Misplaced Pages

Chandra Dillard

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
American politician
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.
Find sources: "Chandra Dillard" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Chandra Dillard
Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives
from the 23rd district
Incumbent
Assumed office
2009
Preceded byFletcher Nathaniel Smith Jr.
Personal details
Born (1965-03-10) March 10, 1965 (age 59)
Greenville, South Carolina, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic

Chandra Dillard (born March 10, 1965) is an American politician. She is a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from the 23rd District, serving since 2009. She is a member of the Democratic party. Dillard is the Deputy Minority Leader of the House. She serves on the Public Education Budget Subcommittee and the Sales & Use Tax and Income Tax Legislative Subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Prior to that, Dillard spent nine years on the Greenville City Council. She has served as secretary of the House Ethics Committee and House Agriculture, Natural Resources & Environmental Affairs Committee. She is a former president of the Conference of Black Municipal Elected Officials (2006–08) and former President of the South Carolina General Assembly Women's Caucus (2015–16). A strong advocate for early childhood education, Rep. Dillard has been recognized by the South Carolina Institute for Child Success. In addition, she has been honored by the South Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities as Legislative Champion of the Year, has been a Green Tie honoree by the South Carolina Conservation Voters, and has received the Leadership Greenville Distinguished Alumni Award from the Greenville Chamber of Commerce.

Dillard was among a number of African American women from around the United States who endorsed Hillary Rodham Clinton for President in 2016.

Dillard is Director of Community Relations for Furman University. She holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from Winthrop University and a Masters in Public Administration (MPA) from Walden University. She is also a graduate of Leadership Greenville, Furman's Riley Institute Diversity Leadership Initiative, and Leadership South Carolina. She is a member of the Epsilon Tau Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, and a Lay Leader at John Wesley United Methodist Church. Rep. Dillard serves on boards including those of Community Works Carolina, the Bank of Travelers Rest Advisory Board and the Greenville Peace Center.

References

  1. "Chandra Dillard". Project Vote Smart. Retrieved April 25, 2015.
  2. "Our Leadership". South Carolina House Democratic Caucus. 2022. Retrieved December 13, 2022
  3. "House Standing Committees". South Carolina Legislature. December 7, 2022. Retrieved December 13, 2022
  4. Legislator Spotlight: Chandra Dillard, South Carolina Democratic Party, July 5, 2017. Retrieved August 19, 2018.
  5. "Growing List of African American Women Leaders Stand with Hillary Clinton". The American Presidency Project. February 3, 2016. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
Members of the South Carolina House of Representatives
Speaker of the House
Jay Lucas (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Tommy Pope (R)
Majority Leader
Gary Simrill (R)
Minority Leader
Todd Rutherford (D)
  1. Bill Whitmire (R)
  2. Adam Lewis Duncan (R)
  3. Phillip Bowers (R)
  4. Davey Hiott (R)
  5. Neal Collins (R)
  6. April Cromer (R)
  7. Lee Gilreath (R)
  8. Don Chapman (R)
  9. Blake Sanders (R)
  10. Thomas Beach (R)
  11. Craig A. Gagnon (R)
  12. Daniel Gibson (R)
  13. John R. McCravy III (R)
  14. Luke Samuel Rankin (R)
  15. JA Moore (D)
  16. Mark N. Willis (R)
  17. Mike Burns (R)
  18. Alan Morgan (R)
  19. Patrick Haddon (R)
  20. Stephen Frank (R)
  21. Bobby Cox (R)
  22. Paul Wickensimer (R)
  23. Chandra Dillard (D)
  24. Bruce W. Bannister (R)
  25. Wendell K. Jones (D)
  26. David Martin (R)
  27. David Vaughan (R)
  28. Chris Huff (R)
  29. Dennis Moss (R)
  30. Brian Lawson (R)
  31. Rosalyn Henderson-Myers (D)
  32. Scott Montgomery (R)
  33. Travis Moore (R)
  34. Sarita Edgerton (R)
  35. Bill Chumley (R)
  36. Rob Harris (R)
  37. Steven Wayne Long (R)
  38. Josiah Magnuson (R)
  39. Cal Forrest (R)
  40. Joseph S. White (R)
  41. Annie McDaniel (D)
  42. Doug Gilliam (R)
  43. Randy Ligon (R)
  44. Mike Neese (R)
  45. Brandon Michael Newton (R)
  46. Heath Sessions (R)
  47. Tommy Pope (R)
  48. Brandon Guffey (R)
  49. John Richard C. King (D)
  50. Vacant
  51. J. David Weeks (D)
  52. Jermaine Johnson (D)
  53. Richie Yow (R)
  54. Jason S. Luck (D)
  55. Jackie E. Hayes (D)
  56. Tim McGinnis (R)
  57. Lucas Atkinson (D)
  58. Jeff Johnson (R)
  59. Terry Alexander (D)
  60. Phillip Lowe (R)
  61. Carla Schuessler (R)
  62. Robert Q. Williams (D)
  63. Jay Jordan (R)
  64. Fawn Pedalino (R)
  65. Cody Mitchell (R)
  66. Jackie Terribile (R)
  67. G. Murrell Smith Jr. (R)
  68. Heather Ammons Crawford (R)
  69. Chris Wooten (R)
  70. Robert Reese (D)
  71. Nathan Ballentine (R)
  72. Seth Rose (D)
  73. Chris R. Hart (D)
  74. Todd Rutherford (D)
  75. Heather Bauer (D)
  76. Leon Howard (D)
  77. Kambrell Garvin (D)
  78. Beth Bernstein (D)
  79. Hamilton R. Grant (D)
  80. Katherine D. Landing (R)
  81. Charles Hartz (R)
  82. Bill Clyburn (D)
  83. Bill Hixon (R)
  84. Melissa Lackey Oremus (R)
  85. Jay Kilmartin (R)
  86. Bill Taylor (R)
  87. Paula Rawl Calhoon (R)
  88. RJ May (R)
  89. Micah Caskey (R)
  90. Justin Bamberg (D)
  91. Lonnie Hosey (D)
  92. Brandon Cox (R)
  93. Jerry Govan Jr. (D)
  94. Gil Gatch (R)
  95. Gilda Cobb-Hunter (D)
  96. Ryan McCabe (R)
  97. Robby Robbins (R)
  98. Chris Murphy (R)
  99. Mark Smith (R)
  100. Sylleste Davis (R)
  101. Roger K. Kirby (D)
  102. Harriet Holman (R)
  103. Carl Anderson (D)
  104. William Bailey (R)
  105. Kevin Hardee (R)
  106. Val Guest (R)
  107. Case Brittain (R)
  108. Lee Hewitt (R)
  109. Tiffany Spann-Wilder (D)
  110. Tom Hartnett (R)
  111. Wendell Gilliard (D)
  112. Joe Bustos (R)
  113. Vacant
  114. Gary Brewer (R)
  115. Spencer Wetmore (D)
  116. James Teeple (R)
  117. Jordan Pace (R)
  118. Bill Herbkersman (R)
  119. Leon Stavrinakis (D)
  120. Weston J. Newton (R)
  121. Michael F. Rivers Sr. (D)
  122. Bill Hager (R)
  123. Jeff Bradley (R)
  124. Shannon Erickson (R)


Flag of South CarolinaPolitician icon

This article about a South Carolina politician is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories:
Chandra Dillard Add topic