- Elwyn Tinklenberg
Infobox Congressional Candidate
honorific-prefix =
name = Elwyn Tinklenberg
honorific-suffix =
state = Minnesota
nominee = U.S. Representative for Minnesota, 10th District
incumbent =Michele Bachmann
opponent =Michele Bachmann [R]
election_date =November 4 ,2008
party=Democratic-Farmer-Labor
date of birth=birth date and age|1950|2|26
place of birth =Princeton, Minnesota
date of death=
place of death=
alma_mater =University of Minnesota Duluth ,Northwestern University
profession =educator
occupation = former Methodist minister, former Blaine mayor, former MnDOT Commissioner
residence =
spouse = Terri Tinklenberg
religion =
website = [http://www.tinklenberg08.com/ www.tinklenberg08.com]Elwyn 'El' Tinklenberg (born
February 26 ,1950 ) is aMinnesota politician, currently theDemocratic-Farmer-Labor Party nominee forU.S. Congress inMinnesota's 6th District , challenging incumbent RepublicanMichele Bachmann .Tinklenberg was born in
Princeton, Minnesota , and grew up on a farm inPease, Minnesota , a small, Dutch farming community in central Minnesota. He received his undergraduate degree at theUniversity of Minnesota Duluth and attended seminary atNorthwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. He served as aUnited Methodist minister inBlaine, Minnesota , from 1977 to 1986 before being elected to the Blaine City Council and then Mayor of Blaine. He was appointed Minnesota Transportation Commissioner by then GovernorJesse Ventura in 1998.Public Service
Blaine
In the 1980s, Tinklenberg was elected to the Blaine City Council, and in 1987, he was elected Mayor of Blaine and served in that position until 1996. Tinklenberg was a crucial player in the construction of the
National Sports Center in Blaine, a 600-acre multi-sport complex that that includes a soccer stadium with a track, over 50 youth soccer fields, a golf course, a velodrome, a meeting and convention facility, and an eight-sheet ice rink, the Schwan Super Rink, which is the largest ice facility of its type in the world. The NSC hosts numerous national and international sporting events throughout the year, boosting the area's economy.Minnesota Transportation Commissioner
In 1991, Tinklenberg headed the North Metro Mayors Association, which worked to improve the transportation systems and business opportunities of its member communities. During that time, he gained a reputation as an expert of transportation and infrastructure issues, which led to his appointment as Transportation Commissioner by then Governor Jesse Ventura in 1998. In that role, Tinklenberg worked with Ventura to support aggressive construction and improvement of highways statewide. He worked with the
Minnesota State Legislature to create bipartisan support for a regional commuter plan for theMinneapolis-St. Paul area. This plan included the construction of theHiawatha Line (the state's first light-rail train line) and theNorthstar Corridor commuter rail line.In 2002, Tinklenberg oversaw the implementation of the Mn-DOT 511 service, an integrated internet and phone system for travel information. The 511 service is used by Minnesota travelers to receive information on conditions and amenities. According to Mn-DOT, it is 10 times faster than its predecessor. [ [http://www.newsline.dot.state.mn.us/archive/02/jul/10.html Newsline, Full Articles ] ]
After Tinklenberg announced his plans to leave MN-DOT in 2002, the
Minneapolis Star-Tribune published an editorial praising his record and service. The editorial noted that Tinklenberg told Minnesotans "not necessarily what they wanted to hear but what they needed to hear. His frequent explanations helped lift the interwoven issues of roads, transit, housing and development to the top of the state's agenda." [MN-DOT News: http://www.newsline.dot.state.mn.us/archive/02/sep/25.html]2006 campaign
Tinklenberg was one of two DFL candidates for the sixth district seat in the
U.S. House of Representatives in the 2006 election. A formerUnited Methodist minister and manager of the Divisions of Public Services forAnoka County , he ran on a platform that supported jobs, education, transportation and as a socially conservative Democrat who opposed legalized abortion and supported a Federal Constitutional Amendment to ban gay marriage. [ [http://minnesota.publicradio.org/collections/special/2006/campaign/congress/tinklenberg/ MPR: Campaign 2006: U.S. Congress: 6th District: Elwyn Tinklenberg ] ] He had been selected to receive support from theDemocratic Congressional Campaign Committee and had received the early endorsement of several important labor unions.Tinklenberg's opponent for the DFL nomination was
Patty Wetterling . Another candidate,Scott Mortensen , dropped out of the running by March 2006. Tinklenberg originally entered the race only after receiving assurances from Wetterling, the DFL's 2004 candidate, that she would not run. Wetterling changed her mind after struggling to gain momentum in her campaign for the open Minnesota Senate seat and after getting encouraged by constituents who wanted a DFL alternative to Tinklenberg. OnMay 13 ,2006 , Tinklenberg dropped out of the race for Congress and endorsed Patty Wetterling after losing the DFL endorsement for the Sixth District race.Michele Bachmann was the Republican candidate for theMinnesota Sixth District seat, which was vacated by Mark Kennedy so he could run for theU.S. Senate . The Minnesota Sixth District covers the northern suburbs of the Twin Cities and extends northwest across rural areas to include St. Cloud. Bachmann won the election.2008 campaign
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