Richard Henderson (Kentucky politician)

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Preceded byAdrian Arnold
Succeeded byDavid Hale
Preceded byJosephine Martin
Succeeded byAnthony Henderson
Richard Henderson
Member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
from the 74th district
In office
January 1, 2007  January 1, 2015
Preceded byAdrian Arnold
Succeeded byDavid Hale
Mayor of Jeffersonville, Kentucky
In office
January 2003  January 2007
Preceded byJosephine Martin
Succeeded byAnthony Henderson
Personal details
BornRichard Dale Henderson
(1971-03-15) March 15, 1971 (age 55)
PartyRepublican (since 2025)
Other political
affiliations
Democratic (1989–2023) Independent (2023–2025)
SpouseLinda
Children2

Richard Dale Henderson (born March 15, 1971) is an American retired politician who served four consecutive terms as a member of the Kentucky House of Representatives for the 74th district from January 2007 to January 2015.[1] Before serving in Frankfort, Henderson served one term as the Mayor of Jeffersonville, Kentucky from January 2003 to January 2007.

Henderson was born March 15, 1971, in Montgomery County, Kentucky. He was first elected to political office in 2002, serving as the mayor of Jeffersonville, Kentucky. In 2006, Henderson decided against running for mayoral re-election in order to run for the Kentucky House of Representatives seat held by the retiring Adrian Arnold. Henderson would win the primary and the general elections, and go on to serve four consecutive terms. On November 4, 2014, he lost re-election to Republican candidate David Hale. On May 19, 2015, after failing to earn a fifth house term, Henderson filed to run for Kentucky State Treasurer. He would finish third in the statewide Democratic primary with 32,914 votes behind Neville Blakemore's 36,663 votes and the winner Rick Nelson's 44,397 votes. In 2023, after an eight-year hiatus, Henderson filed to run as an Independent in the Special Election for the Kentucky Senate District 28 seat. On May 16, Henderson would finish third in the election with 3,001 votes behind Democrat Robert Sainte's 4,968 votes and the winner Republican Greg Elkins' 7,899 votes.[2] Henderson would announce his retirement from politics in the local newspaper.

Elections

References

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