Richard Kimball
Member of the Arizona Corporation Commission
In office
January 1983  September 1985
Preceded byJim Weeks
Succeeded bySharon Megdal
Member of the Arizona Senate
from the 21st district
In office
1979–1983
Preceded byTimothy D. Hayes
Succeeded byCarl J. Kunasek
Personal details
Born1946 (age 7778)
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materUniversity of Arizona
ProfessionActivist
Politician

Richard Kimball is an American politician who is the founder and president emeritus of the nonprofit voter education organization Vote Smart.

Early life

Kimball was born in Tucson, Arizona, in 1946.[1] Kimball attended the University of Arizona where he studied political science. He was a staff assistant to Congressman Morris Udall and worked as a press secretary for Senators Walter Mondale and Daniel Moynihan.[2]

Political career

In 1978, Kimball was elected to represent an area of Phoenix in the Arizona Senate. In the 1982 general election, Kimball was elected to a six-year term on the Arizona Corporation Commission for a six-year term. In January 1984, his fellow commission members elected him the chairman of the board.[1] In September 1985, Kimball resigned from his position as a member of the commission.[3] Governor Bruce Babbitt appointed Sharon Megdal, a member of the University of Arizona's economics faculty, to the seat.[4]

1986 U.S. Senate election

After the expected Democratic candidate, Governor Bruce Babbitt, declined to run in favor of a presidential campaign, Kimball was nominated as the Democratic candidate against then-Congressman John McCain for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Barry Goldwater.[5] His campaign was subject to negative press from The Arizona Republic and Phoenix Gazette. One Gazette columnist described him as displaying "terminal weirdness."[6] McCain ultimately won the election by a margin of over 20 percent.[7] Kimball later said: "I joke that John McCain entered the Senate over my dead political body. I think that's pretty accurate."[8]

Twenty years later, Kimball commented on the campaign to a reporter from the Arizona Daily Star: "I was enormously depressed — not because I lost. It was because I spent all my time collecting money." He said that he spent the following months after the election traveling through Mexico, and then left politics to start Project Vote Smart.[9]

Vote Smart

He is currently the president emeritus of the organization Vote Smart,[10] formerly known as Project Vote Smart.[11]

References

  1. 1 2 "Arizona Corporation Commission 72nd Annual Report" (PDF). June 30, 1984. p. 6. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  2. "The Voter's Self Defense System". Vote Smart. Retrieved 2018-08-16.
  3. Lamb, Ginger L. (ed.). "Arizona News Service 2014 Political Almanac" (PDF). Phoenix, Arizona: Arizona News Service. p. 57. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  4. "Arizona Corporation Commission 75th Annual Report" (PDF). June 30, 1987. p. 3. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  5. McCain, John; Salter, Mark (September 24, 2002). Worth the Fighting For: A Memoir. Random House Publishing Group. p. 135. ISBN 9781588362582. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  6. Nowicki, D. & Muller, B. (2007, March 1). The Senate calls. The Arizona Republic. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  7. Dendy Jr., Dallas L. (May 29, 1987). Anderson, Donnald K. (ed.). "Statistics of the Congressional Election of November 4, 1986" (PDF). Clerk of the United States House of Representatives. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  8. "The ever-ambitious John McCain rises to the U.S. Senate". azcentral.
  9. Innes, Stephanie (November 9, 2006). "Candidates on losing end of election cope differently". The Arizona Daily Star.
  10. https://my.lwv.org/sites/default/files/leagues/wysiwyg/%5Bcurrent-user%3Aog-user-node%3A1%3Atitle%5D/0-vote_smart_for_lwv.pdf
  11. "The Voter's Self Defense System". Vote Smart. Retrieved 2018-08-16.
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