Robyn Brody
A candidate for Idaho Supreme Court, State of Idaho in the 2016 Idaho Primary, May 17
Party: No party
City: Rupert, Idaho
Education: Bachelor’s degree, law degree, and a master’s degree in international management from the University of Denver.
Work experience: An attorney in private practice in Rupert, Brody has operated her practice for the past eight years, and previously was a partner in a Twin Falls law firm for 13 years. Past president of the Fifth District Bar Association.
Political experience: First run for office.
Family: Married. Has two children.
Contact information
Race Results
Candidate | Votes | Pct |
---|---|---|
Robyn Brody (N) | 39,534 | 30.98% |
Curt McKenzie (N) | 34,068 | 26.70% |
Clive J. Strong (N) | 27,123 | 21.26% |
Sergio A. Gutierrez (N) | 26,882 | 21.07% |
Related Coverage
New director for courts, Brody’s fundraising edge, and what N.Idaho campaign $$ reports show…
From my Sunday column: Idaho’s court system has a new director after a two-year wait, Sara Thomas; Supreme Court hopeful Robyn Brody’s fundraising edge; and what the latest campaign finance reports show in North Idaho legislative races, including top fundraiser (Sen. Shawn Keough) and biggest debt (former Rep. Thyra Stevenson)…
Eye on Boise: After two-year wait, Idaho court system gets new director
Sara Thomas, Idaho’s state appellate public defender, has been named the new administrative director of Idaho’s courts by the Idaho Supreme Court.
Runoff set in Idaho Supreme Court race, with Brody in the lead
A rare contested race for an open seat on the Idaho Supreme Court appears to be headed for a runoff in November, as none of the four hopefuls was polling over 50 percent in early returns Tuesday night – though Rupert attorney Robyn Brody was clearly out in front, with the other three neck-and-neck.
Eye on Boise: Campaign finance dispute crops up in Idaho Supreme Court race
Robyn Brody’s campaign for the Idaho Supreme Court disputes a finding by the Idaho Secretary of Statethat four donations, totaling $27,000, received from four farm-related businesses exceeded the state Sunshine Law limits because the businesses are related by a single owner.
Two candidates return contributions after running afoul of limits, including one for Idaho Supreme Court
Two candidates for state offices in the May 17 election are filing amended reports and returning contributions, after inadvertently running afoul of the Sunshine Law’s restrictions on donations from related entities, according to the Idaho Secretary of State’s office – including a candidate for the…