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facts about jesse pippy.html

16 Facts About Jesse Pippy

facts about jesse pippy.html1.

Jesse Tyler Pippy was born on August 6,1982 and is an American politician who was elected on November 6,2018, to serve a 4-year term in the Maryland House of Delegates representing District 4, which encompasses parts of Frederick and Carroll Counties.

2.

Jesse Pippy grew up in a military family and lived in Europe and Asia.

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Jesse Pippy resigned from the liquor board on August 7,2018.

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Jesse Pippy won the general election, receiving 19.7 percent of the vote.

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Jesse Pippy married his wife, Lindsey May Carpenter, in Frederick, Maryland in 2014.

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Jesse Pippy was sworn in to the Maryland House of Delegates on January 9,2019.

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In June 2021, Jesse Pippy announced he would seek the State Senate seat in District 4 being vacated by Michael Hough, but in September 2021 he withdrew his candidacy.

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8.

In March 2022, during a debate on legislation that would expand abortion access, Jesse Pippy introduced an amendment that would allow only physicians to provide abortion services.

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In March 2021, Jesse Pippy voted against legislation that would require businesses to create telework policies.

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In March 2021, Jesse Pippy opposed a proposal by Governor Larry Hogan that would give state employees a $1,000 bonus for working during the coronavirus pandemic, saying that he felt the government needed to do more to help private sector employees.

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Jesse Pippy introduced legislation that would expand the state's child pornography laws to include lascivious acts and computer-generated images, which passed and became law on April 30,2019.

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Jesse Pippy introduced legislation that would make strangulation a first-degree felony assault, which passed and became law on May 8,2020.

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In February 2021, Jesse Pippy said that he opposed removing school resource officers from schools.

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Jesse Pippy introduced legislation in the 2020 legislative session that would fine healthcare facilities that engage in patient brokering.

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In March 2021, during a debate on legislation that would require counties to end their 287 contracts with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Jesse Pippy unsuccessfully attempted to amend the bill to create exemptions for Frederick County.

16.

In February 2025, Jesse Pippy expressed sympathy toward federal employees affected by the Trump administration's federal mass layoffs, but defended the firings as a necessity to address the United States's national debt and bring down federal spending, which he felt had increased "almost to an unsustainable amount".