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Natalie Tennant

American politician (born 1967)


Summary

American politician (born 1967)

FieldValue
nameNatalie Tennant
imageNatalieTennant7.jpg
office1Member of the Kanawha County Commission
term_start1January 1, 2025
predecessor1Marc Slotnick
office229th Secretary of State of West Virginia
governor2Joe Manchin
Earl Ray Tomblin
term_start2January 19, 2009
term_end2January 16, 2017
predecessor2Betty Ireland
successor2Mac Warner
birth_date
birth_placeFairmont, West Virginia, U.S.
partyDemocratic
spouseErik Wells
children1
educationWest Virginia University (BS, MA)

Earl Ray Tomblin Natalie E. Tennant (born December 25, 1967) is an American politician who served as the Secretary of State of West Virginia from 2009 to 2017. She is a member of the Democratic Party. Tennant was the 2014 Democratic Party nominee for West Virginia's open U.S. Senate seat, which she lost to Republican Shelley Moore Capito. In 2016 she was defeated for re-election by Republican Mac Warner, and left office on January 16, 2017. In a historic win in 2024, Tennant was elected as the first female commissioner on the Kanawha County Commission in its 236 years.

Prior to her election as secretary of state, Tennant was a television reporter and co-owner of a video production company.

Early life and education

Tennant grew up on a farm in Fairview, Marion County, West Virginia and is the daughter of Rose Mary (née Brunetti) and John D. Tennant, Jr. Her mother was of Italian descent. Tennant is a 1986 graduate of North Marion High School in Farmington, West Virginia.

She graduated from West Virginia University in 1991 with a bachelor's degree in journalism, and she obtained a master's degree in corporate and organizational communication from WVU in 2002. While at WVU, Tennant was selected in 1990 as the first woman to represent the university as the Mountaineers' mascot. The only other women to serve as the Mountaineer were Rebecca Durst, who was selected in 2009, and Mary G. Roush, who was selected in 2022. Tennant was subjected to harassment for being a female Mountaineer. At the selection ceremony where Tennant was named as the new mascot, some of the crowd booed her appointment. Cups were thrown at her, people spit on her, and fans developed chants, suggesting that Tennant needed to "get in the kitchen" and characterizing her as a "mountain deer."

Following completion of her undergraduate degree in 1991, Tennant began her career in television broadcasting and reporting. Tennant remained active in the WVU community, receiving the WVU Alumni Association's Margaret Buchanan Cole Young Alumni Award in 1997.

West Virginia Secretary of State

Elections

In 2004, Tennant ran unsuccessfully for West Virginia Secretary of State, losing the Democratic primary to Ken Hechler by 1,108 votes.

In 2008, Tennant was elected secretary of state, beating out Republican candidate Charles Minimah with 65% of the vote. During her campaign, she was supported by the Secretary of State Project, a 527 political action committee that supports progressive candidates for secretary of state positions in swing states.

In 2012, Tennant was easily re-elected with more than 62% of the vote against Republican Brian Savilla.

In 2016, Tennant narrowly lost re-election to her Republican challenger, Mac Warner, by less than 2%.

In 2020, Tennant ran to reclaim the Secretary of State's office. On June 9, 2020, she won the primary with 100%, as she was uncontested. She lost to incumbent Republican Mac Warner in the November general election, with approximately 41 percent of the vote, compared to Warner's 59 percent.

In 2024, Tennant was elected a commissioner seat in Kanawha County West Virginia

Tenure

Tennant took office as the Secretary of State of West Virginia on January 19, 2009.

In 2010, Tennant initiated a pilot online voting program that allowed 179 deployed West Virginian service members to vote via the Internet.

