Mark Amodei
Mark E. Amodei (born June 12, 1958) is an American attorney and Republican politician serving as the U.S. representative for Nevada's 2nd congressional district since winning a special election on September 13, 2011.[1][2] Born in Carson City, Nevada, Amodei graduated from the University of Nevada, Reno with a B.A. in 1980 and earned a J.D. from the University of the Pacific's McGeorge School of Law in 1983, after which he served in the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General's Corps from 1983 to 1987, receiving the Army Commendation Medal and Meritorious Service Medal.[1][2] Following private legal practice and a stint as president of the Nevada Mining Association, he entered state politics, representing Carson City in the Nevada Assembly from 1996 to 1998 and the Senate from 1998 to 2010, where he served as president pro tempore from 2003 to 2008.[1][2] In the House, Amodei has focused on appropriations and natural resources issues critical to Nevada, including mining, federal lands, and military installations in his district; he serves on the Appropriations Committee, chairing its Subcommittee on Homeland Security since 2024, and the Natural Resources Committee.[1][3]
Early life and military service
Childhood and education
Mark Amodei was born on June 12, 1958, in Carson City, Nevada, to Donald Mark Amodei and Joy LaRhe Amodei (née Longero).[1][4] His father, of partial Italian and Irish descent, worked for the Nevada Division of Forestry and later served as deputy state forester without a college education, reflecting a middle-class upbringing near the state capital.[5] Amodei attended Carson High School, graduating in 1976 as student class president.[1][6] He then pursued higher education at the University of Nevada, Reno, earning a Bachelor of Arts in political science in 1980; during this period, he interned in the Washington office of U.S. Senator Paul Laxalt.[1][7] Following his undergraduate studies, Amodei obtained a Juris Doctor from McGeorge School of Law at the University of the Pacific in 1983.[1][7] As a child, he aspired to become a pilot, influenced by his father's forestry career involving aerial oversight of Nevada's landscapes.[8]Military career
Amodei entered active duty in the United States Army in 1983 following his graduation from the University of the Pacific's McGeorge School of Law, initially serving prior to passing the bar examination.[6] Upon admission to the bar, he transitioned into the Judge Advocate General's (JAG) Corps as an officer, where he prosecuted criminal matters during his tenure from 1983 to 1987.[1][6] Attaining the rank of captain, Amodei's service occurred amid the Cold War era and included roles such as assistant post judge advocate.[9] For his contributions, he received the Army Achievement Medal, Army Commendation Medal, and Meritorious Service Medal.[1]Pre-political career
Legal practice
Amodei earned his Juris Doctor from the University of the Pacific's McGeorge School of Law in 1983.[10] Following his U.S. Army JAG Corps service ending in 1987, he joined the Carson City-based law firm Allison MacKenzie, where he practiced law from 1987 to 2004.[1] In 2004, Amodei transitioned to the Reno firm Kummer Kaempfer Bonner Renshaw & Ferrario (later renamed Kaempfer Crowell), serving as an attorney there until 2007.[1] Amodei's legal work during this period overlapped with his part-time service in the Nevada Legislature, beginning with the Assembly in 1996.[6] After leaving the Kummer Kaempfer firm and serving as president of the Nevada Mining Association from 2007 to 2008, he maintained a private solo legal practice from 2009 until September 2011, when he entered Congress via special election.[6] No public records detail specific cases handled by Amodei in these roles, though his subsequent mining association leadership suggests involvement in resource-related legal matters.[1]Nevada State Assembly
Elections
Amodei was elected as a Republican to the Nevada State Assembly from District 40 in the November 5, 1996, general election.[11] The district covered part of Carson City, his hometown.[11] He succeeded in securing the seat for a two-year term, assuming office in early 1997 for the 69th legislative session.[1] Amodei did not seek re-election to the Assembly in 1998, instead pursuing and winning a position in the Nevada State Senate from the Capital District.[1]Tenure and committee roles
Amodei was elected to the Nevada State Assembly in November 1996, representing District 40 (Washoe County), and served one term from 1996 to 1998 during the 69th Legislative Session, which convened in 1997.[1][11] As a Republican freshman legislator, he focused on issues pertinent to northern Nevada, including local government and taxation, amid a divided Assembly with Republicans holding a slim majority.[11] During his tenure, Amodei served on the Assembly Subcommittee on Government Affairs, participating in hearings on state administrative matters, such as budget oversight and regulatory reforms.[12] No leadership positions or chairmanships are recorded for him in the Assembly, reflecting his brief service before transitioning to higher office. In 1998, Amodei successfully campaigned for and won election to the Nevada Senate, representing the Capital District, which concluded his Assembly role after the two-year term.[1][13]2010 U.S. Senate campaign
