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Cyndi Taylor Krier : ウィキペディア英語版
Cyndi Taylor Krier


Cynthia Taylor Krier, known as Cyndi Taylor Krier (born July 12, 1950), is an attorney, lobbyist, and Republican former politician in San Antonio, Texas. She served in the Texas State Senate from District 26 from 1985 to 1993 and as the administrative judge of Bexar County from 1993 to 2001.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Past County Judges of Bexar County )〕 Her husband, attorney Joseph Roland "Joe" Krier (born 1946), is a former long-term president of the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Cyndi Taylor Krier )
==Background==

Krier was born in Beeville in Bee County in south Texas to Robert Stevens Taylor (1914–1978) and the former Mary McGuffin (1916–2002). Her parents divorced when she was eight years of age, and she relocated with her mother to Dinero, an unincorporated community in Live Oak County near George West, Texas.〔(A Guide to the Cyndi Taylor Krier Papers ), University of Texas at San Antonio Libraries (UTSA Libraries) Special Collections.〕 There, her maternal grandfather and then her grandmother served as postmaster. That post office has since been closed because of the lack of population in Dinero. Krier's mother was for thirty years a postal employee in Beeville. In 2008, on the recommendation of U.S. Representative Lamar Smith and the Texas congressional delegation, the post office 10250 John Saunders Road in San Antonio was named for Krier.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Congressman Smith on the Cyndi Taylor Krier Post Office Bill, March 5, 2008 )
Krier was an honor student and a basketball player. She attended San Antonio College and then Trinity University, both in San Antonio, before she transferred to the University of Texas at Austin to major in journalism. In Austin, she began working in the campaigns of various Republican candidates. After graduation from UT in 1971, she was subsequently employed by the Republican Party of Texas and edited a statewide newsletter. Thereafter, in 1975, she obtained her Juris Doctor degree from the University of Texas School of Law in Austin.〔

In 1974, she was an intern in the White House. Upon her return to Texas, she worked on the staff of Republican U.S. Senator John G. Tower. In 1976, she worked in the campaign for President Gerald R. Ford, Jr., who was soundly defeated in the Texas primary by former Governor Ronald W. Reagan of California but still won the Republican nomination, only to lose to Democrat Jimmy Carter of Georgia in the general election. In April 1979, