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Todd Lamb (politician)

American politician

Todd Lamb (politician)

Summary

American politician

FieldValue
nameTodd Lamb
imageTodd Lamb.jpg
office216th Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma
governor2Mary Fallin
term_start2January 10, 2011
term_end2January 14, 2019
predecessor2Jari Askins
successor2Matt Pinnell
office354th Chair of the National Lieutenant Governors Association
term_start32012
term_end32013
predecessor3Tim Murray
successor3Nancy Wyman
state_senate4Oklahoma
district447th
term_start4January 3, 2005
term_end4January 10, 2011
predecessor4Mike Fair
successor4Greg Treat
office22nd President of the University of Central Oklahoma
term_startJuly 1, 2023
predecessorPatti Neuhold–Ravikumar
birth_date
birth_placeEnid, Oklahoma, U.S.
partyRepublican
spouseMonica
children2
educationOklahoma State University–Stillwater (BA)
Oklahoma City University (JD)

Oklahoma City University (JD) Todd Lamb (born October 19, 1971) is an American politician and university administrator who is the current president of the University of Central Oklahoma. He previously served as the 16th lieutenant governor of Oklahoma from 2011 to 2019 and as a member of the Oklahoma state senate from 2005 to 2011. He is a member of the Republican Party.

In the 2018 Oklahoma gubernatorial election, Lamb campaigned for the Republican nomination, but placed third in the primary behind former Oklahoma City mayor Mick Cornett and Kevin Stitt, who advanced to a runoff.

Early life and education

Lamb is the son of Norman Lamb and Belva Lamb. Lamb was raised in Enid, Oklahoma, and graduated from Enid High School. Lamb attended Louisiana Tech University, where he was member of the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team. After two years at La. Tech, he transferred to Oklahoma State University where he received his bachelor's degree. Todd also received his Juris Doctor from Oklahoma City University School of Law.

Career

In 1993, he joined Frank Keating's campaign for governor of Oklahoma, and, following its success in November 1994, was appointed to the governor's staff. In 1998 he resigned to become a special agent with the United States Secret Service, where he conducted criminal investigations of counterfeiting, bank fraud, identity theft, and threats against the president of the United States. During the 2000 presidential election campaign, he served as a site supervisor for George W. Bush's campaign. In 2001, he was appointed to the national Joint Terrorism Task Force; after the September 11 attacks, he was assigned to help investigate them.

Oklahoma Senate

From 2005 to 2011, Lamb was a member of the Oklahoma Senate representing the 47th Senate District (which includes part of Oklahoma City as well as Edmond).

Lieutenant governor

Lamb in 2011

In 2010, Lamb decided to run for lieutenant governor. He faced four Republican primary election opponents in John A. Wright (R-Broken Arrow), a member of the Oklahoma State House; Bill Crozier, a former Republican candidate for Superintendent of Public Instruction; Bernie Adler, an Oklahoma City real estate investor; and Paul Nosak, a tree removal service owner from Oklahoma City. Lamb won the primary election with over 66% of the votes cast, thus avoiding a runoff.

In the general election, Lamb faced Democrat Kenneth Corn and independent candidate Richard Prawdzienski, but he defeated them, garnering more than 64% of the votes.

During his tenure, Lamb served in the cabinet of Mary Fallin as the small business advocate. However, he resigned from that position on February 16, 2017, due to his opposition to proposed tax increases.

2018 gubernatorial campaign

Main article: 2018 Oklahoma gubernatorial election

Lamb ran in the Republican primary for Governor of Oklahoma in the 2018 election. On June 26, 2018, he lost the primary election to Mick Cornett, former mayor of Oklahoma City, and businessman Kevin Stitt. Stitt won the runoff and later defeated his Democratic opponent, former attorney general Drew Edmondson, in the November general election.

''Flash Point''

On June 2, 2019, Lamb announced he would become a panelist on Flash Point, a locally-produced Sunday morning political talk show on Oklahoma City’s NBC affiliate KFOR-TV, starting on the June 16 broadcast. He took over the conservative panelist seat being vacated by former Oklahoma City mayor Kirk Humphreys.

University of Central Oklahoma presidency

The Board of Regents for the Regional University System of Oklahoma (RUSO) named Lamb the 22nd president of the University of Central Oklahoma (UCO). Lamb assumed the presidency beginning July 1, 2023, replacing Andrew K. Benton, who had been named interim president of UCO in January 2023.

Personal life

Lamb is married to his wife Monica and they have two children.

Electoral history

CandidatesPartyVotes%
Todd LambRepublican Party25,918
Adam MillerDemocratic Party10,403
Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20070402075001/http://www.ok.gov/~elections/04gen.html

November 4, 2008, Election results for Oklahoma

State Senator for District 47

CandidatesPartyVotes%
Todd LambRepublican Partyn/a100.00%
CandidatesPartyVotes%
Todd LambRepublican Party156,834
John A. WrightRepublican Party41,177
Paul F. NosakRepublican Party13,941
Bill CrozierRepublican Party12,177
Bernie AdlerRepublican Party10,515
Source: http://www.ok.gov/elections/support/10pri.html
CandidatesPartyVotes%
Todd LambRepublican Party659,242
Kenneth CornDemocratic Party334,711
Richard PrawdzienskiIndependent35,665
Source: http://www.ok.gov/elections/support/10gen.html

November 4, 2014, Election results for Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma

CandidatesPartyVotes%
Todd Lamb (inc.)Republican Party562,00868.5
Cathy CummingsDemocratic Party258,56431.5

References

References

  1. (June 13, 2011). "Lamb: Oklahoma poised for great things". [[Enid News & Eagle]].
  2. "Todd Lamb: Oklahoma's lieutenant governor a former Louisiana Tech receiver". [[The Oklahoman]].
  3. "Lieutenant Governor Todd Lamb - About Todd Lamb". Ok.gov.
  4. "SUMMARY RESULTS: Primary Election -- July 27, 2010". Ok.gov.
  5. "Election Results". Oklahoma State Election Board.
  6. Stewart, Sarah. (February 16, 2017). "Lt. Gov. Todd Lamb resigns from Gov. Fallin's cabinet". [[KFOR-TV.
  7. (April 7, 2017). "Lt. Governor Todd Lamb files candidacy paperwork for 2018 governor's race".
  8. (June 26, 2018). "Lieutenant governor concedes in GOP gubernatorial race in Oklahoma; runoff set". [[The Washington Post]].
  9. (November 6, 2018). "Kevin Stitt wins governor's race". [[The Oklahoman]].
  10. Jordan Miller. (June 4, 2019). "Todd Lamb to join KFOR's 'Flash Point'". [[Community Newspaper Holdings]].
  11. K. Butcher. (June 2, 2019). ""It's been a great season here," Member of Flash Point team makes big announcement". Tribune Broadcasting.
  12. (2023-05-18). "UCO Press Release: RUSO Names University of Central Oklahoma's Next President".
  13. (May 19, 2022). "Todd Lamb named next president of University of Central Oklahoma". [[The Oklahoman]].
  14. "LT. Gov. Todd Lamb".
  15. "State Election Results, Statewide Primary Election, June 26, 2018".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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