Collin Duel
Collin Duel | |
---|---|
Member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives from the 31st district | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office November 16, 2022 | |
Preceded by | Garry Mize |
Personal details | |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Hannah |
Military service | |
Branch/service | United States Army |
Rank | Sergeant |
Battles/wars |
|
Collin Duel is an American politician who has served as the Oklahoma House of Representatives member from the 31st district since November 16, 2022.
Early life and education
Collin Duel was born and raised in Guthrie,[1] Oklahoma where he attended Guthrie High School.[2] After his military career, he earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Oklahoma in International Security Studies and his juris doctor from the University of Oklahoma College of Law.[2][3]
Career
Military career
Duel enlisted in the United States Army at age 19.[4] He was an Army Ranger and served four deployments in the War in Afghanistan and was honorably discharged in 2013.[3] During his service he was awarded two Army Commendation medals and he was discharged at the rank of sergeant.[4]
Legal career
He graduated from the University of Oklahoma College of Law in 2019 and started his own practice, Duel Law.[3]
Oklahoma House of Representatives
Duel officially launched his campaign for the Oklahoma House of Representatives 31st district in August 2021.[4] Two other candidates, Logan Trainer and Karmin Grider, also launched campaigns in the district to succeed retiring incumbent Garry Mize.[5] He advanced to a runoff with Grider.[6] He was supported by the Oklahoma Farm Bureau in both primary elections[7] and endorsed by Governor Kevin Stitt in the Republican runoff election.[6] Duel defeated Grider in the runoff and won the seat since no non-Republican candidate filed for the district.[8] He was sworn in November 16, 2022.[9]
Personal life
He is married to his wife Hannah.[3] They have two children together.[9] He is a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association of America.[3] He and his family attends Life Church.[4]
References
- ^ "About Duel Law, P.L.L.C." duellaw.com. Retrieved January 3, 2023. [non-primary source needed]
- ^ a b "Oklahoma State Rep. Collin Duel". legistorm.com. Legistorm. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e Tomlinson, Joe (June 6, 2022). "Army veteran, former county GOP leader and former actor seek House District 31". NonDoc. Archived from the original on June 7, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ a b c d "Combat veteran enters State Representative race to defend liberty". Guthrie News Page. August 18, 2021. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ "Logan County commissioners draw opponents for upcoming primary election". Guthrie News Page. April 17, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ a b Hancock, Andrea (August 22, 2022). "HD 31 runoff: Sketchy ads, dark money and a Stitt endorsement". NonDoc. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ "OKFB AG PAC ISSUES ADDITIONAL ENDORSEMENTS, FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR CANDIDATES IN UPCOMING ELECTIONS". Oklahoma Farm Bureau. July 20, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ Forman, Carmen (August 24, 2022). "Incumbent GOP state senator fends off challenge from the right; 5 legislative races decided in runoff". The Oklahoman. Archived from the original on November 8, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- ^ a b "Collin Duel takes oath of office for House of Representatives". Guthrie News Page. November 20, 2022. Archived from the original on December 1, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
- v
- t
- e
- Speaker of the House
- Charles McCall (R)
- Speaker pro tempore
- Kyle Hilbert (R)
- Majority Leader
- Tammy West (R)
- Minority Leader
- Cyndi Munson (D)
- ▌Eddy Dempsey (R)
- ▌Jim Olsen (R)
- ▌Rick West (R)
- ▌Bob Ed Culver Jr. (R)
- ▌Josh West (R)
- ▌Rusty Cornwell (R)
- ▌Steve Bashore (R)
- ▌Tom Gann (R)
- ▌Mark Lepak (R)
- ▌Judd Strom (R)
- ▌John Kane (R)
- ▌Kevin McDugle (R)
- ▌Neil Hays (R)
- ▌Chris Sneed (R)
- ▌Randy Randleman (R)
- ▌Scott Fetgatter (R)
- ▌Jim Grego (R)
- ▌David Smith (R)
- ▌Justin Humphrey (R)
- ▌Sherrie Conley (R)
- ▌Cody Maynard (R)
- ▌Charles McCall (R)
- ▌Terry O'Donnell (R)
- ▌Chris Banning (R)
- ▌Ronny Johns (R)
- ▌Dell Kerbs (R)
- ▌Danny Sterling (R)
- ▌Danny Williams (R)
- ▌Kyle Hilbert (R)
- ▌Mark Lawson (R)
- ▌Collin Duel (R)
- ▌Kevin Wallace (R)
- ▌John Talley (R)
- ▌Trish Ranson (D)
- ▌Ty Burns (R)
- ▌John George (R)
- ▌Ken Luttrell (R)
- ▌John Pfeiffer (R)
- ▌Erick Harris (R)
- ▌Chad Caldwell (R)
- ▌Denise Crosswhite Hader (R)
- ▌Cynthia Roe (R)
- ▌Jay Steagall (R)
- ▌Jared Deck (D)
- ▌Annie Menz (D)
- ▌Jacob Rosecrants (D)
- ▌Brian Hill (R)
- ▌Tammy Townley (R)
- ▌Josh Cantrell (R)
- ▌Marcus McEntire (R)
- ▌Brad Boles (R)
- ▌Gerrid Kendrix (R)
- ▌Mark McBride (R)
- ▌Kevin West (R)
- ▌Nick Archer (R)
- ▌Dick Lowe (R)
- ▌Anthony Moore (R)
- ▌Carl Newton (R)
- ▌Mike Dobrinski (R)
- ▌Rhonda Baker (R)
- ▌Kenton Patzkowsky (R)
- ▌Daniel Pae (R)
- ▌Trey Caldwell (R)
- ▌Rande Worthen (R)
- ▌Toni Hasenbeck (R)
- ▌Clay Staires (R)
- ▌Jeff Boatman (R)
- ▌Lonnie Sims (R)
- ▌Mark Tedford (R)
- ▌Suzanne Schreiber (D)
- ▌Amanda Swope (D)
- ▌Monroe Nichols (D)
- ▌Regina Goodwin (D)
- ▌Mark Vancuren (R)
- ▌T. J. Marti (R)
- ▌Ross Ford (R)
- ▌John Waldron (D)
- ▌Meloyde Blancett (D)
- ▌Melissa Provenzano (D)
- ▌Stan May (R)
- ▌Mike Osburn (R)
- ▌Nicole Miller (R)
- ▌Eric Roberts (R)
- ▌Tammy West (R)
- ▌Cyndi Munson (D)
- ▌Dave Hardin (R)
- ▌Ellyn Hefner (D)
- ▌Mauree Turner (D)
- ▌Arturo Alonso (D)
- ▌Jon Echols (R)
- ▌Chris Kannady (R)
- ▌Forrest Bennett (D)
- ▌Mickey Dollens (D)
- ▌Andy Fugate (D)
- ▌Max Wolfley (R)
- ▌Preston Stinson (R)
- ▌Jason Lowe (D)
- ▌Dean Davis (R)
- ▌Ajay Pittman (D)
- ▌Marilyn Stark (R)
- ▌Robert Manger (R)
This article about an Oklahoma politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e