Kevin Lundberg

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Preceded bySteve Johnson
Succeeded byRob Woodward
Preceded bySteve Johnson
Succeeded byB.J. Nikkel
Kevin Lundberg
Member of the Colorado Senate
from the 15th district
In office
January 15, 2009  January 4, 2019
Preceded bySteve Johnson
Succeeded byRob Woodward
Member of the Colorado House of Representatives from the 49th district
In office
January 8, 2003  January 15, 2009
Preceded bySteve Johnson
Succeeded byB.J. Nikkel
Personal details
Born (1952-07-29) July 29, 1952 (age 73)
PartyRepublican
SpouseSandra Jayne "Sandy" Lundberg
OccupationBusinessman

Kevin Lundberg (born July 29, 1952) is an American businessman and former legislator in the U.S. state of Colorado.[1] Before his appointment to the State Senate in 2009 as a Republican, he was elected to serve as the Representative to House District 49 in the Colorado House of Representatives in 2003. He was appointed to the Colorado Senate in 2009, replacing Senator Steve Johnson after his resignation. He represented Senate District 15, which encompasses Berthoud, Estes Park, Laporte, Loveland, Red Feather Lakes and Wellington. In the 2015 legislative session he served as the Assistant Majority Leader for the Senate Republican caucus. From 2016 to early 2019, he served on the Joint Budget Committee and chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee. [2]

In July 2017, Lundberg announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for Colorado State Treasurer in the election to be held in 2018.[3] However, he was defeated in the Republican primary election.

Lundberg attended Rockmont College, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from in the fields of history and social science. After graduation, Lundberg worked with his father as a custom harvester[4] for twenty years before moving on to own and manage a private video production company, a business that he has grown and maintained for the past thirty years. In 1990, Lundberg also helped found the Christian Home Educators of Colorado, which later went on to recognize him as their "Legislator of the Year" in 2006.

Lundberg lives with his wife, Sandy, and their three children in Berthoud, Colorado.

Colorado House of Representatives

Lundberg ran for office in 2002 and was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives to represent House District 49, defeating Taylor Stephens in the Republican primary but facing no general election opposition. Lundberg was re-elected in the three following elections, having defeated Democrat Doug Frisbie and Libertarian Alberto Squassabia in 2004, Democrat Sue Radford in 2006, and Democrat James Ross in 2008.[5][6]

As three-term Representative for the 49th House District, Lundberg sponsored 400 House bills, 13 Senate bills, and 10 resolutions, 16 of which passed.[7] Notable bills sponsored by Lundberg include repeated efforts to adopt a long-term Revenue Shortfall Relief Fund, measures to support home-based educators, support for the Federal Marriage Amendment, cost recovery and alternatives for seniors to Medicaid, and Pine Beetle mitigation.[8] Lundberg also opposed Referendum C, a measure adopted by Coloradans in 2005 to temporarily suspend the revenue limits in the Colorado Taxpayer Bill of Rights.[9]

Lundberg was the sole representative in the Colorado House of Representatives to vote against a resolution censuring fellow Representative Douglas Bruce for his kicking of a photographer during opening prayer on the house floor.[10] Lundberg said of his vote, "It would seem logical that since this was the first censure in the 131 year history of the state, it must indicate that Representative Bruce's action was by far the worst impropriety shown on the House floor…What Representative Bruce did was wrong, and demonstrated poor judgment. I would have supported a rebuke, but to use the word censure is to use the strongest word of condemnation that a legislative body can employ."[11]

Colorado State Senate

References

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