Rudy Takala | |
Birth Place: | Rush City, Minnesota |
Party: | Republican |
Occupation: | Writer, farmer |
Rudy Takala is a conservative writer and Republican politician.
Takala was born in Rush City, Minnesota and grew up on a dairy farm in neighboring Pine City. Takala was homeschooled for nine years before earning a Bachelor of Arts in legal studies and economics from Hamline University in 2009 at the age of 20. He completed a Master of Arts in political communication from American University.[1]
He received a Bachelor of Arts in legal studies and economics from Hamline University followed by a master's degree in political communication at American University.[2]
Takala was elected chairman of Minnesota's Pine County Republicans at the age of 18. He was re-elected in 2009 with 60% of the vote, and again in 2011.
In early 2009, Takala announced his decision to run for the Minnesota House of Representatives in House district 8B, which at the time encompassed all of Kanabec County and parts of Pine & Isanti counties.[3] Takala lost the primary election to Roger Crawford on August 10, 2010, by a 59% to 41% margin.[4]
At the 2012 Minnesota State Republican Convention he was selected as a delegate to the Republican Party's National Convention in Tampa.[5]
After running for the Minnesota House, Takala wrote and provided occasional commentary on Minnesota politics.[6] He was often critical of both major political parties for not doing enough to slow the rate of government growth in Minnesota. In 2011, he was quoted by Politics in Minnesota as saying of Republicans in the state legislature, "There was too much talk about the rate of growth [of spending]... we should have been talking about cutting."[7]
He received 1,214 votes at the 2012 Minnesota State Republican Convention to become a delegate to the Republican Party's National Convention in Tampa.[8]
He joined the Washington Examiner in 2015, where he profiled members of Congress including Tom Cotton,[9] Tim Scott,[10] Ron Wyden,[11] Marsha Blackburn,[12] future Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,[13] and Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Varadaraj Pai[14]
As of 2019, he was an opinion editor at Fox News.[15]