Diane Allen Popular Books

Diane Allen Biography & Facts

Diane B. Allen (born March 8, 1948) is an American politician and television journalist. A member of the Republican Party, she represented the 7th legislative district in the New Jersey Assembly from 1996 to 1998 and New Jersey Senate from 1998 to 2018. Allen was the senate majority whip from 1998 to 2001, deputy Republican conference leader from 2002 to 2003, and later deputy minority leader. In 2002, she was an unsuccessful candidate for United States Senate, finishing second in the Republican primary. Allen was the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor in 2021 after Jack Ciattarelli announced she had agreed to join his ticket. The pair narrowly lost the general election to the incumbent Democratic ticket of Phil Murphy and Sheila Oliver. Early life Allen grew up in Moorestown, New Jersey and graduated as the valedictorian of the Moorestown High School class of 1966. In 1969, Allen was crowned Miss Burlington County. Allen received a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy from Bucknell University. In 1973, Allen won a national hang gliding competition. Broadcasting career Allen began her broadcast news career in 1970 with WJJZ, an AM radio station based in Mount Holly, New Jersey. She worked at the New Jersey Network before joining an ABC affiliate in Chicago. In 1976, Allen returned home to cover New Jersey politics for KYW-TV, the then-NBC (now CBS) affiliate in Philadelphia. In 1985, she co-moderated the New Jersey gubernatorial debate between Governor Thomas Kean and Peter Shapiro. She left the network in 1988 and later won a lawsuit against CBS for discriminatory practices. In 1989, she joined WCAU, the then-CBS (now NBC) affiliate in Philadelphia, and remained there until 1994. In 2000, Allen briefly served as an interim anchor for CN8 while another anchorwoman was on vacation. This prompted criticism from Senate Minority Leader Richard Codey, who criticized her for conducting her duties as an officeholder while reporting on politics. Allen is the president of VidComm, Inc., a media production company she founded after her broadcasting career ended. Accolades During her career, Allen won eight Daytime Emmy Awards. The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia inducted Allen into their Hall of Fame in 2005. Political career Allen first sought elective office in the 1970s when she ran for the Board of Education of the Moorestown Township Public Schools. New Jersey Assembly 1995 election Allen was recruited to state politics by Burlington County Republican chair Glenn Paulsen, who asked her to run for Assembly in 1995 to set up a 1997 campaign for State Senate. In the 1995 general election, Allen and Republican running mate Carmine DeSopo were elected over Democratic incumbent Steven M. Petrillo and his running mate, newcomer Joseph P. Dugan. The $1.1 million spent in the 1995 Assembly race made it the first in New Jersey to cross the $1 million spending mark. New Jersey Senate Elections In 1997, Allen announced her campaign for Senate as expected. Incumbent Democrat Jack Casey announced late that he would not to stand for re-election, citing health complications; Allen defeated Democratic nominee Robert P. Broderick with 54% of the vote. Despite her district's solid Democratic lean—during her entire twenty-year tenure, her district never elected one of her Republican running mates to the Assembly—Allen consistently won re-election with little trouble. In 2001, Allen defeated U.S. Navy SEAL reservist Louis Gallagher with 54% of the vote. Gallagher was called up for active duty late in the race following the September 11 attacks, and Allen debated his wife instead. In 2003, Allen defeated Diane F. Gabriel with 60% of the vote. In 2007, Allen defeated Rich Dennison of Florence with 56% of the vote. In 2011, Allen defeated a primary challenge from Carol Lokan-Moore with 90% of the vote and won the general election against Gail Cook with 57%. In 2013, Allen defeated Gary Catrambone with 60% of the vote. Tenure Throughout her career in the Senate, Allen was an advocate for stricter enforcement of discrimination and workplace harassment restrictions. During her final year in office, Allen worked to override Governor Chris Christie's veto of an equal pay law. Three months after she left office, new governor Phil Murphy signed the Diane B. Allen Equal Pay Act, which he said, "cement[ed Allen's] legacy as a lawmaker who worked across the aisle to do the right things for our state.” In addition to her work on women's equality, Allen authored the NJSAVER rebate plan and sponsored legislation assisting senior citizens in doubling their Homestead Rebate checks. In November 2013, Allen was elected Chair of the National Foundation for Women Legislators. The organization represents the near 1800 female state legislators in America, and supports elected women from all levels of governance. After leaving office, Allen founded a political action committee dedicated to encouraging women to run for public office on a non-partisan basis. 2002 United States Senate campaign In 2002, Allen ran to unseat Democratic U.S. Senator Robert Torricelli. Early in the race, the favorite was Jim Treffinger, who had run in 2000. However, Treffinger was forced to drop out under an ethics cloud after the FBI raided his Newark office. The party leadership coalesced behind Doug Forrester, a multimillionaire businessman who pledged to personally fund his campaign. During the primary, Allen was endorsed by The New York Times. She faced criticism from fellow Republicans for her Quaker faith and pacifism, which conflicted with the national mood following the September 11 attacks. Allen finished a close second to Forrester, who won the primary with 44.6% of the vote to Allen's 36.9%. She carried every county in South Jersey except for Gloucester, home of third-place finisher State Senator John J. Matheussen, and Ocean. Forrester lost the general election to Frank Lautenberg, who entered the race after Torricelli withdrew amid ethics concerns and poor polling. Other offices Senator Allen has served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1996, 2000, as well as in 2004 and 2012. In 2008, Allen was a leading candidate to succeed Jim Saxton in the U.S. House. However, she announced on November 29, 2007 that she would not run for the seat, citing factionalism in the Burlington County Republican Party. In 2009, Allen was a leading candidate to join Chris Christie's ticket as the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor. Christie ultimately chose Monmouth County Sheriff Kim Guadagno instead. 2021 lieutenant gubernatorial campaign Republican nominee for Governor Jack Ciattarelli announced his selection of Allen as his running mate on August 4, 2021. Allen was an early supporter of Ciattarelli's campaign and supervised his campaign's anti-harassment policies. The pair lost the general election to the incumbent Democratic ticket of Phil Murphy and Sheila Oliver. Election results Person.... Discover the Diane Allen popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Diane Allen books.

