Matt Gress Explained

Matt Gress
State House:Arizona
District:4th
Term Start:January 9, 2023
Predecessor:Joel John
Alongside:Eric Meyer
Birth Name:Matthew Owen Gress[1]
Birth Date:8 July 1988
Birth Place:Oklahoma, U.S.
Party:Republican
Alma Mater:University of Oklahoma
Syracuse University
Residence:Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.
Signature:Matt Gress Signature.png
Website:Campaign Website

Matt Gress (born July8, 1988) is an American politician and Republican member of the Arizona House of Representatives elected to represent District 4 in 2022.

Early career and education

Gress grew up in rural Oklahoma and graduated from the University of Oklahoma, where he was selected for the Harry S. Truman Scholarship.[2] [3] Gress was accepted into the Teach for America program, and he gained certification to teach in English, History, Government and Economics.[4] [5] He also received his master's degree from Syracuse University.

In Arizona, Gress worked as an analyst for the non-partisan Joint Legislative Budget Committee, and later as Director of the Governor's Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting, under former Governor Doug Ducey.[6] From 2017 until 2021, Gress served as a governing board member in the Madison Elementary School District, in central Phoenix. Gress is openly gay.[7] [8]

Elections

In the 2022 General Election, Gress was elected to the legislature, becoming the top vote getter in District 4 with 61,527 votes.[9]

Gress serves with Democrat Laura Terech, who came in second with 59,292 votes. Former Republican state Representative Maria Syms came in third in the general election, falling short with 56,383 votes.[10] [11]

Tenure

One of Gress' key campaign pledges was a plan to raise teacher pay by $10,000 per Arizona teacher.[12] Gress introduced his Pay Teachers First Plan in January 2023.[13]

Gress also sponsored by a bill to provide financial assistance to residents of mobile homes if they are told to vacate their homes due to redevelopment efforts.[14] The bill was signed into law by Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs.[15]

In the wake of the Planned Parenthood Arizona v. Mayes ruling that upheld an 1864 near-total abortion ban over a more recent law passed in 2022 that outlined a 15-week ban, Gress became one of the biggest advocates calling for its repeal. He was the sole Republican in the Arizona House to vote to repeal over three instances, being joined by fellow Republicans Justin Wilmeth and Tim Dunn, on the latter to repeal the ban alongside all Democrats.[16] He was later removed from his House committee role.[17]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.mattgress.com/
  2. Web site: Meet Matt . April 8, 2023 . Matt Gress for State Representative.
  3. Web site: OU scholar Matthew Gress' wheels are turning . The Oklahoman . April 8, 2023 . April 5, 2009.
  4. Web site: Gress hosted at ImgBB .
  5. Web site: Arizona Democrats have a Republican they can work with. They're telling him to kiss off . The Arizona Republic . April 8, 2023 . February 21, 2009.
  6. Web site: Ducey's budget director Matt Gress running for state House . The Miner . January 7, 2023 . December 30, 2021 . Associated Press.
  7. Web site: Meet Matt . January 7, 2023 . Matt Gress for State Representative.
  8. Web site: First Openly Gay GOP Former Member of US House Dies at 80 . SFGN . January 7, 2023 . December 5, 2022 . Levesque, Brody.
  9. Web site: Maricopa County Official Results . Maricopa County Elections Department . April 8, 2023 . November 8, 2022 . Kmack, Sam.
  10. Web site: Where Arizona House candidates Matt Gress and Laura Terech stand on key issues for District 4 . The Arizona Republic . December 10, 2022 . October 11, 2022 . Kmack, Sam.
  11. Web site: Update: Terech, Gress lead in race for LD4 Arizona House seats . Daily Independent . December 10, 2022 . November 14, 2022.
  12. Web site: Matt Gress Announces "Pay Teachers First" Plan . April 8, 2023 . Matt Gress for State Representative.
  13. Web site: Arizona Democrats have a Republican they can work with. They're telling him to kiss off . The Arizona Republic . April 8, 2023 . February 21, 2023.
  14. Web site: Bipartisan bill to help mobile home park residents advances . Arizona Mirror . April 8, 2023 . February 1, 2023 .
  15. Web site: Hobbs signs legislation into law that helps forced-out mobile home residents . KJZZ . April 8, 2023 . March 31, 2023 .
  16. News: Healy . Jack . Arizona Republicans Who Supported Repealing an Abortion Ban Face Blowback . . April 25, 2024.
  17. Web site: Arizona GOP lawmaker booted from committee after backing abortion ban repeal. Choi . Joseph . April 24, 2024. The Hill.