Martha Mugler

American politician
Martha Mugler
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
from the 91st district
In office
January 8, 2020 – January 12, 2022
Preceded byGordon Helsel
Succeeded byAijalon Cordoza
Personal details
Born
Martha Vogel[1]

(1961-07-23) July 23, 1961 (age 62)[2]
Hampton, Virginia, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseRoss A. Mugler
Children3
EducationRadford University (BA)

Martha Mugler (née Vogel; born July 23, 1961) is an American politician from Virginia. She was first elected to the Hampton School Board in 2008 then to the Virginia House of Delegates in 2019. She won the seat vacated by retiring Republican Delegate Gordon Helsel.[3] She represented a district covering a large slice of Hampton, as well as all of the neighboring city of Poquoson. In 2021, she was initially declared the loser to Republican Aijalon "A.C." Cordoza, an information technology specialist. However, due to the closeness of the win, a recount was held. After the recount, Mugler conceded.[4][5] She was elected to an at large seat on Hampton City Council on November 8, 2022.

Electoral history

Date Election Candidate Party Votes %
Virginia House of Delegates, 91st district
June 11, 2019[6] Primary Martha Mugler Democratic 2,576 68.69%
Michael Wade Democratic 1,174 31.31%
November 5, 2019[7] General Martha Mugler Democratic 11,535 54.74%
Colleen Holcomb Republican 9,487 45.02%
November 3, 2021[8] General Aijalon Cordoza Republican 13,741 (prior to recount) 49.4% (prior to recount)
Martha Mugler Democratic 13,647 (prior to recount) 49.0% (prior to recount)
Charles West Libertarian 417 (prior to recount) 1.5% (prior to recount)

References

  1. ^ "Meet Martha".
  2. ^ "Candidate Profile for Martha Mugler". ivoterguide.com.
  3. ^ "Candidate Profile: Martha Mugler (91st District)". WAVY News. October 1, 2019. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  4. ^ 13News Now Staff (9 December 2021). "Democratic del. Mugler concedes after recount loss". 13News Now.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Cain, Andrew (December 8, 2021). "House Speaker Filler-Corn concedes majority to Republicans". The Daily Progress.
  6. ^ "House of Delegates District 91". www.vpap.org. Virginia Public Access Project. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  7. ^ "Elections: House of Delegates District 91". www.vpap.org. Virginia Public Access Project. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  8. ^ "Martha Mugler". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2022-02-01.

External links

  • Campaign website
Virginia House of Delegates
Preceded by
Martha Mugler
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
from the 51st district

2020–2022
Succeeded by
  • v
  • t
  • e
162nd General Assembly (2024−2026)
Speaker of the House
Don Scott (D)
Majority Leader
Charniele Herring (D)
Minority Leader
Todd Gilbert (R)
  1. Patrick Hope (D)
  2. Adele McClure (D)
  3. Alfonso Lopez (D)
  4. Charniele Herring (D)
  5. Elizabeth Bennett-Parker (D)
  6. Rip Sullivan (D)
  7. Karen Keys-Gamarra (D)
  8. Irene Shin (D)
  9. Karrie Delaney (D)
  10. Dan Helmer (D)
  11. David Bulova (D)
  12. Holly Seibold (D)
  13. Marcus Simon (D)
  14. Vivian Watts (D)
  15. Laura Jane Cohen (D)
  16. Paul Krizek (D)
  17. Mark Sickles (D)
  18. Kathy Tran (D)
  19. Rozia Henson (D)
  20. Michelle Maldonado (D)
  21. Josh Thomas (D)
  22. Ian Lovejoy (R)
  23. Candi King (D)
  24. Luke Torian (D)
  25. Briana Sewell (D)
  26. Kannan Srinivasan (D)
  27. Atoosa Reaser (D)
  28. David Reid (D)
  29. Marty Martinez (D)
  30. Geary Higgins (R)
  31. Delores Riley Oates (R)
  32. Bill Wiley (R)
  33. Todd Gilbert (R)
  34. Tony Wilt (R)
  35. Chris Runion (R)
  36. Ellen Campbell (R)
  37. Terry Austin (R)
  38. Sam Rasoul (D)
  39. Will Davis (R)
  40. Joe McNamara (R)
  41. Chris Obenshain (R)
  42. Jason Ballard (R)
  43. Will Morefield (R)
  44. Israel O'Quinn (R)
  45. Terry Kilgore (R)
  46. Jed Arnold (R)
  47. Wren Williams (R)
  48. Eric Phillips (R)
  49. Danny Marshall (R)
  50. Tommy Wright (R)
  51. Eric Zehr (R)
  52. Wendell Walker (R)
  53. Tim Griffin (R)
  54. Katrina Callsen (D)
  55. Amy Laufer (D)
  56. Tom Garrett (R)
  57. David Owen (R)
  58. Rodney Willett (D)
  59. Buddy Fowler (R)
  60. Scott Wyatt (R)
  61. Michael Webert (R)
  62. Nick Freitas (R)
  63. Phillip Scott (R)
  64. Paul Milde (R)
  65. Joshua G. Cole (D)
  66. Bobby Orrock (R)
  67. Hillary Pugh Kent (R)
  68. Keith Hodges (R)
  69. Chad Green (R)
  70. Shelly Simonds (D)
  71. Amanda Batten (R)
  72. Lee Ware (R)
  73. Mark Earley Jr. (R)
  74. Mike Cherry (R)
  75. Carrie Coyner (R)
  76. Debra Gardner (D)
  77. Michael Jones (D)
  78. Betsy B. Carr (D)
  79. Rae Cousins (D)
  80. Destiny Levere Bolling (D)
  81. Delores McQuinn (D)
  82. Kim Taylor (R)
  83. Otto Wachsmann (R)
  84. Nadarius Clark (D)
  85. Marcia Price (D)
  86. A.C. Cordoza (R)
  87. Jeion Ward (D)
  88. Don Scott (D)
  89. Baxter Ennis (R)
  90. Jay Leftwich (R)
  91. Cliff Hayes (D)
  92. Bonita Anthony (D)
  93. Jackie Glass (D)
  94. Phil Hernandez (D)
  95. Alex Askew (D)
  96. Kelly Convirs-Fowler (D)
  97. Michael Feggans (D)
  98. Barry Knight (R)
  99. Anne Ferrell Tata (R)
  100. Robert Bloxom Jr. (R)