In 2012, the Secretary of State's office issued a Republican primary ballot, which told voters to select 18 at-large delegates to the Republican National Convention when 19 were to be chosen.{{cite news |last=Brust|first=Pamela |date=May 23, 2012 |title=West Virginia to pay for ballot mistake|url=http://www.newsandsentinel.com/page/content.detail/id/561336/West-Virginia-to-pay-for-ballot-mistake.html?nav=5061 |newspaper=Parkersburg News and Sentinel

Tennant, along with U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin, led the investigation of the Lincoln County 2010 Democratic primary, in which a large number of absentee ballots were cast in favor of a certain faction of the Democratic party. In early 2012, as a result of the investigation, Lincoln County Sheriff Jerry Bowman and Lincoln County Clerk Donald Whitten pleaded guilty to felony charges. Bowman, Whitten, and Tennant were all elected Democratic officials.

In 2013, Tennant returned $3 million in unused revenue to the state legislature after Tennant's department enacted cost-saving measures and settled two lawsuits for significantly less money than expected.

In 2013, the Secretary of State's office was late sending out change-of-address materials to election officials, which are sent out every two years to keep election rolls accurate. According to the Harrison County Clerk's office, the materials should have arrived at the end of 2013 to give officials time to send them out before the primary election in May 2014, but some county clerks did not receive the materials until April 2014 or later.

In 2014, a number of West Virginian political candidates were unable to file their campaign finance reports on the Secretary of State's website due to issues with the online campaign finance reporting system. Tennant said, "The company that was hired to update the campaign finance reporting system has not met the standards of my office, has not met the standards of the contract or what West Virginians deserve...They are being held accountable."

On January 7, 2016, the Secretary of State's office opened a second location in Fairmont.

Gubernatorial campaign

Main article: 2011 West Virginia gubernatorial special election

On January 20, 2011, Tennant announced she was running for the Democratic nomination for Governor of West Virginia in the 2011 special gubernatorial election. Tennant focused her campaign on openness and accountability, which she said had been a hallmark of her tenure as secretary of state.

Public polling conducted in January 2011 showed Tennant to be a front runner in the Democratic primary, alongside acting governor Earl Ray Tomblin. She lost the primary election to acting governor Earl Ray Tomblin, coming in third place behind state house speaker Rick Thompson.

U.S. Senate campaign

Main article: 2014 United States Senate election in West Virginia

Tennant ran for the Senate in 2014. The seat was open after incumbent Democrat Jay Rockefeller announced his retirement. Tennant lost to Republican representative Shelley Moore Capito in the general election, losing every county in the state.

Tennant did not face any significant primary opposition. She entered the race after ten prominent Democrats declined to run. In announcing her campaign, Tennant stated, "I will fight any Republican or any Democrat — including President Barack Obama — who tries to kill our energy jobs, whether they are coal, natural gas, wind or water." Tennant was endorsed by Senator Rockefeller, Senator Joe Manchin, and Governor Earl Ray Tomblin. She was also endorsed by First Lady Michelle Obama, North Dakota Senator Heidi Heitkamp,

According to Politico and The New York Times, Tennant sought to distance herself from President Obama. Tennant was an Obama delegate at the 2012 Democratic National Convention.

Personal life

Prior to Tennant's election as secretary of state, she was co-owner of Wells Media Group, a Charleston-based video production and media training company she operated with her husband, Democratic state senator Erik Wells. Tennant and Wells have one daughter, Delaney, and reside in Charleston.

In 2017, Tennant joined the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law in a voting rights advocacy position.

Electoral history

West Virginia Secretary of State Democratic primary election, 2004
Party
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
West Virginia Secretary of State Democratic primary election, 2008
Party
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
West Virginia Secretary of State Election, 2008
Party
Democratic
Republican
West Virginia Governor Special Democratic primary election, 2011
Party
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
West Virginia Secretary of State Election, 2012
Party
Democratic
Republican
West Virginia U.S. Senate Democratic primary election, 2014
Party
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic
West Virginia U.S. Senate Election, 2014
Party
Republican
Democratic
Libertarian
Mountain
Constitution
West Virginia Secretary of State Democratic primary election, 2016
Party
Democratic
Democratic
West Virginia Secretary of State election, 2016
Party
Republican
Democratic