In September 2009, Nevada State Senator Mark Amodei announced his bid for the Republican nomination in the 2010 United States Senate election, seeking to challenge incumbent Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid.[14][15] Amodei positioned himself as a conservative with legislative experience, emphasizing fiscal responsibility and opposition to Reid's leadership amid Nevada's economic challenges from the Great Recession.[14] The Republican primary field was competitive, including casino owner Sue Lowden, former Assemblywoman Sharron Angle, businessman John Chachas, and others.[16] Amodei suspended his campaign after approximately six months, citing difficulties in fundraising and the need to avoid a fragmented primary that could benefit Reid.[14][17] He formally dropped out on March 1, 2010, endorsing efforts to consolidate support behind a single strong contender.[18] Angle ultimately won the GOP nomination on August 3, 2010, with 35 percent of the vote but lost to Reid in the general election.[16] In May 2010, following his withdrawal, Amodei was elected chairman of the Nevada Republican Party, a role he held until resigning in May 2011 to pursue a congressional bid.[19][14]U.S. House of Representatives
2011 special election
The special election for Nevada's 2nd congressional district was necessitated by the resignation of Republican Dean Heller, who was appointed to the U.S. Senate on May 12, 2011, to fill the vacancy created by John Ensign's resignation amid an ethics scandal involving an extramarital affair and related campaign finance issues.[20] Nevada election law required a special election to fill the House vacancy, scheduled for September 13, 2011, with party nominations determined through state conventions rather than primaries due to the compressed timeline.[21] The Republican Party held its nominating convention in mid-June 2011, selecting Mark Amodei, a former Nevada State Assembly minority leader with prior service from 1997 to 2003, over competitors including former state controller Brian Krolicki.[21] Amodei, a Carson City native and Army JAG Corps veteran, campaigned on fiscal conservatism, local control of public lands, and opposition to the Affordable Care Act, emphasizing his legislative experience in the state assembly where he focused on water rights and mining issues. The Democratic convention on June 25, 2011, nominated State Treasurer Kate Marshall, who had held office since 2007 and positioned herself as a moderate Democrat advocating for economic recovery measures amid Nevada's high unemployment, though she received limited national party support in the heavily Republican district.[22] In the general election, Amodei secured victory with 57.92% of the vote (75,180 votes), defeating Marshall who received 36.07% (46,818 votes), alongside independent candidates Helmuth Lehmann (4.14%, 5,372 votes) and Timothy Fasano (1.87%, 2,421 votes).[23] Voter turnout was approximately 18% of registered voters in the district, which encompasses rural northern Nevada and leans strongly Republican, having elected GOP representatives since its creation in 1983. Amodei was sworn into office on September 15, 2011, to serve the remainder of the term ending January 2013.[24] Pre-election polling had forecasted Amodei's substantial lead, reflecting the district's partisan composition and Marshall's challenges in mobilizing Democratic voters outside urban Reno areas.[25]Subsequent elections (2012–2024)
Amodei secured his first full term in the U.S. House in the 2012 general election, defeating Democratic nominee Samuel Koepnick with 57.6% of the vote to Koepnick's 36.2%, a margin of 21.4 percentage points. He faced no Republican primary opponent that year.[7] In 2014, Amodei again ran unopposed in the Republican primary and won reelection decisively against Democrat Kristen Spees, capturing 65.7% to Spees's 27.9%, for a 37.8-point margin amid a strong Republican midterm wave. The 2016 cycle saw Amodei unopposed in the primary and victorious in the general over Democrat Chip Evans by 58.3% to 36.9%, a 21.4-point margin, despite a competitive national environment.[7] Amodei's 2018 primary featured a challenge from former U.S. Senate candidate Sharron Angle, whom he defeated with 71.7% of the vote. In the general, he beat Democrat Clint Koble 58.2% to 41.8%, narrowing his margin to 16.4 points in a Democratic-leaning midterm.[7] For 2020, Amodei won the Republican primary against challengers Joel Beck and Jesse Hurley with 80.8%. He then prevailed in the general over Democrat Patricia Ackerman by 56.5% to 40.7%, a 15.8-point edge. In the 2022 Republican primary, Amodei fended off developer Danny Tarkanian and others, securing 54.9%. The general election pitted him against Democrat Elizabeth Mercedes Krause, whom he defeated 59.7% to 37.8%, expanding his margin to 21.9 points. Amodei faced physician Fred Simon Jr. in the 2024 Republican primary, winning 64.2%. With no Democratic nominee, the general featured nonpartisan Greg Kidd as the main challenger; Amodei won 55.0% to Kidd's 36.1%, a 18.9-point margin.[26]Committee assignments and caucuses
