Difference between revisions of "Julie Quinn"

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(Background)
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|author=Richard Rainey}}</ref> However, the engagement was broken after a five-year relationship. In 2019, Young sought to return to his previous post as Jefferson Parish president.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.johnfyoung.com/ John Young]|title=John Young, Parish President|publisher=Johnfyoung.com|access date=November 16, 2019; material on broken engagement no longer on-line}}</ref>
 
|author=Richard Rainey}}</ref> However, the engagement was broken after a five-year relationship. In 2019, Young sought to return to his previous post as Jefferson Parish president.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.johnfyoung.com/ John Young]|title=John Young, Parish President|publisher=Johnfyoung.com|access date=November 16, 2019; material on broken engagement no longer on-line}}</ref>
  
===Career==
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==Career==
  
In order to run for the Louisiana State Senate in 2005, Quinn resigned from the Jefferson Parish School Board. She was elected and took the oath of office in August 2005, just three weeks before [[Hurricane Katrina]].  Quinn was thereafter elected to a full term in the Senate seat in the primary held on October 20, 2007.<ref Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, October 20, 2007.}}</ref>
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In order to run for the Louisiana State Senate in 2005, Quinn resigned from the Jefferson Parish School Board. She was elected and took the oath of office in August 2005, just three weeks before [[Hurricane Katrina]].  Quinn was thereafter elected to a full term in the Senate seat in the primary held on October 20, 2007.<ref Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, October 20, 2007.</ref>
  
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Senator Quinn served on the House Insurance Committee, a position through which she became an advocate for property insurance reform. She also worked to require insurance companies to pay the claims to homeowners in the wake of Katrina. After her first legislative session, she was named "Senator of the Year" by the Louisiana Childcare Association. Within eighteen months, she was named Legislator of the Year by the Louisiana Orthopedic Association, the Louisiana Chiropractic Association, and the Louisiana Nurse Anesthetists. She has been twice named to the "Hall of Fame" of the [[conservative]] Louisiana Family Forum for a voting record 100 percent in line with the traditional values of that group.<ref name=quinn/> 
  
Senator Quinn served on the House Insurance Committee, a position through which she became an advocate for property insurance reform. She also worked to require insurance companies to pay the claims to homeowners in the wake of Katrina. After her first legislative session, she was named "Senator of the Year" by the Louisiana Childcare Association. Within eighteen months, she was named Legislator of the Year by the Louisiana Orthopedic Association, the Louisiana Chiropractic Association, and the Louisiana Nurse Anesthetists. She has been twice named to the "Hall of Fame" of the [[|conservative]] Louisiana Family Forum for a voting record 100 percent in line with the organization’s traditional values.<ref name=quinn/>  Additionally, she supported Senate colleague [[Heulette Fontenot]]'s Pet Evacuation Act of 2006 and in 2008 passed legislation protecting and including animals in a Domestic Abuse Protective Order. In 2008 she was named "Legislator of the Year by the United States Humane Society.
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Additionally, Quinn supported her late Senate colleague [[Heulette Fontenot]]'s Pet Evacuation Act of 2006 and in 2008 worked to pass legislation protecting and including animals in a Domestic Abuse Protective Order. In 2008 she was named "Legislator of the Year by the United States Humane Society. Quinn sponsored a bill requiring mandatory jail time for people who violate a [[restraining order]] at the request of the Louisiana Coalition for Domestic Abuse.  The bill is now law. She also filed a bill banning [[texting]] while driving in Louisiana.
  
 
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In 2008, then Senate President Joel Chaisson, a [[Democratic Party|Democrat]] from Destrehan in St. Charles Parish, named Quinn as chair of the Judiciary A Committee. In that role, she managed a large amount of non-fiscal legislation relating to clerks of court, tort reform, courts, property law, successions, family law, state civil code, code of evidence, and children’s code. She also served on the Senate Committee on Local and Municipal Affairs.<ref name=quinn>{{cite web|url=http://senate.legis.state.la.us/quinn/biography.asp|title=Louisiana State Senate District 6|publisher=senate.legis.state.la.us|accessdate=October 19, 2009}}</ref>  
Quinn sponsored a bill requiring mandatory jail time for people who violate a [[restraining order]] at the request of the Louisiana Coalition for Domestic Abuse.  The bill is now law. She also filed a bill banning text messaging while driving in Louisiana.
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In 2008, then Senate President Joel Chaisson, a [[Democratic Party|Democrat]] from Destrehan in St. Charles Parish, named her chair of the Judiciary A Committee. In that role, she managed a large amount of non-fiscal legislation relating to clerks of court, tort reform, courts, property law, successions, family law, state civil code, code of evidence, and children’s code. She also served on the Senate Committee on Local and Municipal Affairs.<ref name=quinn>{{cite web|url=http://senate.legis.state.la.us/quinn/biography.asp|title=Louisiana State Senate District 6|publisher=senate.legis.state.la.us|accessdate=October 19, 2009}}</ref>  
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In 2009, she championed the cause of homeowners having problems with [[China|Chinese]] drywall. In 2011, she chose not to run for re-election in part because [[redistricting]] would have placed her in the same senatorial district as fellow Republican Conrad Appel. She was mentioned as a potential candidate for the state appeals court.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2011/03/on_eve_of_redistricting_sessio.html|publisher=''The New Orleans Times-Picayune''|title=
 
