Jamie McLeod-Skinner

Politician

Birthday May 31, 1967

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.

Age 56 years old

Nationality United States

#41569 Most Popular

1967

Jamie McLeod-Skinner (born May 31, 1967) is an American attorney, engineer, and politician who was the Democratic nominee for OR's 5th congressional district in the 2022 election.

In an upset, McLeod-Skinner defeated seven-term incumbent Blue Dog representative Kurt Schrader in the Democratic primary for Oregon's 5th, in a race in which she was considered the more progressive candidate.

She later lost the general election to Republican former Happy Valley Mayor Lori Chavez-DeRemer.

McLeod-Skinner was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

When she was nine, her mother, Marty Hall, moved to teach school in Tanzania.

She attended elementary and high school there and in Kenya.

1981

The district had been held by Republicans since 1981 and had only twice been represented by Democrats in its 121-year history.

In the general election, she faced nine-term incumbent Greg Walden, a former state senator.

She decided to run due to Walden's efforts to replace the Affordable Care Act.

1983

She moved in 1983 to Ashland, Oregon.

1985

She holds the girls' 800-meter track record at Ashland High School from which she graduated in 1985.

1989

She went to college at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, graduating in 1989 with a Bachelor of Science.

1995

She received a master's degree in engineering from Cornell University in 1995.

Beginning at the end of 1995 she served as a reconstruction and program manager in war-torn Bosnia and Kosovo.

2000

She led a Lutheran services organization from 2000 through 2002.

No Democrat had come within 36 percentage points of Walden since 2000.

McLeod-Skinner lost by less than 17%.

2004

She served on the city council of Santa Clara, California, for eight years from 2004 to 2012.

2006

A political scientist took note of her run, as she had defeated Walden in Deschutes County though no candidate had come close before, with Carol Voisin outdoing all others, yet losing by almost 17,000 votes in 2006.

2016

She graduated from the University of Oregon School of Law in 2016 with a Juris Doctor.

From 2016 to 2017, McLeod-Skinner was the city manager of Phoenix, Oregon, where she was fired after four months because of complaints from several department heads.

2018

In 2018, she ran in the Democratic primary for Oregon's 2nd congressional district, winning by 19.5% in a seven-candidate field.

2020

She became the interim city manager of Talent, Oregon, in 2020, hired after a forest fire that destroyed over 700 homes, more than one-third of the city, and where there was substantial discord between the executive, administration, and city employees.

In 2020, she ran in the Secretary of State primary against two incumbent Democratic state senators, Shemia Fagan and Mark Hass.

She focused her campaign on preserving and expanding voter rights and accessibility and did not accept corporate contributions.

In the Democratic primary, the three candidates were separated by less than nine percentage points, with Fagan winning the election.

In 2022, McLeod-Skinner challenged moderate Democrat Kurt Schrader, a six-term incumbent whose district boundaries were substantially reordered by redistricting as Oregon gained a sixth seat due to its population increase.

Schrader had opposed some initiatives by President Biden, who nevertheless endorsed him, but the incumbent had alienated grassroots leadership in a number of counties.

The new district took in Deschutes County and also included part of Multnomah County, a reliable progressive stronghold.

She won both counties by double digits.

Democratic Party leadership organizations in four of the five counties within the district's new boundaries supported McLeod-Skinner, who was also endorsed by Senator Elizabeth Warren.

Schrader received 2022 endorsements from President Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and his campaign outspent McLeod-Skinner's by 10–1.

Although he first referred to Trump's impeachment as a "lynching", he later voted for it.

McLeod-Skinner's win marked the first time an incumbent member of Oregon's congressional delegation had lost a primary in 42 years.

The primary divided the party and Schraeder refused to endorse her in the general election.

McLeod-Skinner lost the general election to Lori Chavez-DeRemer.