Talk:Arlon Lindner/Draft
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Arlon Lindner (born 1935-08-03) was a legislator in the Minnesota House of Representatives serving district 33A from 1993—2002 and district 32A from 2003—2004 (after the 2002 redistricting). When he first ran for office in 1993, he ran as an Independent Republican, but became a member of the Republican Party following his second term.
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[edit] Biography
Lindner is a self-employed businessman and a Baptist. He attended the North Texas State University, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics. He also received a Master of Divinity in Ethics from the Central Baptist Theological Seminary of Minneapolis. He is married with four children.
[edit] Ethics complaint
In 2003, Keith Ellison and a group of fellow DFLers of the Minnesota House of Representatives filed an ethics complaint against Lindner for a speech he made denying that homosexuals were targeted by the Nazis and were slain in the Holocaust. He made several comments on the floor of the House while he introduced a bill that would "repeal the state's pro-gay human rights amendment and remove sexual orientation from its hate-crimes law.”[1] This led to Lidner being denied the Republican endorsement in the 2004 elections, so he ran as an independent, but lost the election with only 19.3% of the votes in the general election.
[edit] References
- ^ "Minn. Kampf - Politics - Minnesota state representative Arlon Lindner", The Advocate, April 15, 2003. Retrieved on Dec. 13, 2006