Chris Heagarty Explained

Chris Heagarty
Office:Member of the Wake County School Board
from the 7th district
Term Start:December 11, 2018
Predecessor:Kathy Hartenstine
State House1:North Carolina
State1:North Carolina
District1:41st
Term Start1:October 30, 2009
Term End1:January 1, 2011
Predecessor1:Ty Harrell
Successor1:Tom Murry
Party:Democratic
Education:William G. Enloe High School
Residence:Raleigh, North Carolina

John Christopher Heagarty is an American politician. He was appointed by Governor Bev Perdue to serve in the North Carolina House of Representatives in 2009 to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Rep. Ty Harrell, a fellow Democrat.[1] Heagarty represented the 41st House district in western Wake County.

A long-time resident of Wake County, Heagarty attended York Elementary School and William G. Enloe High School. He graduated from North Carolina State University with a Bachelor of Arts in multi-disciplinary studies with a concentration in political communications.[2]

Heagarty lobbied at the North Carolina General Assembly for the NC Association of Electric Cooperatives Inc.[3] He next served as executive director and lobbyist for the non-partisan North Carolina Center for Voter Education from 2000 until he left in 2007 to pursue a J.D. degree from North Carolina Central University.[4]

Morrisville Councilman Tom Murry defeated Heagarty in the 2010 general election by a 54-46% margin. After his loss, Heagarty went on to head the North Carolina Judicial Standards Commission and the City of Oaks Foundation, a land conservancy.

Upon the death and posthumous re-election of Wake County School Board member Kathy Hartenstine, Heagarty applied to be appointed to the position. As he was the only contender for the District 7 seat, he was chosen to serve on the school board.[5] He was elected to a full term on the board in 2020.[6]

Electoral history

2010

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Heagarty chosen for seat in House - Politics - NewsObserver.com. 2009-12-22 . The News & Observer. Observer. The News &. 2009-10-18.
  2. News: Former state lawmaker becomes newest Wake County school board member. Hui. T. Keung. 2018-12-11. The News & Observer. 2019-12-22.
  3. Web site: North Carolina Department of Secretary of State Lobbying Registration. North Carolina Department of Secretary of State. North Carolina Department of Secretary of State. 2010-07-25.
  4. Web site: Voter Education head leaving - newsobserver.com projects. 2009-12-22. The News & Observer. Observer. The News &. 2007-08-14. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20081024234910/http://projects.newsobserver.com/blogs/voter_education_head_leaving. 2008-10-24.
  5. https://assistive.eboardsolutions.com/AboutUs/AboutUs.aspx?S=920&TID=1 Wake County Board of Education members
  6. http://www.wakegov.com/elections/data/Past%20Election%20Results/2020-11-03%20-%20General%20Election/20201103.Summary.htm Wake County Board of Elections: results of 2020 general election