Representative Jacqueline Parker Contact information
Here you will find contact information for Representative Jacqueline Parker, including email address, phone number, and mailing address.
Name | Jacqueline Parker |
Position | Representative |
State | Arizona |
Party | Republican |
Email Form | |
Website | Official Website |
Jacqueline Parker for Representative
Jacqueline Parker is an American politician who has served as a member of the Arizona House of Representatives from the 16th legislative district since 2021. She was born in Mesa, Arizona. Parker earned a bachelor’s degree in classical literature and philosophy from Brigham Young University in 2009, a J.D. from the University of San Francisco in 2015, and a master’s degree from Arizona State University in 2019.
Before being elected to office, Parker was an assistant to Commissioner Justin Olson of the Arizona Corporation Commission. Parker was elected to the seat in the Arizona House of Representatives after incumbent Kelly Townsend, also a Republican, decided to run for Arizona Senate. She and incumbent John Fillmore, a fellow Republican, won in a two–seat election in 2020, defeating Democrat Helen Hunter. The district covers parts of Maricopa and Pinal counties.
As a Representative-elect after the 2020 presidential election, Parker was one of 22 Arizona Republican legislators who signed a document urging Congress to accept fraudulent Republican electoral votes. In 2021, Parker proposed a bill to allow people to have loaded guns in their vehicles on school grounds. The legislation passed the House on a party-line vote.
Parker introduced a bill to give Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich the power to sue the Arizona Board of Regents over tuition at Arizona public universities. Brnovich previously sued the Board in 2017; the suit was unsuccessful, as the Arizona Supreme Court ruled that Brnovich lacked the power to maintain the suit against the board. Parker’s bill failed after a single Republican, Michelle Udall, joined all the Democrats in voting no.
Parker introduced a bill in 2021 to give the Legislature more power over the Arizona Corporation Commission through forcing the state attorney general to investigate. The bill was introduced over a dispute over the role of the Commission versus the Legislature over powers to regulate utilities and set energy policy. Democratic members of the Commission favored renewable portfolio standard, while Republican members of the Commission and Republican Governor Doug Ducey took steps to block the Commission from adopting such standards.