Kevin Priola

American politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kevin Priola is an American politician who served in the Colorado Senate from the 13th district as a member of the Democratic Party. Prior to decennial redistricting he also represented the 25th district. Prior to his tenure in the state senate he served in the Colorado House of Representatives from the 30th and 56th districts from 2009 to 2017. Until 2022, he served as a member of the Republican Party.

Preceded byRedistricted
Succeeded byScott Bright
Preceded byMary Hodge
Succeeded byRedistricted
Quick facts Member of the Colorado Senate from the 13th district, Preceded by ...
Kevin Priola
Member of the Colorado Senate
from the 13th district
In office
January 9, 2023  January 8, 2025
Preceded byRedistricted
Succeeded byScott Bright
Member of the Colorado Senate
from the 25th district
In office
January 11, 2017  January 9, 2023
Preceded byMary Hodge
Succeeded byRedistricted
Member of the Colorado House of Representatives
In office
January 9, 2013  January 11, 2017
Preceded byChristine Scanlan
Succeeded byPhilip Covarrubias
Constituency56th district
In office
January 14, 2009  January 9, 2013
Preceded byMary Hodge
Succeeded byJenise May
Constituency30th District
Personal details
Born
PartyDemocratic (2022–present)
Republican (1990–2022)
SpouseMichelle
Children4
Close

Priola was born in Brighton, Colorado, and educated at the University of Colorado Boulder where he joined the College Republicans. He joined the Republican Party at age seventeen and was elected to the state house from the 30th district in the 2008 election. During his tenure in the state house he served as a whip, but resigned in 2014 following an unsuccessful attempt to remove him. He was elected to the state senate in the 2016 election, but joined the Democrats in 2022, citing Republican attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

Early life

Kevin Priola was born in Brighton, Colorado. He attended the University of Colorado Boulder from 1992 to 1996, and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in finance and accounting and a minor in economics. He became a Republican at age seventeen and was a member of the College Republicans. He married Michelle, with whom he had four children.[1][2][3] He was involved with the University of Colorado's Ralphie program, which runs a buffalo on the field at football games.[4]

Career

Priola ran for the Republican nomination for a seat in the Colorado House of Representatives in the 30th district in the 2008 election and won in the general election against Democratic nominee Dave Rose.[5] He defeated Democratic nominee Laura Huerta in the 2010 election.[6] He defeated Democratic nominee Rose and Libertarian nominee Will Hiltscher in the 2012 election.[7][8] He defeated Democratic nominee Vicki A. Snider and Libertarian nominee Chris Baerns in the 2014 election.[9][10]

Priola ran for a seat in the Colorado Senate from the 25th district and defeated Democratic nominee Jenise May in the 2016 election.[11][12] He defeated Democratic nominee Paula Dickerson in the 2020 election.[13][14] He over-performed Donald Trump by over 10% in the 2020 election in his district.[15] Priola was redistricted into the 13th district.[16]

He served as a whip during his tenure in the state house, but resigned from his position in 2014, the day after Representative Chris Holbert unsuccessfully attempted to have him removed from the position due to Priola not supporting a Republican amendment to legislation.[17][18][19] During his tenure in the state senate he served on the Business, Labor and Technology, and Education committees.[2] He was considered as a possible running mate for Walker Stapleton in the 2018 gubernatorial election, but Lang Sias was selected instead.[20]

On August 22, 2022, Priola announced he was leaving the Republican Party and joining the Democratic Party, citing Republicans' attempts to overturn the 2020 election and denial of climate change.[21][22] Priola's wife, Michelle, is a plaintiff on Anderson v. Griswold.[23]

Political positions

Priola is considered a moderate in his district, and has worked with Democrats in sponsoring or supporting bipartisan bills.[24] He voted in favor of legislation to allow municipalities to require affordable housing which had been prohibited since a ruling by the Colorado Supreme Court in 2000.[25] He was the only Republican in the state senate to vote in favor of legislation to prevent landlords from using or disclosing the citizenship or immigration status of their tenants.[26]

