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John Engler

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John Mathias Engler (born October 12, 1948) is an American politician. He served as a Republican governor of Michigan from 1991 to 2003.

Engler, a Catholic, was born in Mount Pleasant and grew up on a cattle farm in Beal City. He attended Michigan State University, where he was chairman of the College Republicans. In 1971 he graduated with a degree in agricultural economics and was elected as a State Representative at the age of 23. His campaign manager was new MSU College Republican chair Dick Posthumus, who later went on to become Engler's Lieutenant Governor.

Engler married Colleen House Engler in 1975. Colleen Engler, by then a state representative herself, ran unsuccessfully in the Republican gubernatorial primary in 1986. John Engler had initially declared his support for another candidate (eventual Republican nominee William Lucas), but backed Colleen Engler once she became a candidate. The couple divorced sometime during the 1980s.

Engler married his second wife, Michelle, a lawyer, in 1990. She was named to the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) board in 2001 by President George W. Bush and re-appointed in 2002. The couple have triplet daughters born November 13, 1994.

Engler has spent most of his adult life in government. He was serving in the Michigan House when he enrolled at Thomas M. Cooley Law School, and graduated with a J.D. in 1981, having served as a Michigan State Senator since 1979. He was elected Senate Majority Leader in 1985 and served there until elected governor in 1990.

Governorship

His administration was characterized by privatization of state services, tax reduction, educational reform, and major reconfiguration and renaming of executive branch departments. In 1996 he was elected Chairman of the Republican Governors Association.

1996 Presidential Election

During the 1996 presidential campaign, Engler was considered by many political commentators and experts to be a serious potential vice presidential running mate for Republican nominee Bob Dole. Eventually, however, Dole instead selected Jack Kemp, a former congressman and HUD Secretary.

2000 Presidential Election

Engler was widely touted as a potential candidate for President in the 2000 election. However, Engler quickly passed on the race and enthusiastically endorsed his close personal friend, Texas Governor George W. Bush, in the Republican primary.

Engler and Bush became unwitting foils for Canadian comedy news reporter Rick Mercer in his Talking to Americans report.

After Bush secured the GOP nomination, Engler's name began to surface as a possible running mate for Bush [link]. In the weeks leading up to the Republican National Convention that July, Bush campaign sources reported that Engler was on Bush's short list to be named. However, Engler had failed to deliver Michigan to Bush in the Republican primary, and was beset by flagging popularity. Engler was passed over in favor of Richard Cheney for the position.

2002 Elections & Post-Gubernatorial Work

Engler's lieutenant governor, Dick Posthumus, sought to succeed Engler in the 2002 gubernatorial race. Despite Republican successes across the country and in Michigan, Posthumus lost the race to the state's Attorney General, Democrat Jennifer Granholm.

Since leaving the governor's mansion, Engler has become president of the National Association of Manufacturers in Washington, D.C., and he now lives in northern Virginia with his family.

Election results

In 1990 then State Senate Majority Leader John Engler challenged Governor James Blanchard in his bid for a third term. Political observers viewed Engler's bid as a long shot, and he trailed Blanchard by double digits in the polls the weekend before the election. However, on election day Engler pulled off the upset, defeating Blanchard by approximately 17,000 votes -- less than one percentage point. Engler's upset did not lead to a resounding Republican victory, however. Then-Rep. Bill Schuette lost his bid to unseat Democratic Sen. Carl Levin. Democrats also retained their control of the offices of Secretary of State, Attorney General, and majorities in the State House of Representatives and the state Supreme Court.

In 1994 Engler ran for his second term. The Democrats nominated former Representative Howard Wolpe, who had close ties to labor movement -- a potent force in Democratic politics in Michigan. Engler crushed Wolpe 61% - 39%, and the state Republican party made significant gains. Spencer Abraham picked up the Senate seat of retiring Democrat Donald W. Riegle, Jr.. Republicans gained a seat to break a tie in the state House of Representatives and take a 56-54 majority, while also picking up a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Republican Candice Miller pulled off an upset victory to win the post of Secretary of State.

Michigan voters re-elected Governor Engler to his third and final term in 1998. He won a landslide victory over Dr. Jack Kevorkian's controversial former lawyer Geoffrey Fieger. Engler took 1,883,005 votes -- 62 percent of the total -- to Fieger's 38 percent and 1,143,574 votes. Engler's landslide helped the state Republican party to gain six seats in the state House of Representatives, taking control of the chamber they had lost two years previously with a 58-52 margin, as well as picking up an additional seat in the State Senate, for a 23-15 majority. Republicans also gained a seat on the technically non-partisan state Supreme Court, holding a 4-3 majority over the Democrats. The Republican landslide was not complete, however. The Democrats narrowly held on to the Attorney General's office, and Republicans failed in their bids to defeat several Democratic members of the state's congressional delegation.

Electoral history

Further reading

Lieutenant governors: Democratic opponents:

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