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Mike Talboy

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American politician
Mike Talboy
Member of the Missouri House of Representatives
from the 37th district
In office
January 2007 – January 2013
Personal details
Born (1977-08-02) August 2, 1977 (age 47)
Boise, Idaho
Political partyDemocratic
ResidenceKansas City
Alma materUniversity of Missouri-Kansas City
ProfessionAttorney

Mike Talboy (born August 2, 1977) was a Democratic member of the Missouri House of Representatives. Talboy represented the 37th District, which at the time encompassed much of downtown Kansas City south of the Missouri River, as well as portions of the East Side. During the 96th General Assembly, he also served as House Minority Floor Leader. He is a practicing attorney who formerly served as Burns & McDonnell Engineering's Director of Governmental Affairs. He also currently serves as the political director for the Kansas City building trades.

Personal history

Mike Talboy was born in Boise, Idaho to Dr. Glenn E. Talboy, Jr., a surgeon, and Edna (Salcedo) Talboy, an education and instructional design consultant. He has two brothers. Talboy is of partly Colombian heritage: his maternal grandfather, Hector Salcedo, immigrated to the United States at the age of 33. Talboy moved with his family to Kansas City in 1993. He received a bachelor's degree in Communications from the University of Missouri–Kansas City in 2000, and a Juris Doctor from the University of Missouri–Kansas City School of Law in 2002. When the General Assembly was not in session, Talboy practiced law with the Kansas City firm Polsinelli Shughart. He is a father of two children, named Michael Talboy Jr and Grace Talboy

Political history

Mike Talboy became involved in local and national politics in 2001 while still a student at UMKC. In 2004, he served as a regional field director for the Missouri Coordinated Campaign, an organization working for Senator John Kerry's unsuccessful presidential run.

First elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in November 2006 after winning a three-way contested Democratic Primary, Talboy retained his seat in 2008 and 2010. In December 2008, Talboy was appointed Chairman of the Missouri House Democratic Campaign Committee, a group supporting Democrats in the 2010 elections. He ran unopposed for reelection in both the Democratic primary and the general election in both 2008 and 2010.

Beginning in 2012, as a result of redistricting following the 2010 United States Census, Talboy resided in the new 24th District, which included all of Downtown Kansas City, cut out the old 37th District's heavily African American and Democratic East Side portion, and extended south through Midtown Kansas City (including Westport, Hyde Park, and Volker) to portions of the more affluent Country Club District, including the West Plaza and half of the Country Club Plaza itself. On February 28, 2012, Talboy registered to run for the new 24th District, and was unopposed in the Democratic primary, though he faced Republican Jonathan Sternberg, a Kansas City attorney who had no opponents in the Republican primary. On May 22, 2012, however, Talboy dropped out of the race and left the House of Representatives to become engineering firm Burns & McDonnell's first "Director of Governmental Affairs," reopening Democratic primary registration. If Talboy had won, he would have been term limited from running for the Missouri House of Representatives again.

Organizations

  • Member, The Missouri Bar
  • Member, Operation Breakthrough Board of Directors

External links

References

  1. "Representative Mark Sharp". house.mo.gov.
  2. ^ "Mike Talboy - State Representative 37th District". Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
  3. "Missouri House of Representatives - Error".
  4. "Our Campaigns - MO State House 037 - D Primary Race - Aug 08, 2006". www.ourcampaigns.com.
  5. "Nov 4, 2008 General Election". Archived from the original on 2012-10-05.
  6. Dick Aldrich, "New districts send lawmakers scrambling," Missouri News Horizon (December 2, 2011) Archived July 12, 2012, at archive.today
  7. "24th House District Map (2011), Missouri Office of Administration" (PDF).
  8. "SOS, Missouri - Elections: Offices Filed in Candidate Filing". s1.sos.mo.gov.
  9. "Candidate Profile: Jonathan Sternberg," Kansas City Star Archived 2012-11-14 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Justin Kendall, "Mike Talboy is leaving the Missouri Legislature for Burns & McDonnell," May 23, 2012". Archived from the original on May 27, 2012. Retrieved August 1, 2012.
Members of the Missouri House of Representatives
102nd General Assembly (2023–2024)
Speaker of the House
Dean Plocher (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Mike Henderson (R)
Majority Leader
Jonathan Patterson (R)
Minority Leader
Crystal Quade (D)
  1. Jeff Farnan (R)
  2. Mazzie Christensen (R)
  3. Danny Busick (R)
  4. Greg Sharpe (R)
  5. Louis Riggs (R)
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  7. Peggy McGaugh (R)
  8. Josh Hurlbert (R)
  9. Dean Van Schoiack (R)
  10. Bill Falkner (R)
  11. Brenda Shields (R)
  12. Jamie Johnson (D)
  13. Sean Pouche (R)
  14. Ashley Aune (D)
  15. Maggie Nurrenbern (D)
  16. Chris Brown (R)
  17. Bill Allen (R)
  18. Eric Woods (D)
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  21. Robert Sauls (D)
  22. Yolanda Young (D)
  23. Michael Johnson (D)
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  27. Richard Brown (D)
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  29. Aaron Crossley (D)
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  32. Jeff Coleman (R)
  33. Chris Sander (R)
  34. Kemp Strickler (D)
  35. Keri Ingle (D)
  36. Anthony Ealy (D)
  37. Mark Sharp (D)
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  41. Doyle Justus (R)
  42. Jeff Myers (R)
  43. Kent Haden (R)
  44. Cheri Toalson Reisch (R)
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  47. Adrian Plank (D)
  48. Tim Taylor (R)
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  54. Dan Houx (R)
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  72. Doug Clemens (D)
  73. Raychel Proudie (D)
  74. Kevin Windham Jr. (D)
  75. Alan Gray (D)
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  78. Vacant
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  98. Deb Lavender (D)
  99. Ian Mackey (D)
  100. Philip Oehlerking (R)
  101. Ben Keathley (R)
  102. Richard West (R)
  103. Dave Hinman (R)
  104. Phil Christofanelli (R)
  105. Adam Schwadron (R)
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  107. Mark Matthiesen (R)
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  115. Cyndi Buchheit-Courtway (R)
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  122. Tara Peters (R)
  123. Lisa Thomas (R)
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  127. Ann Kelley (R)
  128. Mike Stephens (R)
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  131. Bill Owen (R)
  132. Crystal Quade (D)
  133. Melanie Stinnett (R)
  134. Alex Riley (R)
  135. Betsy Fogle (D)
  136. Stephanie Hein (D)
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  138. Brad Hudson (R)
  139. Bob Titus (R)
  140. Jamie Gragg (R)
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  142. Jeff Knight (R)
  143. Bennie Cook (R)
  144. Chris Dinkins (R)
  145. Rick Francis (R)
  146. Barry Hovis (R)
  147. John Voss (R)
  148. Jamie Burger (R)
  149. Donnie Brown (R)
  150. Cameron Parker (R)
  151. Herman Morse (R)
  152. Hardy Billington (R)
  153. Darrell Atchison (R)
  154. David Evans (R)
  155. Travis Smith (R)
  156. Brian Seitz (R)
  157. Mitch Boggs (R)
  158. Scott Cupps (R)
  159. Dirk Deaton (R)
  160. Ben Baker (R)
  161. Lane Roberts (R)
  162. Bob Bromley (R)
  163. Cody Smith (R)
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