He sponsored legislation to exempt teachers from the Colorado Open Records Act in order to prevent doxing being conducted against teachers.[27] Priola was the only Republican to vote in favor of legislation to prohibit employers from retaliating against their workers for reporting health and safety concerns or violations.[28]

He co-sponsored legislation to repeal the death penalty, and at one point was the only Republican supporter of the bill, stating that he opposes capital punishment due to his Catholic beliefs and how it disproportionately targets black people.[29][1] He voted in favor of reducing the sentence of felony murder from life in prison without parole to a maximum of forty-eight years.[30]

He and Senator Brittany Pettersen created legislation to allow for supervised injection sites to combat the opioid epidemic.[31] Patrick Neville, the Republican Minority Leader in the state house, threatened to have recall attempts made against Democratic members of the Colorado General Assembly who supported the legislation, but not against Priola.[32] Priola sponsored legislation to prohibit the selling or marketing of flavored products by cigarette, tobacco, or nicotine retailers.[33]

Priola sponsored legislation in 2014 that would prohibit abortions, except to prevent the death of the mother, and make it a class three felony.[34] He received an F rating from NARAL Pro-Choice America.[35]

He voted in favor of legislation to allow transgender and nonbinary people to change their names and gender on identifications without surgery or judicial requirements,[36] and voted in favor of legislation to prohibit gay conversion therapy.[37] He cosponsored legislation to make HIV prevention drugs available without the need of a prescription.[38] He has also supported anti-LGBT religious-exemption legislation.[39]

After the January 6 United States Capitol attack, he called for President Trump to be removed from office through either the Twenty-fifth Amendment or impeachment.[40] Priola was the only Republican to vote in favor of a resolution calling for the passage of voting rights legislation at the federal level while fifteen Republican members of the state senate voted in favor of unsuccessful amendments to the resolution thanking the Capitol attackers and decertifying the 2020 presidential election.[41][42]

Electoral history

More information Primary election, Party ...
2008 Colorado House of Representatives 30th district election[5]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Priola 1,579 100.00%
Total votes 1,579 100.00%
General election
Republican Kevin Priola 11,936 50.92%
Democratic Dave Rose 11,505 49.08%
Total votes 23,441 100.00%
Close
More information Primary election, Party ...
2010 Colorado House of Representatives 30th district election[6]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 2,912 100.00%
Total votes 2,912 100.00%
General election
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 10,612 60.49%
Democratic Laura Huerta 6,931 39.51%
Total votes 17,543 100.00%
Close
More information Primary election, Party ...
2012 Colorado House of Representatives 56th district election[7][8]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 4,064 100.00%
Total votes 4,064 100.00%
General election
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 22,270 58.78%
Democratic Dave Rose 14,070 37.14%
Libertarian Will Hiltscher 1,544 4.08%
Total votes 37,884 100.00%
Close
More information Primary election, Party ...
2014 Colorado House of Representatives 56th district election[9][10]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 5,894 100.00%
Total votes 5,894 100.00%
General election
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 20,627 63.09%
Democratic Vicki A. Snider 10,629 32.51%
Libertarian Chris Baerns 1,439 4.40%
Total votes 32,695 100.00%
Close
More information Primary election, Party ...
2016 Colorado Senate 25th district election[11][12]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Priola 4,743 100.00%
Total votes 4,743 100.00%
General election
Republican Kevin Priola 30,074 52.07%
Democratic Jenise May 27,678 47.93%
Total votes 57,752 100.00%
Close
More information Primary election, Party ...
2020 Colorado Senate 25th district election[13][14]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 11,135 100.00%
Total votes 11,135 100.00%
General election
Republican Kevin Priola (incumbent) 37,195 50.84%
Democratic Paula Dickerson 35,968 49.16%
Total votes 73,163 100.00%
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI