Caleb Rudow
Caleb Rudow | |
---|---|
Member of the North Carolina House of Representatives | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office February 1, 2022 | |
Preceded by | Susan Fisher |
Succeeded by | Brian Turner |
Constituency | 114th district (2022–2023) 116th district (2023–present) |
Personal details | |
Political party | Democratic |
Education | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (BA) University of Texas, Austin (MA) |
Caleb Rudow is an American politician serving as a member of the North Carolina House of Representatives from the 116th district. He was appointed on February 1, 2022, succeeding Susan Fisher.
Early life and education
A native of Asheville, North Carolina, Rudow graduated from Asheville High School in 2005.[1] He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Master of Arts in global policy studies from the University of Texas at Austin.[2][3]
Career
From 2008 to 2011, Rudow worked as a manager at a gardening company.
From 2012 to 2014, he served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Zambia. He continued his work in Zambia as a member of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Zambia Economic Development Team until 2015.
In 2018, he worked as a consultant with the World Bank Group. He was also a research fellow at the Center for Open Data Enterprise in Washington, D.C.
In 2019 and 2020, he was a regional organizing coordinator for Swing Left.[4]
From August to October 2020, he was a census enumerator for the United States Census Bureau.
Rudow joined Open Data Watch in 2018 and has since worked as a program assistant and data analyst until leaving the organization in July 2021. In 2021, he worked as a COVID-19 case investigator for Community Care of North Carolina.
He was appointed to the North Carolina House of Representatives in February 2022.[5]
In 2023, Rudow announced a run for North Carolina's 11th congressional district. He was unopposed in the primary and will face incumbent Chuck Edwards in the 2024 general election.
Electoral history
2022
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Caleb Rudow (incumbent) | 25,161 | 62.36% | |
Republican | Mollie Rose | 15,185 | 37.64% | |
Total votes | 40,346 | 100% | ||
Democratic hold |
References
- ^ "Caleb Rudow". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
- ^ "Caleb Rudow to Fill Out NC Rep. Fisher's Term". The Urban News. 2022-01-14. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
- ^ "Representative Caleb Rudow - Biography - North Carolina General Assembly". www.ncleg.gov. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
- ^ "RPCV Caleb Rudow (Zambia) replaces Susan Fisher in North Carolina House | Peace Corps Worldwide". peacecorpsworldwide.org. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
- ^ "Susan Fisher replacement appointed to NC House". The Asheville Citizen Times. Associated Press. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
- ^ [1] North Carolina State Board of Elections.
- v
- t
- e
- Speaker of the House
- Tim Moore (R)
- Speaker pro tempore
- Sarah Stevens (R)
- Majority Leader
- John Bell (R)
- Minority Leader
- Robert Reives (D)
- ▌Ed Goodwin (R)
- ▌Ray Jeffers (D)
- ▌Steve Tyson (R)
- ▌Jimmy Dixon (R)
- ▌Bill Ward (R)
- ▌Joe Pike (R)
- ▌Matthew Winslow (R)
- ▌Gloristine Brown (D)
- ▌Timothy Reeder (R)
- ▌John Bell (R)
- ▌Allison Dahle (D)
- ▌Chris Humphrey (R)
- ▌Celeste Cairns (R)
- ▌George Cleveland (R)
- ▌Phil Shepard (R)
- ▌Carson Smith (R)
- ▌Frank Iler (R)
- ▌Deb Butler (D)
- ▌Charlie Miller (R)
- ▌Ted Davis Jr. (R)
- ▌Ya Liu (D)
- ▌William Brisson (R)
- ▌Shelly Willingham (D)
- ▌Ken Fontenot (R)
- ▌Allen Chesser (R)
- ▌Donna McDowell White (R)
- ▌Michael Wray (D)
- ▌Larry Strickland (R)
- ▌Vernetta Alston (D)
- ▌Marcia Morey (D)
- ▌Zack Forde-Hawkins (D)
- ▌Frank Sossamon (R)
- ▌Rosa Gill (D)
- ▌Tim Longest (D)
- ▌Terence Everitt (D)
- ▌Julie von Haefen (D)
- ▌Erin Paré (R)
- ▌Abe Jones (D)
- ▌James Roberson (D)
- ▌Joe John (D)
- ▌Maria Cervania (D)
- ▌Marvin Lucas (D)
- ▌Diane Wheatley (R)
- ▌Charles Smith (D)
- ▌Frances Jackson (D)
- ▌Brenden Jones (R)
- ▌Jarrod Lowery (R)
- ▌Garland Pierce (D)
- ▌Cynthia Ball (D)
- ▌Renee Price (D)
- ▌John Sauls (R)
- ▌Ben Moss (R)
- ▌Howard Penny Jr. (R)
- ▌Robert Reives (D)
- ▌Mark Brody (R)
- ▌Allen Buansi (D)
- ▌Ashton Clemmons (D)
- ▌Amos Quick (D)
- ▌Alan Branson (R)
- ▌Cecil Brockman (D)
- ▌Pricey Harrison (D)
- ▌John Faircloth (R)
- ▌Stephen Ross (R)
- ▌Dennis Riddell (R)
- ▌Reece Pyrtle (R)
- ▌Sarah Crawford (D)
- ▌Wayne Sasser (R)
- ▌David Willis (R)
- ▌Dean Arp (R)
- ▌Brian Biggs (R)
- ▌Kanika Brown (D)
- ▌Amber Baker (D)
- ▌Diamond Staton-Williams (D)
- ▌Jeff Zenger (R)
- ▌Donny Lambeth (R)
- ▌Harry Warren (R)
- ▌Julia Craven Howard (R)
- ▌Neal Jackson (R)
- ▌Keith Kidwell (R)
- ▌Sam Watford (R)
- ▌Larry Potts (R)
- ▌Kristin Baker (R)
- ▌Kevin Crutchfield (R)
- ▌Jeffrey McNeely (R)
- ▌Dudley Greene (R)
- ▌Hugh Blackwell (R)
- ▌Destin Hall (R)
- ▌Mary Belk (D)
- ▌Mitchell Setzer (R)
- ▌Sarah Stevens (R)
- ▌Kyle Hall (R)
- ▌Terry Brown (D)
- ▌Ray Pickett (R)
- ▌Jeffrey Elmore (R)
- ▌Grey Mills (R)
- ▌Jay Adams (R)
- ▌Jason Saine (R)
- ▌John Bradford (R)
- ▌Nasif Majeed (D)
- ▌John Autry (D)
- ▌Carolyn Logan (D)
- ▌Becky Carney (D)
- ▌Laura Budd (D)
- ▌Brandon Lofton (D)
- ▌Wesley Harris (D)
- ▌Carla Cunningham (D)
- ▌Kelly Alexander (D)
- ▌John Torbett (R)
- ▌Donnie Loftis (R)
- ▌Kelly Hastings (R)
- ▌Tim Moore (R)
- ▌Tricia Cotham (R)
- ▌Jake Johnson (R)
- ▌Eric Ager (D)
- ▌Lindsey Prather (D)
- ▌Caleb Rudow (D)
- ▌Jennifer Balkcom (R)
- ▌Mark Pless (R)
- ▌Mike Clampitt (R)
- ▌Karl Gillespie (R)