Jenn Hill

American politician from Michigan
Jenn Hill
Member of the Michigan House of Representatives
from the 109th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 1, 2023
Preceded bySara Cambensy
Personal details
Born
Jennifer Hill

September 26, 1966
Belvidere, IL
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology

Jenn Hill is an American Democratic politician from Michigan.[1] She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 109th district in the 2022 election.[2] Jenn was born September 26, 1966 in Belvidere, IL.

Hill has worked as a Marquette City Commissioner and as a clean energy and youth advocate.[3]

Early Life and Education

Being born in Illinois, Jenn's Family moved all over the Midwest for economic reasons. Jenn was active in 4-H. In her senior year of high school and was voted Female Athlete of the Year.[4] Jenn went to Barnard College 1984-88 and received an Anthropology BA, cum laude Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1993-95, Environmental Planning, Master's in City Planning.[5]

Michigan House of Representatives

Hill Serves as Majority Vice Chair on the Energy, Communications and Technology, Higher Education, Local Government and Municipal Finance, and Natural Resources, Environment, Tourism and Outdoor Recreation [2]

Campaigns

in 2022, Hill ran for Michigan's 109th House District which covers the Counties of Alger, Marquette, Baraga and the eastern two-thirds of Dickinson. After winning the 2022 Democratic Primary against candidate Joe Boogren, Hill won against Republican candidate Melody Wagner.[1]

Hill's seat is currently up for election in 2024 and she is being primaried in the Democratic ticket by Margaret Brumm and Randy Girard[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Jenn Hill". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2023-11-22.
  2. ^ a b "Rep. Jenn Hill". housedems.com. Retrieved 2023-11-22.
  3. ^ "Hill runs for 109th District seat". WNMU-FM. 2022-02-03. Retrieved 2023-11-22.
  4. ^ Committee to Elect Jenn Hill State Representative. "Meet Jenn".
  5. ^ "Rep. Jenn Hill". Gongwer News Service-Michigan.
  • v
  • t
  • e
102nd Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Joe Tate (D)
Speaker pro tempore
Laurie Pohutsky (D)
Majority Floor Leader
Abraham Aiyash (D)
Minority Leader
Matt Hall (R)
  1. Tyrone Carter (D)
  2. Tullio Liberati (D)
  3. Alabas Farhat (D)
  4. Karen Whitsett (D)
  5. Natalie Price (D)
  6. Regina Weiss (D)
  7. Helena Scott (D)
  8. Mike McFall (D)
  9. Abraham Aiyash (D)
  10. Joe Tate (D)
  11. Veronica Paiz (D)
  12. Kimberly Edwards (D)
  13. Mai Xiong (D)
  14. Donavan McKinney (D)
  15. Erin Byrnes (D)
  16. Stephanie Young (D)
  17. Laurie Pohutsky (D)
  18. Jason Hoskins (D)
  19. Samantha Steckloff (D)
  20. Noah Arbit (D)
  21. Kelly Breen (D)
  22. Matt Koleszar (D)
  23. Jason Morgan (D)
  24. Ranjeev Puri (D)
  25. Peter Herzberg (D)
  26. Dylan Wegela (D)
  27. Jaime Churches (D)
  28. Jamie Thompson (R)
  29. James DeSana (R)
  30. William Bruck (R)
  31. Reggie Miller (D)
  32. Jimmie Wilson Jr. (D)
  33. Felicia Brabec (D)
  34. Dale Zorn (R)
  35. Andrew Fink (R)
  36. Steve Carra (R)
  37. Brad Paquette (R)
  38. Joey Andrews (D)
  39. Pauline Wendzel (R)
  40. Christine Morse (D)
  41. Julie Rogers (D)
  42. Matt Hall (R)
  43. Rachelle Smit (R)
  44. Jim Haadsma (D)
  45. Sarah Lightner (R)
  46. Kathy Schmaltz (R)
  47. Carrie Rheingans (D)
  48. Jennifer Conlin (D)
  49. Ann Bollin (R)
  50. Bob Bezotte (R)
  51. Matt Maddock (R)
  52. Mike Harris (R)
  53. Brenda Carter (D)
  54. Donni Steele (R)
  55. Mark Tisdel (R)
  56. Sharon MacDonell (D)
  57. Thomas Kuhn (R)
  58. Nate Shannon (D)
  59. Doug Wozniak (R)
  60. Joseph Aragona (R)
  61. Denise Mentzer (D)
  62. Alicia St. Germaine (R)
  63. Jay DeBoyer (R)
  64. Andrew Beeler (R)
  65. Jaime Greene (R)
  66. Josh Schriver (R)
  67. Phil Green (R)
  68. David Martin (R)
  69. Jasper Martus (D)
  70. Cynthia Neeley (D)
  71. Brian BeGole (R)
  72. Mike Mueller (R)
  73. Julie Brixie (D)
  74. Kara Hope (D)
  75. Penelope Tsernoglou (D)
  76. Angela Witwer (D)
  77. Emily Dievendorf (D)
  78. Gina Johnsen (R)
  79. Angela Rigas (R)
  80. Phil Skaggs (D)
  81. Rachel Hood (D)
  82. Kristian Grant (D)
  83. John Wesley Fitzgerald (D)
  84. Carol Glanville (D)
  85. Bradley Slagh (R)
  86. Nancy De Boer (R)
  87. Will Snyder (D)
  88. Greg VanWoerkom (R)
  89. Luke Meerman (R)
  90. Bryan Posthumus (R)
  91. Pat Outman (R)
  92. Jerry Neyer (R)
  93. Graham Filler (R)
  94. Amos O'Neal (D)
  95. Bill G. Schuette (R)
  96. Timothy Beson (R)
  97. Matthew Bierlein (R)
  98. Gregory Alexander (R)
  99. Mike Hoadley (R)
  100. Tom Kunse (R)
  101. Joseph Fox (R)
  102. Curt VanderWall (R)
  103. Betsy Coffia (D)
  104. John Roth (R)
  105. Ken Borton (R)
  106. Cam Cavitt (R)
  107. Neil Friske (R)
  108. David Prestin (R)
  109. Jenn Hill (D)
  110. Gregory Markkanen (R)


Stub icon

This article about a Michigan politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e