In the 119th United States Congress, Amodei serves on the House Committee on Appropriations, where he holds the position of chairman of the Subcommittee on Homeland Security and vice chairman of the Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, in addition to membership on the Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government.[27][28] He also received a waiver from House Republican leadership to join the House Committee on Natural Resources, marking his return to the panel after prior service in the 112th and 113th Congresses; there, he was assigned to the Subcommittee on Federal Lands and the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.[29][30] These assignments reflect Amodei's focus on Nevada-specific issues, including federal land management—given that approximately 85% of his district's land is federally owned—and appropriations for security, interior resources, and oversight of natural resource policies.[29] Amodei participates in numerous congressional caucuses, emphasizing Western regional interests, military support, and bipartisan policy areas:- Congressional Western Caucus
- Army Caucus
- Congressional Joint Strike Fighter Caucus
- USO Caucus
- Veterans Job Caucus
- Italian American Congressional Delegation
- Travel and Tourism Caucus
- Public Broadcasting Caucus
- Conservative Climate Caucus
- Postal Preservation Caucus
- ALS Caucus
- Skin Cancer Caucus
- American Canadian Economy and Security (ACES) Caucus
Policy positions and legislative record
Fiscal policy and government spending
Amodei has consistently advocated for fiscal restraint, emphasizing the need to curb unchecked federal spending amid rising national debt, which he noted exceeded $36 trillion by early 2025.[32][33] In statements, he has described out-of-control spending as a primary threat to American prosperity, supporting measures that prioritize spending reductions over expansions.[33] During the 118th Congress, Amodei voted in favor of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, which raised the debt ceiling while enacting spending caps projected by the Congressional Budget Office to save $2.1 trillion over a decade—the largest such cut in U.S. history according to nonpartisan estimates.[34][35] He also supported the Limit, Save, Grow Act of 2023, conditioning debt limit increases on cuts to non-defense discretionary spending and work requirements for federal programs.[36] In the 119th Congress, Amodei backed H. Con. Res. 14, the FY2025 budget resolution passed in February 2025, which set parameters for reconciliation to achieve net spending reductions through measures like rescinding unspent funds from prior laws.[33] He voted for the Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act of 2025 in March, providing funding stability while avoiding shutdowns, and endorsed H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, in July 2025, which aimed to rein in spending alongside energy and economic provisions.[37][38] Amodei's fiscal conservatism aligns with conservative scorecards, earning an 83% rating from Heritage Action in the 117th Congress for opposing major tax-and-spending increases.[39] However, he has occasionally diverged from strict austerity, voting against a 2025 Trump administration rescission package that targeted public broadcasting funds, citing support for public radio in his district.[40] Advocacy groups like Americans for Prosperity have critiqued him for insufficient opposition to post-2017 tax cut spending growth.[41]Public lands and natural resources
Amodei has consistently advocated for increased local control and multiple-use management of federal public lands in Nevada, where over 85 percent of the state's land is under federal ownership, emphasizing economic development alongside conservation.[42] As a member of the House Committee on Natural Resources since the 119th Congress, he has prioritized legislation promoting mining, energy production, and land disposals to address regulatory barriers and support Nevada's resource-based economy.[43] In mining policy, Amodei sponsored the Mining Regulatory Clarity Act, first passed by the House on May 8, 2024, by a 216-195 vote, which clarifies that mining claimants can conduct ancillary operations—such as road building and exploration—on federal lands even without proven mineral deposits, overturning interpretations under the General Mining Law of 1872 that restricted such activities.[44] [45] He reintroduced the bill in the 119th Congress on February 14, 2025, arguing it provides regulatory certainty essential for responsible domestic mining amid competition from foreign adversaries.