Phil Keisling | |
---|---|
Secretary of State of Oregon | |
In office January 14, 1991 –November 8, 1999 | |
Governor | Barbara Roberts John Kitzhaber |
Preceded by | Barbara Roberts |
Succeeded by | Bill Bradbury |
Member of the OregonHouseofRepresentatives from the 12th district | |
In office 1989–1991 | |
Preceded by | Richard S. Springer |
Succeeded by | Gail Shibley [1] |
Personal details | |
Born | June 23,1955 |
Political party | Democratic |
Residence | Portland,Oregon |
Alma mater | Yale University |
Occupation | Director of the Center for Public Service at Portland State University |
Phil Keisling (born June 23,1955) [2] is an American politician and business executive in the U.S. state of Oregon. He served as Oregon Secretary of State from 1991 to 1999 and previously served in the Oregon House of Representatives. He is known for having championed the state's vote-by-mail system. [3] [4]
Keisling is the retired Director of the Center for Public Service,located in the Mark O. Hatfield School of Government at Portland State University. Keisling oversaw more than a dozen separate programs serving local,state,federal government,and international organizations in the U.S. and several countries (including Japan,Vietnam,South Korea,and China). [5]
Keisling was born in Oregon and graduated from Sunset High School,then located in an unincorporated area of Washington County,in 1973. [6] He graduated from Yale University in 1977 and pursued a career in journalism,first as a writer for Willamette Week in Portland,Oregon from 1978–1981,and then as an editor at Washington Monthly in Washington,D.C. from 1982–1984. [5] [7]
From 2000 to 2009,Keisling was a Senior Vice President for Marketing for the Oregon high tech company CorSource Technology Group,Inc. (formerly Hepieric,Inc.), [8] has remained involved in politics and civic affairs since leaving office,serving on a variety of local,statewide and national committees,commissions and organizations,both inside and outside of government.
In 2010,Keisling joined a new statewide trade association,Smart Grid Oregon, [9] as its Board Chairman. The organization has been created to enable,promote and grow the smart grid industry and infrastructure in the State of Oregon.
He accepted appointment in 1998 to the Performance Audit Implementation Steering Committee of the Portland Public Schools,which guided the financially troubled district through comprehensive reform in response to an independent performance audit. [10]
When a proposal came before the Oregon State Legislature in 2003 transfer responsibility for audits of state agencies and programs from the Audit Division of the Secretary of State to the Legislature,Keisling joined with four other former Secretaries of States of both parties,Mark Hatfield,Clay Myers,Norma Paulus,and Barbara Roberts,to publicly denounce the move. [11]
Keisling is a chief proponent of open primaries in Oregon,contributing to and later promoting a 2004 white paper sponsored by the non-partisan Oregon Progress Forum. [12] The Public Commission on the Oregon Legislature included open primaries among its sweeping proposals for reforms to the legislature. [13] Keisling and Paulus,a Republican,headed an initiative petition signature drive to place the issue on the 2006 ballot. Of the 91,401 petition signatures submitted,only 67% were determined to be valid,and the measure did not make it to a vote. [14] They tried again in 2008,successfully placing Measure 65 on the ballot, [15] [16] which failed to pass,retaining the closed primaries.
A longtime supporter of open government,Keisling previously served on the Board of Open Oregon,a statewide advocacy and watchdog organization involved in Oregon Public Meeting Law (Sunshine Law) enforcement,and other government secrecy issues. [17] He is also a co-founder and board member of the Oregon Public Affairs Network (OPAN),roughly based on the C-SPAN television model. [18]
Bill Bradbury was an American politician who served as a member of the Oregon Legislative Assembly and as the 23rd Oregon secretary of state from 1999 to 2009. Bradbury was an unsuccessful candidate for the 2010 Oregon gubernatorial election. In 2010,he was appointed to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council by Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski.
Norma Jean Paulus was an American lawyer and politician in the state of Oregon. A native of Nebraska,she was raised in Eastern Oregon before becoming a lawyer. A Republican,she first held political office as a representative in the Oregon House of Representatives,and then became the first woman elected to statewide public office in Oregon when she became Oregon Secretary of State in 1977. Paulus later served as Oregon Superintendent of Public Instruction for nine years. She made unsuccessful bids to become Governor of Oregon and United States Senator. Prior to her death on February 28,2019,Paulus lived in Portland,where she was involved with several non-profit groups and sponsored a ballot measure to create open primaries in Oregon's statewide elections.
Randall Edwards is an American politician who most recently served as the state treasurer of the state of Oregon. A Democrat,Edwards was elected as treasurer in 2000 and reelected in 2004,after serving two terms in the Oregon Legislative Assembly. He served as a manager and senior advisor at the Oregon State Treasury from 1992–1996,and was an International Trade Analyst for the U.S. Commerce Department.
