Somebody has to stand up. 74 million Americans are not going to be told their voices don’t matter pic.twitter.com/DMa7sRyoAh
— Josh Hawley (@HawleyMO) December 31, 2020
Hawley vows to challenge Biden electors, forcing vote ...
Joshua David Hawley (born December 31, 1979) is an American lawyer and politician serving as the junior U.S. Senator from Missouri. A member of the Republican Party, Hawley served as the 42nd Missouri Attorney General from 2017 to 2019, before defeating two-term Democratic incumbent Senator Claire McCaskill in the 2018 election. At age 41, he is the youngest current U.S. senator.[1]
Hawley holds degrees in history and law from Stanford University and Yale Law School, respectively. Before becoming Attorney General of Missouri, he was an associate professor at the University of Missouri Law School and worked as an appellate litigator.
Hawley was born in Springdale, Arkansas, but soon moved to Lexington, Missouri, where his father worked as a banker and his mother a teacher.[2][3] He graduated from Rockhurst High School, a private boys' preparatory school in Kansas City, Missouri. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in history from Stanford University in 2002, graduating with highest honors. He moved to London and taught at St Paul's School for a year,[2] then attended Yale Law School, where he led the school's chapter of the Federalist Society[4] and received a Juris Doctor degree in 2006.[3]
At age 28, Hawley wrote a biography of Theodore Roosevelt for Yale University Press, Theodore Roosevelt: Preacher of Righteousness.[4]
After law school, Hawley clerked for Judge Michael W. McConnell of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit[2] and Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts. While clerking for Roberts, Hawley met his future wife, fellow Supreme Court clerk Erin Morrow.[4][5][6]
After Hawley's clerkships, he worked as an appellate litigator at Hogan Lovells in Washington, D.C (then called Hogan & Hartson), from 2008 to 2011.[2] From 2011 to 2015, he worked for The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty at its Washington, D.C., offices before moving to Missouri.[7] At Becket, he wrote briefs and gave legal advice in the Supreme Court cases Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & School v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, decided in 2012, and Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, decided in 2014.[8][9] In 2011, Hawley moved back to Missouri and became an associate professor at the University of Missouri Law School, where he taught constitutional law, constitutional theory, legislation, and torts.[2][10]
In June 2013, Hawley served as a faculty member of the Blackstone Legal Fellowship, which is funded by Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian organization.[11]
In May 2015, Hawley was admitted to the Supreme Court bar and became eligible to argue cases before the Court.[8][9]
Rockhurst High School is a private, Roman Catholic, Jesuit, all-boys, preparatory school founded in 1910 along with Rockhurst College, in Kansas City, Missouri, United States. It moved away from the College in 1962 to a campus on State Line Road in Kansas City. Rockhurst is accredited by the North Central Education Association and is a member of the North Central Education Association of Independent College Preparatory Schools, the Jesuit Secondary Education Association, and the National Association for College Admission Counseling (and its regional affiliates).
In 1908, the Rev. Michael P. Dowling, S.J., selected the site for a Jesuit school at 52nd and Troost Street in Kansas City. The name "Rockhurst" was chosen because large rocks found on the grounds resembled those at the Jesuit Stonyhurst College in Lancashire, England. Rockhurst was established by the Society of Jesus and chartered by the State of Missouri as part of Rockhurst College in August 1910. Classes began in the fall of 1914, and the school changed its name to Rockhurst High School in 1923. The high school shared a campus and corporate umbrella with the College until 1962, when it moved to the Greenlease Campus (named for its principal benefactor, Robert C. Greenlease).[2]
In 2017 Fr. Terrence Baum, S.J., concluded 12 years as president of the high school. He had overseen a $41.3 million fund-raising campaign which allowed capital improvements including Loyola Center athletic complex, a dining commons, and interactive classrooms.[3] In 2018, former Rockhurst High School principal David J. Laughlin returned to be the school's first lay president.
For the Greater Glory of God
トランプが居座ったら時期大統領候補ナンバーワンかもね。(爆wwwwwwwwwww
2 件のコメント:
居座ることは無理でしょ。
やっぱアメリカの金主がヨーロッパなのなら地主(ヨーロッパ)に対する賃借人(アメリカ)くらいの立場の差がある。
Hawleyさんも宗旨替え?
☆昨年は毎日必死でブログ読んでいたので
世界が明らかに壊され変わっていくことに
恐れや怒り無力感に浸る暇がなくて。
これも団長さんのサイキックな思考力記憶力持続力の
お蔭かと。匿名さんも面白くて。ありがとうございました
今年も健康維持のためヨロシクです(zuuzuusiikana)
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