[46] Separately, his Strategic Mineral Production Act, incorporated into a broader energy package, aims to expedite permitting for critical minerals to enhance national security and economic interests by leveraging federal land resources.[47] On land management, Amodei introduced an amendment in May 2025 to the House Natural Resources Committee's budget reconciliation bill, co-sponsored with Rep. Celeste Maloy, directing the Bureau of Land Management to sell or exchange over 500,000 acres of public lands in Washoe, Pershing, Lyon, and Clark Counties for development, overriding certain federal protections.[48] [49] The provision advanced through committee but was stripped from the final House bill on May 21, 2025, following opposition from Nevada's Democratic congressional delegation and environmental groups citing risks to recreation and wildlife habitats.[50] He has also advanced the Northern Nevada Economic Development and Conservation Act (H.R. 3173), reported favorably by the committee on November 20, 2024, which facilitates land exchanges, sales, and designations in Douglas County to balance conservation designations with infrastructure and resource development opportunities.[51] [52] These efforts reflect Amodei's position that federal land policies should prioritize economic viability and local input over centralized restrictions, countering what he describes as inefficient Bureau of Land Management practices.[42]Immigration and border security
Amodei has consistently supported legislative efforts to strengthen border security, emphasizing the need to prioritize enforcement before broader immigration reforms. In May 2023, he voted for H.R. 2, the Secure the Border Act of 2023, which sought to resume border wall construction, hire additional Border Patrol agents and immigration judges, impose stricter asylum restrictions, and end catch-and-release policies.[53] Following the vote, Amodei stated that securing the border must precede any comprehensive immigration changes, reflecting his view that unchecked illegal crossings strain resources and undermine legal immigration processes.[53] As Chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security since 2023, Amodei has directed significant funding toward border enforcement. He authored the Fiscal Year 2025 Homeland Security Appropriations Act, passed by the House on June 28, 2024, by a 212–203 vote, which allocates resources for hiring more Border Patrol agents, enhancing detention capacity, and supporting deportation operations to address what he described as threats from dangerous migrants.[54][55] The bill also funds technological improvements, aligning with his yes vote on H.R. 495, the Emerging Innovative Border Technologies Act, passed in March 2025, which promotes advanced surveillance and detection tools along the border.[56] Amodei evaluates immigration policies with Nevada's economic interests in mind, including agriculture and tourism sectors reliant on legal immigrant labor, while criticizing executive overreach that bypasses congressional authority. In response to President Obama's 2014 Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA) executive order, he argued that Congress bears primary responsibility for immigration regulation, as inaction creates policy voids exploited by the executive branch.[57] He has expressed openness to solutions starting with legal status for DREAMers—undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children—but opposed standalone DREAM Act provisions in 2021, voting instead for targeted protections for farmworkers under the Farm Workforce Modernization Act.[58][59] In December 2024, Amodei acknowledged logistical challenges to mass deportation proposals, citing infrastructure limitations in detention and processing, though he maintains that robust enforcement remains essential.[60]National security and foreign affairs
Amodei has prioritized border security as a core component of national security, serving as Chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security since 2024 and authoring the FY2025 Homeland Security Appropriations Act, which passed the House on June 28, 2024, by a 212-203 vote to enhance border enforcement and counterterrorism funding.[54] He voted for H.R. 2, the Secure the Border Act of 2023, on May 11, 2023, emphasizing the need to address unlawful entries as a deportable offense under federal law.[53][61] In defense policy, Amodei has consistently supported annual National Defense Authorization Acts to maintain military readiness, including votes for the FY2024 NDAA on July 14, 2023, and the FY2026 NDAA, which included service member pay increases amid broader fiscal concerns over escalating budgets.[62] He advocated for expanding Naval Air Station Fallon through legislative efforts in the FY2023 NDAA, though the provision faced delays, and backed a March 11, 2025, full-year continuing resolution incorporating $13 billion in non-defense savings alongside defense investments.[63][37] On foreign affairs, Amodei endorsed sanctions and measures against Russia following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, co-sponsoring legislation to impose penalties if Russia refused peace negotiations or violated agreements, and supported suspending Russia's normal trade status on March 19, 2022, citing war crimes.[64][65] He voted against the April 2024 supplemental aid package for Ukraine, prioritizing assistance to Israel, Taiwan, and Palestinian civilians instead, while expressing in September 2023 reluctance to abandon Ukraine amid ongoing conflict.[66][67] Amodei backed H.R. 7521, the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act in 2024, targeting apps linked to China and other adversaries.[68] He affirmed support for Israel's actions against Iran in a June 18, 2025, statement, aligning with robust U.S. backing for allies facing regional threats.[69]Social and domestic issues