References

References

  1. (December 8, 2010). "Natalie Tennant".
  2. "West Virginia Secretary of State's office". sos.wv.gov.
  3. (June 4, 2011). "Obituaries: Rose Mary Brunetti Tennant". The Times West Virginian.
  4. "Natalie Tennant for U.S. Senate (WV)". IADLC.
  5. News, University Relations {{!}}. "Second woman to don the buckskins as WVU Mountaineer mascot".
  6. (1 December 2014). "WVU Mountaineers".
  7. "The Year of the Mountaineer".
  8. "25th Anniversary of the first female WVU Mountaineer: Secretary of State Natalie E. Tennant".
  9. Holdren, Wendy. (2013-03-17). "Secretary of state promotes women's role in W.Va.". Register-Herald.
  10. "Statewide Results". West Virginia Secretary of State.
  11. Laskow, Sarah. (November 6, 2008). "Democrats dominate secretary of state races in toss-up states". Center for Public Integrity.
  12. "Statewide Results". West Virginia Secretary of State.
  13. (2016-11-08). "Mac Warner unseats Natalie Tennant for Secretary of State". Metro News.
  14. Mistich, Dave. "Democrat Natalie Tennant Announces She's Seeking Return As West Virginia's Secretary Of State". West Virginia Public Broadcasting.
  15. "June 9, 2020 Primary Election". West Virginia Secretary of State.
  16. (2020-11-03). "Secretary of State: Incumbent Republican Warner turns back challenge from Tennant". Charleston Gazette-Mail.
  17. King, Joselyn. (June 11, 2013). "Tennant Undecided on Senate". News-Register.
  18. (2012-02-16). "Internet Voting: Will Democracy or Hackers Win?". PBS.
  19. Miller, Dendra. (May 24, 2012). "Secretary Of States Office To Pay More Than $200K For Ballot Blunder". The Glenville Democrat.
  20. (2012-01-30). "Lincoln County officials admit to stuffing ballot box". Charleston Daily Mail.
  21. Eyre, Eric. (12 September 2013). "Secretary of State's Office returns $3M to W.Va.'s coffers". The Charleston Gazette.
  22. Davis, Jim. (May 4, 2014). "Pre-Election Blame Game". The Exponent Telegram.
  23. Boucher, David. (2014-04-29). "Tennant: Vendor to blame for website issues". Charleston Daily Mail.
  24. Murray, Melissa. "West Virginia Secretary of State Opens Office in Fairmont".
  25. Fritz, Doug. (January 20, 2011). "Tennant Announces Candidacy for Governor". [[WVNS-TV]].
  26. "Associated Press Reports on WV Gubernatorial Special Election".
  27. (26 January 2011). "Public Policy Polling - W.Va. Governor's Race".
  28. Lavender, Paige. (2013-09-13). "Natalie Tennant Senate Run: West Virginia Secretary Of State Preparing Campaign". The Huffington Post.
  29. Kercheval, Hoppy. (13 September 2013). "Tennant to run for U.S. Senate". Metro News.
  30. Kercheval, Hoppy. (22 August 2013). "Natalie Tennant said to be considering Senate run". Charleston Daily Mail.
  31. Gabriel, Trip. (2013-12-28). "West Virginia Democrats Face an Uneasy Time". The New York Times.
  32. Hohmann, James. (17 September 2013). "West Virginia Senate race 2014: Natalie Tennant seeks distance from Obama, coal policy". Politico.
  33. Nyden, Paul J.. (17 September 2013). "Tennant announces run for Senate". The Charleston Gazette.
  34. Boucher, Dave. (November 19, 2013). "Michelle Obama backs Natalie Tennant in US Senate race". [[Charleston Daily Mail]].
  35. Mattise, Jonathan. (June 23, 2014). "Sen. Elizabeth Warren to campaign for Tennant in W.V". [[The Charleston Gazette]].
  36. (4 April 2017). "Tennant joins Brennan Center for Justice at NYU".
Wikipedia Source

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