John Peavey

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_Peavey an entity of type: Thing

John Peavey (born September 1, 1933) is a rancher and Democratic politician from Carey, Idaho. Peavey served in the Idaho Senate from 1969 to 1976 and from 1978 to 1994. From a young age Peavey worked on the ranch founded by his grandfather, U.S. Senator John W. Thomas. In 1969 he succeeded his mother, Mary Brooks in the Idaho Senate as a Republican after she was appointed director of the United States Mint by President Richard M. Nixon. rdf:langString
rdf:langString John Peavey
rdf:langString John Peavey
rdf:langString John Peavey
xsd:date 1933-09-01
xsd:integer 21397973
xsd:integer 1032103497
xsd:date 1933-09-01
rdf:langString Member of the Idaho Senate
rdf:langString from District 21
rdf:langString from District 22
rdf:langString Art Peavey and Mary Brooks
rdf:langString Diane Josephy Peavey
xsd:date 1992-12-01
xsd:date 1994-12-01
xsd:date 1984-12-01
xsd:date 1992-12-01
rdf:langString John Peavey (born September 1, 1933) is a rancher and Democratic politician from Carey, Idaho. Peavey served in the Idaho Senate from 1969 to 1976 and from 1978 to 1994. From a young age Peavey worked on the ranch founded by his grandfather, U.S. Senator John W. Thomas. In 1969 he succeeded his mother, Mary Brooks in the Idaho Senate as a Republican after she was appointed director of the United States Mint by President Richard M. Nixon. In 1974, after repeated attempts to pass a Sunshine Law; a law requiring lobbyists to register and political campaign disclosure, in the legislature were unsuccessful, Peavey led a successful statewide campaign to pass one by ballot initiative. In 1994 Peavey was the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor. He was defeated by the Republican incumbent Butch Otter, who was later elected governor in 2006.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4868

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