- John Engler
Infobox Governor
name= John Engler
caption=
order= 46th
office= Governor of Michigan
term_start=January 1 ,1991
term_end=January 1 ,2003
lieutenant=Dick Posthumus Connie Binsfeld
predecessor=James Blanchard
successor=Jennifer Granholm
birth_date= birth date and age|1948|10|12
birth_place= Mount Pleasant,Michigan
death_date=
death_place=
spouse=Colleen Engler (divorced)Michelle Engler
profession=Lawyer
party=Republican
religion=Roman Catholic
footnotes=John Mathias Engler (born
October 12 ,1948 ) is an Americanpolitician . He served as a Republicangovernor ofMichigan from 1991 to 2003.Engler, a
Roman Catholic , was born in Mount Pleasant and grew up on a cattle farm in Beal City. He attendedMichigan State University and graduated with a degree inagricultural economics in 1971. He was elected to theMichigan House of Representatives as a State Representative in 1970 the age of 22. Hiscampaign manager was new MSU College Republican chairDick Posthumus , who later went on to become Engler's Lieutenant Governor.Engler married Colleen House in 1975. Colleen Engler, by then a state representative herself, ran unsuccessfully in the Republican gubernatorial primary in 1986. John Engler had initially declared his support for another candidate (eventual Republican nominee William Lucas), but backed Colleen Engler once she became a candidate. The couple divorced sometime during the 1980s.
Engler married his second wife, Michelle, a
lawyer , in 1990. She was named to theFederal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) board in 2001 by PresidentGeorge W. Bush and re-appointed in 2002. The couple have triplet daughters bornNovember 13 , 1994. The girls are named Margaret Rose, Hannah Michelle and Madeleine Jenny.Engler has spent most of his adult life in government. He was serving in the Michigan Senate when he enrolled at
Thomas M. Cooley Law School , and graduated with a J.D. in 1981, having served as a Michigan State Senator since 1979. He was elected Senate Majority Leader in 1984 and served there until elected governor in 1990.Governorship
His administration was characterized by
privatization of state services, tax reduction, educational reform,welfare reform and major reorganization ofexecutive branch departments. In 1996 he was elected Chairman of theRepublican Governors Association .1996 Presidential Election
During the 1996 presidential campaign, Engler was considered by many political commentators and experts to be a serious potential vice presidential running mate for Republican nominee
Bob Dole . Eventually, however, Dole instead selectedJack Kemp , a former congressman and HUD Secretary.2000 Presidential Election
Engler was widely touted as a potential candidate for President in the 2000 election. However, Engler quickly passed on the race and endorsed his friend, Texas Governor
George W. Bush , in the Republican primary.Engler and Bush became unwitting foils for Canadian
comedy news reporterRick Mercer in hisTalking to Americans report.After Bush secured the GOP nomination, Engler's name began to surface as a possible
running mate for Bush [http://www.freep.com/news/politics/gov26_20000726.htm] . Engler was unsuccessful in delivering Michigan for Bush in the primary election that year; John McCain received more votes than Bush. Perhaps for this reason, Engler was not seriously considered as a running mate for Bush.2002 Elections & Post-Gubernatorial Work
Engler's lieutenant governor,
Dick Posthumus , sought to succeed Engler in the 2002 gubernatorial race. Despite Republican successes across the country and in Michigan, Posthumus lost a close race to the state's Attorney General, DemocratJennifer Granholm .Since leaving the governor's mansion in January 2003, Engler served as President of the state and local government sector of
Electronic Data Systems , he left that post in August 2004.National Association of Manufacturers
In September 2004, Engler was named the new President & CEO of the
National Association of Manufacturers .Election results
In 1990 then State Senate Majority Leader John Engler challenged Governor
James Blanchard in his bid for a third term. Political observers viewed Engler's bid as a long shot, and he trailed Blanchard by double digits in the polls the weekend before the election. However, on election day Engler pulled off the upset, defeating Blanchard by approximately 17,000 votesndash less than one percentage point. This victory is often cited by politicians of both major parties who are trailing in the polls as evidence they still can win.In 1994 Engler ran for his second term. The Democrats nominated former Representative
Howard Wolpe , who had close ties to labor movementndash a potent force in Democratic politics in Michigan. Engler bested Wolpe 61% - 39%, and the state Republican party made significant gains.Spencer Abraham picked up the Senate seat of retiring DemocratDonald W. Riegle, Jr. . Republicans gained a seat to break a tie in the state House of Representatives and take a 56-54 majority, while also picking up a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. RepublicanCandice Miller won an upset victory to win the post of Secretary of State.Michigan voters re-elected Governor Engler to his third and final term in 1998. He won a landslide victory over lawyer
Geoffrey Fieger . Engler took 1,883,005 votesndash 62 percent of the totalndash to Fieger's 38 percent and 1,143,574 votes. Engler's landslide helped the state Republican party to gain six seats in the state House of Representatives, taking control of the chamber they had lost two years previously with a 58-52 margin, as well as picking up an additional seat in the State Senate, for a 23-15 majority. Republicans also gained a seat on the technically non-partisan state Supreme Court, holding a 4-3 majority over the Democrats. Democrats held on to other seats, many of whom were held by long term incumbents in no danger of losing regardless who won the governorship.Electoral history
*1998 Race for Governor
**John Engler (R) (inc.), 62%
**Geoffrey Fieger (D), 38%*1994 Race for Governor
**John Engler (R) (inc.), 61%
**Howard Wolpe (D), 38%*1990 Race for Governor
**John Engler (R), 50%
**James Blanchard (D) (inc.), 49%Further reading
*
Gleaves Whitney , "John Engler: The Man, The Leader, The Legacy." ISBN 1-58536-127-5
*John J. Miller, [http://www.nationalreview.com/miller/miller010203.asp "Citizen Engler."] National Review Online, January 2, 2003Lieutenant governors:
*Connie Binsfeld , 1991–1999
*Dick Posthumus , 1999–2003Democratic opponents:
*James Blanchard (incumbent), 1990
*Howard Wolpe , 1994
*Geoffrey Fieger , 1998
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.