Term limits legislation –term limits for state and federal office-holders –has been a recurring political issue in the U.S. state of Oregon since 1992. In that year's general election,Oregon voters approved Ballot Measure 3,an initiative that enacted term limits for representatives in both houses of the United States Congress and the Oregon Legislative Assembly,and statewide officeholders. It has been described as the strictest term limits law in the country.
The Independent Party of Oregon (IPO) is a centrist political party in the U.S. state of Oregon with more than 140,000 registrants since its inception in January 2007. The IPO is Oregon's third-largest political party and the first political party other than the Democratic Party and Republican Party to be recognized by the state of Oregon as a major political party.
Elections in Oregon are all held using a Vote by Mail (VBM) system. This means that all registered voters receive their ballots via postal delivery and can vote from their homes. A state Voters’Pamphlet is mailed to every household in Oregon about three weeks before each statewide election. It includes information about each measure and candidate in the upcoming election.
Tobias Read is an American politician who is the secretary of state-elect of Oregon. As a member of the Democratic Party he has been serving as the Oregon State Treasurer since 2017. He was a member of the Oregon House of Representatives,representing the 27th district from 2007 to 2017,which comprises parts of Beaverton,southwest Portland,and unincorporated Multnomah and Washington Counties. He served as Speaker Pro Tempore and was formerly the Democratic Majority Whip.
Brad Peter Avakian is an American politician who served as a Democrat in the Oregon House,the Oregon Senate,and as the state's nonpartisan elected Labor Commissioner.
Bruce Starr is an American politician and businessman in Oregon. A Republican,he served two terms in the Oregon House of Representatives before winning election to the Oregon State Senate in 2002. There he joined his father Senator Charles Starr and they became the first father-son team to serve at the same time in Oregon's Senate. Bruce had previously been a member of the Hillsboro City Council,and was re-elected to the Senate in 2006 and 2010,but lost a bid in 2012 to be the Oregon Labor Commissioner.
The Public Commission on the Oregon Legislature (PCOL) was a group of 30 citizens in the U.S. state of Oregon charged with developing recommendations on how to improve the Oregon Legislative Assembly. The 2005 session of the legislature established the commission with Senate Bill 1084. The bill,which declared an emergency,took effect upon its passage,when it was signed by Governor Ted Kulongoski on July 29,2005.
Rod Monroe is a Canadian-born American politician who served in the Oregon Senate,representing District 24 in the middle part of Multnomah County,which includes most of eastern Portland and the city of Happy Valley.
Chuck Riley is an American politician who served as a member of the Oregon State Senate for the 15th district,which includes Hillsboro,Forest Grove,and Cornelius in western Washington County. He served three terms in the Oregon House of Representatives from 2005 to 2011.
The Oregon Channel was a public affairs television network in the U.S. state of Oregon. It was operated by a consortium consisting of Oregon Public Broadcasting,Southern Oregon Public Television,the Oregon Legislative Assembly,the Oregon University System and the Oregon Public Affairs Network (OPAN). It was carried on most cable television systems throughout Oregon either on a part-time or full-time basis as well as on the Internet. The station operated 24 hours a day.
Electoral reform in Oregon refers to efforts to change election and voting laws in the West Coast state of Oregon.
On November 6,2012,the U.S. state of Oregon held statewide general elections for four statewide offices,both houses of the Oregon Legislative Assembly,and several state ballot measures.
Roger Edward Martin was an American businessman,state legislator,and lobbyist from Oregon. He was an electric equipment sales executive with Martin Electric and served six terms in the Oregon House of Representatives. In 1978,Martin ran for governor of Oregon,but lost to Victor Atiyeh in the Republican primary. Following the 1978 election,Martin became a lobbyist at the Oregon State Capitol.
A general election was held in the U.S. state of Oregon on November 8,2016. Primary elections were held on May 17,2016.
A general election was held in the U.S. state of Oregon on November 3,2020. Primary elections were held on May 19,2020.
Oregon Ballot Measure 115,entitled the Impeachment of Elected State Executives Amendment,is a proposed amendment to the Constitution of Oregon that will be decided by voters as part of the 2024 Oregon elections on November 5,2024. If approved by voters,it will amend the state Constitution to grant the Oregon State Legislature the power to impeach and remove statewide elected officials in the Executive branch of the Oregon state government:the Oregon Governor,Oregon Secretary of State,Oregon Attorney General,Oregon State Treasurer,and Oregon Commissioner of Labor and Industries.