In 2009, she championed the cause of homeowners having problems with [[China|Chinese]] drywall. In 2011, she chose not to run for re-election in part because [[redistricting]] would have placed her in the same senatorial district as fellow Republican Conrad Appel. She was mentioned as a potential candidate for the state appeals court.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2011/03/on_eve_of_redistricting_sessio.html|publisher=''The New Orleans Times-Picayune''|title=

Revision as of 15:21, November 16, 2019

Julie Ann Unangst Quinn

[Louisiana]] State Senator for
District 6 (Jefferson, Orleans, St. Tammany, and Tangipahoa parishes)
In office
2005–2012
Preceded by John Hainkel
Succeeded by Bodi White

Member of the
Jefferson Parish School Board
In office
2001–2005

Born October 26, 1966
Greenville, Pennsylvania, USA
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Francis Patrick Quinn (1996-2006, divorced)
Children Two sons (Spencer and Ashton)

Parents
Bruce Edward, Sr., and Shirley Lineman Unangst

Residence Metairie, Jefferson Parish
Alma mater Louisiana State University

Loyola University New Orleans

Occupation Attorney
Religion Roman Catholic

Julie Ann Unangst Quinn (born October 26, 1966) is an attorney from Metairie] Louisiana. A Republican, she is a former member of the Louisiana State Senate for District 6, which previously included parts of Jefferson, Orleans (Uptown section), St. Tammany, and Tangipahoa parishes..

Quinn was elected after winning a special election runoff held in July 2005 against fellow Republican Diane Winston of Covington, who was then a state representative. The Senate seat became available by the sudden death of veteran Republican lawmaker John Joseph Hainkel, Jr. (1938-2005).

Background

Quinn is the oldest of three children born to Bruce Edward Unangst, Sr. (born January 1949), a native of Greenville in Mercer County in northwestern Pennsylvania, and the former Shirley Ann Lineman (born March 1948).[1] Bruce Unangst, I, is a resident of Madisonville, Louisiana, was served as the first president of the combined parish and municipal government for St. Tammany Parish.[1]He is a real estate agent and banker in the parish seat of government in Covington. Quinn’s mother also had political aspirations and unsuccessfully sought the District 76 seat in St. Tammany Parish in the Louisiana House of Representatives in a four-candidate all-Republican field[1] in the nonpartisan blanket primary held on October 19, 1991.[2] In the second round of balloting, the incumbent Edward C. Scogin of Slidell, was unseated for the position that Shirley Unangst sought by Suzanne Mayfield Krieger.[3]

She has two brothers—Bruce Unangst, II (born 1971), of Prairieville in Ascension Parish and Christopher Martin Unangst (born 1980) of Destin, Florida. Bruce Unangst, II, a Baton Rouge attorney ran unsuccessfully in 2014 for the Division C seat on the state 23rd Judicial District Court. He was defe43ated by fellow Republican Katherine Tess Percy Stromberg (born 1972), who polled 18,355 votes (61 percent) to Unangst's 11,657 (39 percent).[4] In the campaign, Stromberg questioned Unangst's role as a criminal defense attorney, having been co-counsel to serial killer Derrick Todd Lee. She argued in her advertising that Unangst had been dishonest in telling of his experience in felony cases, which implied a "tough-on-crime" commitment possessed instead by Stromberg.[5]

Quinn graduated in 1989 from Louisiana State University in [[Baton Rouge] with a Bachelor of Arts degree in broadcast journalism. In 1992, she earned her Juris Doctorate from Loyola University in New Orleans, at which she was involved with the Law Review and Moot Court and was twice named a teaching assistant in legal research and writing.[1]

In 1996, Quinn married businessman Francis Patrick Quinn, owner of the Decatur hotel chain. In 2001, Quinn ran for and won a special election to the Jefferson Parish School Board. From that berth she declared her support for fiscal responsibility[1] and worked to establish the first magnet school in Jefferson Parish. The Quinns divorced in 2006. In 2012, then Jefferson Parish President John F. Young, who ran unsuccessfully as a Republican candidate for lieutenant governor in 2015,[6] announced his engagement to Quinn. [7] However, the engagement was broken after a five-year relationship. In 2019, Young sought to return to his previous post as Jefferson Parish president.[8]

Career

In order to run for the Louisiana State Senate in 2005, Quinn resigned from the Jefferson Parish School Board. She was elected and took the oath of office in August 2005, just three weeks before Hurricane Katrina. Quinn was thereafter elected to a full term in the Senate seat in the primary held on October 20, 2007.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

In 2009, she championed the cause of homeowners having problems with Chinese drywall. In 2011, she chose not to run for re-election in part because redistricting would have placed her in the same senatorial district as fellow Republican Conrad Appel. She was mentioned as a potential candidate for the state appeals court.[9]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Senator Quinn Takes Oath of Office as New District 6 State Senator. Louisiana State Senate (August 2, 2003). Retrieved on October 20, 2009; no longer on-line.
  2. Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, October 19, 1991.
  3. Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, November 16, 1991.
  4. Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, November 4, 2014.
  5. David J. Mitchell (November 5, 2014). Judicial race in River Parishes heated as candidates complain of tactics. The New Orleans Times-Picayune. Retrieved on November 16, 2019.
  6. Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, October 24, 2015.
  7. Richard Rainey (February 24, 2012). John Young, Julie Quinn to marry. Retrieved on February 20, 2013.
  8. John Young John Young, Parish President]. Johnfyoung.com.
  9. Bill Barrow (March 19, 2011). On eve of redistricting session, Sen. Julie Quinn says she won't seek re-election. The New Orleans Times-Picayune. Retrieved on November 16, 2019.