Scott Pruitt

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Scott Pruitt
Oklahoma State Senator
In office
1999 – 2007
Succeeded by Bill Brown
Born May 9, 1968
Danville, Kentucky
Constituency 36th Senate District
Political party Republican
Spouse Marlyn Pruitt

Scott Pruitt (born May 9, 1968) is an United States lawyer and Republican politician from the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Pruitt was a State Senator, representing Tulsa and Wagoner counties from 1999 until 2007. Pruitt retired from the Senate to, in 2006, launch a failed campaign to receive the Republican nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma.

[edit] Biography

Pruitt was born in Danville, Kentucky in 1968. He attended Georgetown College and graduated in 1990 with a Bachelor of Arts degrees in Political Science and Communications. He then moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma when he attended the University of Tulsa to earn a Juris Doctor in 1993. He passed the bar examination that same year.

He entered into private practice in Tulsa where he specialized in Constitutional Law, Contracts, Insurance Law, Labor Law, and Litigation & Appeals. After five years as an attorney, Pruitt ran for, and was elect to, the Oklahoma Senate in 1998, representing Tulsa and Wagoner counties. After only two years in the Senate, Pruitt was selected to serve as the Republican Whip from 2001 to 2003. He was then selected to serve as the Republican Assistant Floor Leader, a position he currently holds.

In 2004, Pruitt became the General Managing Partner of the Oklahoma RedHawks, Oklahoma City's Triple-A baseball club. Under his first season of leadership, the RedHawks saw a 25% increase in attendance. After two years, the team broke the all-time attendance record for minor league baseball in Oklahoma and saw a 45% increase in revenue.

[edit] 2006 Lieutenant Governor campaign

Pruitt is currently seeking Republican nomination to replace outgoing Republican Mary Fallin as Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma. In the primary election, Pruitt faced Nacy Riley and Speaker of the House Todd Hiett. Following the primaries on July 25, 2006, Pruitt received 34% of the vote, Riley receive 23%, and Hiett received 43%. Pruitt, according to Oklahoma state law, had to face Hiett in a runoff election in order to receive the party's nomination.

Following the run-off election on August 22, 2006, Pruitt received 63,812 votes and 49.08% as opposed to Hiett's 66,217 votes and 50.92%. Pruitt failed to received the nomination, with Hiett to face Democratic House Minority Leader Jari Askins in the November general election.

[edit] References