Chad Lovejoy

American politician
Chad Lovejoy
Member of the West Virginia House of Delegates from the 17th district
In office
December 1, 2016 – December 1, 2022
Preceded byDoug Reynolds
Succeeded byNew boundaries
Personal details
Born (1973-09-15) September 15, 1973 (age 50)
Huntington, West Virginia
Political partyDemocratic
EducationWest Virginia University (BA, JD[1])

Chad Lovejoy (born September 15, 1973) is an American politician who served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from the 17th district from 2016 to 2022.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ "Chad Lovejoy (D - Cabell, 17) Biography". West Virginia Legislature. Retrieved 6 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Chad Lovejoy (D - Cabell, 17)". Wvlegislature.gov. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  3. ^ "Lovejoy, Rohrbach win re-election". Herald-dispatch.com. 2018-11-07. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  • v
  • t
  • e
86th West Virginia Legislature (2023−2024)
Speaker
Roger Hanshaw (R)
Minority Leader
Sean Hornbuckle (D)
  1. Pat McGeehan (R)
  2. Mark Zatezalo (R)
  3. Jimmy Willis (R)
  4. Diana Winzenreid (R)
  5. Shawn Fluharty (D)
  6. Jeffrey Stephens (R)
  7. Charles Sheedy (R)
  8. David Kelly (R)
  9. Trenton Barnhart (R)
  10. Bill Anderson (R)
  11. Bob Fehrenbacher (R)
  12. Vernon Criss (R)
  13. Scot Heckert (R)
  14. Dave Foggin (R)
  15. Erica Moore (R)
  16. Steve Westfall (R)
  17. Jonathan Pinson (R)
  18. Jim Butler (R)
  19. Kathie Hess Crouse (R)
  20. Geoff Foster (R)
  21. Jarred Cannon (R)
  22. Daniel Linville (R)
  23. Evan Worrell (R)
  24. Patrick Lucas (R)
  25. Sean Hornbuckle (D)
  26. Matthew Rohrbach (R)
  27. Ric Griffith (D)
  28. Mark Ross (R)
  29. Henry Dillon (R)
  30. David Adkins (R)
  31. Margitta Mazzocchi (R)
  32. Josh Holstein (R)
  33. Jordan Bridges (R)
  34. Mark Dean (R)
  35. Adam Vance (R)
  36. Stephen "David" Green (R)
  37. Marty Gearheart (R)
  38. Joe Ellington (R)
  39. Doug Smith (R)
  40. Roy Cooper (R)
  41. Jordan Maynor (R)
  42. Brandon Steele (R)
  43. Chris Toney (R)
  44. Todd Kirby (R)
  45. Eric Brooks (R)
  46. Jeff Campbell (R)
  47. Todd Longanacre (R)
  48. Tom Clark (R)
  49. Heather Tully (R)
  50. Elliott Pritt (R)
  51. Tom Fast (R)
  52. Larry Rowe (D)
  53. Chris Pritt (R)
  54. Mike Pushkin (D)
  55. JB Akers (R)
  56. Kayla Young (D)
  57. Hollis Lewis (D)
  58. Walter Hall (R)
  59. Andy Shamblin (R)
  60. Dana Ferrell (R)
  61. Dean Jeffries (R)
  62. Roger Hanshaw (R)
  63. Lori Dittman (R)
  64. Adam Burkhammer (R)
  65. Carl Martin (R)
  66. Ty Nestor (R)
  67. Elias Coop-Gonzalez (R)
  68. Chris Phillips (R)
  69. Keith Marple (R)
  70. Mickey Petitto (R)
  71. Laura Kimble (R)
  72. Clay Riley (R)
  73. Amy Summers (R)
  74. Mike DeVault (R)
  75. Phil Mallow (R)
  76. Joey Garcia (D)
  77. Joe Statler (R)
  78. Geno Chiarelli (R)
  79. Evan Hansen (D)
  80. John Williams (D)
  81. Anitra Hamilton (D)
  82. Debbie Warner (R)
  83. George Street (R)
  84. D. Rolland Jennings (R)
  85. John Paul Hott (R)
  86. Bryan Ward (R)
  87. Gary Howell (R)
  88. Rick Hillenbrand [Wikidata] (R)
  89. Darren Thorne (R)
  90. George Miller (R)
  91. Don Forsht (R)
  92. Michael Hite (R)
  93. Michael Hornby (R)
  94. Larry Kump (R)
  95. Chuck Horst (R)
  96. Eric Householder (R)
  97. John Hardy (R)
  98. Paul Espinosa (R)
  99. Wayne Clark (R)
  100. William Ridenour (R)


Stub icon

This article about a West Virginia politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e