Dennis Hollingsworth Explained

Dennis Hollingsworth
State Senate:California
District:36th
Term Start:December 2, 2002
Term End:November 30, 2010
Predecessor:Ray Haynes
Successor:Joel Anderson
State Assembly2:California
District2:66th
Term Start2:December 4, 2000
Term End2:November 30, 2002
Predecessor2:Bruce Thompson
Successor2:Ray Haynes
Office3:Minority Leader of the California Senate
Term Start3:February 18, 2008
Term End3:October 11, 2010
Predecessor3:Dave Cogdill
Successor3:Bob Dutton
Party:Republican
Spouse:Natalie
Children:3
Birth Date:January 12, 1967
Birth Place:Hemet, California
Alma Mater:California Polytechnic State University
Cornell University

Dennis Clark Hollingsworth (born January 12, 1967) is an American politician who represented California's 36th State Senate district, which includes portions of San Diego and Riverside County, from 2002 to 2010. In 2000, Hollingsworth was elected to the Legislature as a member of the Assembly, and in 2002, Hollingsworth was elected to the Senate. Hollingsworth served as the California State Senate Minority Leader from 2008 until he termed out of the Senate in 2010. Hollingsworth's political focus included advancing conservative principles and transparency.

Hollingsworth was affiliated with the conservative group ProtectMarriage.com and was instrumental in their unsuccessful legal battle to uphold the ban on same-sex marriage in California.[1] As such, he is the named appellant in Hollingsworth v. Perry.

Background

Hollingsworth attended the California Polytechnic State University and Cornell University where he studied Dairy Science, Agricultural Management and International Relations. He was a business owner and Legislative Director for the Riverside County Farm Bureau prior to his election to the State Legislature. Hollingsworth is an avid hunter and past state chairman of Quail Unlimited.

Hollingsworth lives in Murrieta with his wife, Natalie, and two sons and one daughter.

Political career

Hollingsworth was elected to the California State Assembly in 2000 and the State Senate in 2002.

In 2006, he authored a resolution to replace the statue of Thomas Starr King, a Unitarian minister who worked to keep California in the Union during the American Civil War, with one of Ronald Reagan in Statuary Hall. One of his reasons was that he had never heard of King, and felt that someone more widely known should represent California. Hollingsworth also believed that the King statue would serve a better educational purpose being placed in the state capital. The bill passed the Senate and Assembly on August 31, 2006.[2]

Shortly after midnight on the morning of February 18, 2009, after several days of late-night, contentious debates over closing a $42 billion gap in the state budget, Senate Republicans met in caucus where they voted to replace State Senate Republican Leader Dave Cogdill with Hollingsworth as minority leader. Hollingsworth immediately repudiated a budget deal negotiated by Cogsdill because it included increases in the sales, income and gasoline taxes, saying "We should reopen negotiations and we should pass a no-tax budget."[3] The Cogdill-negotiated budget eventually passed regardless.

In 2010, Hollingsworth retired from the Senate due to term limits.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The Supreme Court Will Uphold Gay Marriage … Here's Why. Blum. Bill. March 15, 2013. Los Angeles CityWatch. March 20, 2013. dead. https://archive.today/20130410170536/http://www.citywatchla.com/8br-hidden/4707-the-supreme-court-will-uphold-gay-marriage-here-s-why. April 10, 2013.
  2. Web site: Senate Joint Resolution 3 (Hollingsworth, 2006). California State Legislature. 2006.
  3. News: Schwarzenegger says lawmakers resisting budget plan 'have math problem'. February 19, 2009. Los Angeles Times. March 20, 2013.
  4. News: GOP leader reflects on his tenure. Gardner. Michael. November 13, 2010. San Diego Union Tribune. March 20, 2013.