun rights, and a proponent of school choice.[16]

References

External links