Pat Garofalo Explained

Pat Garofalo
State House:Minnesota
District:58B
Prior Term:36B (2005–2013)
Term Start:January 4, 2005
Term End:July 14, 2024
Preceded:Steve Strachan
Succeeded:Vacant
Party:Republican Party of Minnesota
Birth Date:23 September 1971
Birth Place:Saint Paul, Minnesota
Alma Mater:Minnesota State University, Mankato (B.S.)
Occupation:Network engineer, Legislator
Spouse:Julie Garofalo
Children:2
Residence:Farmington, Minnesota

Patrick "Pat" Garofalo (born September 23, 1971) is an American politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Republican Party of Minnesota, he represented District 58B, which includes portions of Dakota and Goodhue counties in the southeastern Twin Cities metropolitan area.

Education

Born in 1971 in Saint Paul, Minnesota,[1] Garofalo graduated from Rosemount High School in Rosemount in 1989, then went on to Minnesota State University, Mankato in Mankato, earning his B.S. in law enforcement in 1994.

Minnesota House of Representatives

Garofalo was first elected in 2004 and was reelected every two years thereafter. In February 2008, he was named assistant minority whip for the Republican caucus. Garofalo served one term as chair of the Education Finance Committee in 2011–12, and chaired the Job Growth & Energy Affordability Committee from 2015 to 2018. He served as the minority lead of the Ways and Means Committee.[2]

In March 2015, Garofalo posted on Twitter that if a majority of National Basketball Association teams were to fold, "nobody would notice a difference [with the] possible exception of increase in streetcrime."[3] [4] He said he was making an observation about crime among professional athletes, not a racist comment. He later apologized.[5]

In 2015, after U.S. Representative John Kline announced he was not running for reelection, attention turned to Garofalo as a possible contender for the seat. After a recruiting visit to Washington, D.C., with House leadership, Garofalo told local media, "I would rather stick a fork in my eye than run for Congress".[6]

In 2021, Garofalo called the U.S. Capitol attack by Donald Trump supporters "ridiculous" and "banana republic shit".[7]

In January 2024, Garofalo announced that he would not seek reelection after his term finished. In a letter to Governor Tim Walz dated July 9, 2024, he gave notice of his intent to resign. Garofalo stepped down effective July 14 at 11:59 PM.[8] [9]

Personal life

Pat Garofalo is married to Julie (Rohloff) Garofalo, has two children, and lives in Farmington, Minnesota.[10] He is a network engineer who works on computer infrastructure and IP telephony systems, and was the technology coordinator for Tim Pawlenty's 2002 gubernatorial campaign.

Electoral history

Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo11,54958.84
DFLMarla Vagts8,06041.06
Write-in200.10
Total votes19,629100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo13,92664.78
DFLMarla Vagts7,54235.08
Write-in290.13
Total votes21,497100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo8,87863.85
DFLMarla Vagts5,00836.02
Write-in180.13
Total votes13,904100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo12,52059.47
DFLJim Arlt8,51240.04
Write-in190.09
Total votes21,051100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo12,31765.81
DFLSigrid Iversen6,38134.10
Write-in170.09
Total votes18,715100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo14,23556.01
DFLBev Topp11,14443.85
Write-in360.14
Total votes25,415100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo10,30455.85
DFLPaul Hardt8,12344.03
Write-in230.12
Total votes18,450100
Republican hold
Party!Candidate!Votes!%
RepublicanPatrick Garofalo14,51162.39
DFLBenjamin Coler8,71837.48
Write-in310.13
Total votes23,260100
Republican hold

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Garofalo, Patrick "Pat" - Legislator Record - Minnesota Legislators Past & Present.
  2. Web site: Garofalo, Patrick "Pat". Legislators Past & Present. Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. March 27, 2013.
  3. Web site: Minn. lawmaker responds to tweet about NBA, street crime. March 10, 2014. January 30, 2021. USA Today. Jolie. Lee.
  4. Web site: Farmington legislator's tweet on NBA called racist. March 10, 2014. January 30, 2021. Star Tribune. Rachel E.. Stassen-Berger.
  5. Web site: Rep. Garofalo apologizes for tweet on NBA that many called racist. March 11, 2014. January 30, 2021. Star Tribune. Jennifer. Brooks.
  6. Web site: Not a 2016 candidate, Kline focused on work ahead. Johnson. Tad. hometownsource.com. 3 September 2015 . en. 2019-01-07.
  7. Web site: Capitol riot fueled by deep network of GOP statehouse support. January 13, 2021. January 29, 2021. Politico. David. Siders.
  8. Web site: Garofalo to resign from House. July 9, 2024. HPIS Staff. house.mn.gov.
  9. Web site: Rep. Pat Garofalo. house.mn.gov.
  10. Web site: About | patgarofalo .