American politician
Leah G. Cole Allen (born October 15, 1988)[ 1] is an American politician who served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and was the Republican nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts in the 2022 Massachusetts gubernatorial election .
State representative
Allen was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 2013. A first time candidate, she defeated Democrat Beverley Griffin Dunne 35% to 34% in a special election to fill the 12th Essex District seat that had been vacant since the death of Joyce Spiliotis the previous November.[ 2] She was reelected in 2014 and remained in the House until September 28, 2015, when she resigned to focus on her nursing career.[ 3]
2022 election
Allen lost her nursing job at Beverly Hospital for not complying with a COVID-19 vaccine mandate.[ 4] Allen then entered the 2022 election for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts as the running mate of Geoff Diehl .[ 5] She defeated Kate Campanale in the primary election to win the Republican nomination.[ 6] Allen and Diehl lost the general election to Democrats Maura Healey and Kim Driscoll .[ 7]
Personal life
She was born in Lynn, Massachusetts .[ 8]
References
^ Kashinsky, Lisa (March 31, 2022). "Diehl Finds His Equalizer" . Politico . Retrieved June 5, 2022 .
^ Ogan, Terri; Dostis, Melanie (April 3, 2013). "GOP newcomer, 24, Leah Cole, and longtime politician Wayne Matewsky capture state representative seats in Peabody and Everett" . The Boston Globe . Retrieved 7 September 2022 .
^ Swift, Adam (September 21, 2015). "Rep. Cole Stepping Down From House Seat" . Peabody Patch . Retrieved October 3, 2015 .
^ Norton, Michael P. (May 14, 2022). "Allen: 'My beloved Beverly Hospital let me go' " . The Salem News . Retrieved 7 September 2022 .
^ Joyce, Tom. "Leah Cole Allen Weighs In On Bid For Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts" . NewBostonPost . Retrieved 27 May 2023 .
^ DeCosta-Klipa, Nik (September 7, 2022). "Leah Cole Allen wins GOP nod for lieutenant governor" . WBUR . Retrieved 7 September 2022 .
^ "Democrats sweep Mass. Midterms" .
^ "Geoff Diehl & Leah Allen" . Geoff Diehl & Leah Allen . Retrieved 2022-10-18 .