Amodei has consistently opposed federal funding for abortions, voting in favor of legislation such as H.R. 7 in 2017, which prohibited taxpayer funding of abortions and health plans covering them.[70] He supported the Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson decision overturning Roe v. Wade, stating it returned the issue to state voters, as Nevada's protections for abortion rights are codified by state law and subject to ballot initiative.[71] In 2023, he voted for two House measures restricting abortion-related activities, including one barring federal funding for organizations providing abortions and another targeting medical standards for abortion providers.[72] His voting record reflects a pro-life orientation, earning high marks from organizations tracking such positions, though he has deferred to Nevada's state-level framework post-Dobbs.[73] On Second Amendment rights, Amodei advocates protecting law-abiding citizens' access to firearms while targeting criminals and the mentally ill, opposing broad restrictions like the 2022 assault weapons ban (H.R. 1808) and House Democrats' gun control agenda (H.R. 7910 and H.R. 2377).[74][75] He has cosponsored bills for national concealed carry reciprocity and loosening interstate purchase restrictions, emphasizing responsible ownership over mass disarmament.[76] Following the 2018 Parkland shooting, he proposed arming school districts with security knowledge rather than endorsing federal gun bans.[77] Amodei opposes federal codification of same-sex marriage protections, voting against the Respect for Marriage Act in both 2022 iterations, arguing Nevada voters had already settled the issue via ballot and that federal intervention overrides state determinations.[78] He also voted against the Equality Act in 2019 and 2021, citing concerns over its implications for religious liberties and sex-segregated facilities.[79] In education policy, Amodei prioritizes state and local control over federal mandates, cosponsoring the A-PLUS Act to allow states flexibility from No Child Left Behind requirements and supporting tax incentives for private school aid.[80] He backs national testing standards but opposes unelected bureaucrats dictating curricula, advocating for vocational training and workforce alignment in Nevada.[81] Regarding healthcare, Amodei favors market-driven reforms enabling interstate insurance sales and individual plan choices, voting for the 2017 American Health Care Act to repeal Obamacare provisions he viewed as increasing costs without improving access.[82] He opposes single-payer systems, emphasizing personal responsibility and competition to address Nevada's rural coverage gaps.[83]Electoral history
Amodei won the September 13, 2011, special election to fill the vacancy in Nevada's 2nd congressional district following Dean Heller's appointment to the U.S. Senate, defeating Democrat Kate Marshall by a margin of approximately 19 percentage points.[84][85]| Year | Election | Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 185,884 | 57.2% |
| 2012 | General | Brian Mack | Democratic | 128,649 | 39.6% |
| 2012 | General | Other | 3.2% | ||
| 2014 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 133,988 | 66.1% |
| 2014 | General | Kristen Speckmann | Democratic | 59,531 | 29.4% |
| 2014 | General | Other | 4.5% | ||
| 2016 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 200,927 | 58.3% |
| 2016 | General | Chip Evans | Democratic | 128,975 | 37.4% |
| 2016 | General | Other | 4.3% | ||
| 2018 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 166,450 | 58.7% |
| 2018 | General | Clint Koble | Democratic | 109,990 | 38.8% |
| 2018 | General | Other | 2.5% | ||
| 2020 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 216,078 | 56.5%[86] |
| 2020 | General | Patricia Ackerman | Democratic | 155,780 | 40.7%[86] |
| 2020 | General | Janine Hansen | Independent American | 10,815 | 2.8%[86] |
| 2022 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 170,051 | 61.5%[87] |
| 2022 | General | Elizabeth Mercedes Krause | Democratic | 94,558 | 34.1%[87] |
| 2022 | General | Other | 4.4% | ||
| 2024 | General | Mark Amodei (incumbent) | Republican | 56.9%[88] | |
| 2024 | General | Greg Kidd | Nonpartisan | 36.0%[88] | |
| 2024 | General | Javi Trujillo Tachiquin | Libertarian | ~7%[89] |