Best Seller Diane Allen Books of 2024

  • A Family Christmas synopsis, comments

    A Family Christmas

    Glenice Crossland

    Lucy Gabbitas has just left school and is excited about joining her sisters at the local umbrella factory. But then her beloved father dies of lung disease leaving Lucy and her bro...

  • The Chocolate Box Girls synopsis, comments

    The Chocolate Box Girls

    Gracie Hart

    Rowntrees Factory, York 1936The aroma of chocolate was as familiar to Molly Freeman as the nose on her face. Living and schooling on Haxby Road alongside the Rowntrees Chocolate Fa...

  • The Stanford Lasses synopsis, comments

    The Stanford Lasses

    Glenice Crossland

    They loved. They lost. They lived.In the small Yorkshire town of Cottenly dominated by the steel works and surrounded by beautiful countryside Isaac Stanford lives with his wife ...

  • The Typewriter Is Holy synopsis, comments

    The Typewriter Is Holy

    Bill Morgan

    2014 ACKER AWARD WINNERAnyone who cares to understand the literary and cultural ferment of America in the later twentieth century must be familiar with the writings and lives of th...

  • Apropos of Nothing synopsis, comments

    Apropos of Nothing

    Woody Allen

    The LongAwaited, Enormously Entertaining Memoir by One of the Great Artists of Our TimeNow a New York Times, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, and Publisher’s Weekly Bestseller. &...

  • Diane Allen v. Intermountain Health Care synopsis, comments

    Diane Allen v. Intermountain Health Care

    Court of Appeals of Utah

    Plaintiff alleged the following facts. On February 23, 1976, plaintiff was treated for a broken ankle in the emergency room of Utah Valley Hospital, which is owned and operated by ...

  • Christmas Past synopsis, comments

    Christmas Past

    Glenice Crossland

    When seventeenyearold Mary O'Connor collapses one Sunday in church she is taken to live with Dr Roberts and his wife in a beautiful Yorkshire village for her health. Though initial...

  • Then Again synopsis, comments

    Then Again

    Diane Keaton & Anna Quindlen

    NAMED ONE OF THE TEN BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY Janet Maslin, The New York Times People Vogue   ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEARFinancial Times Chicago SunTimes The Indepe...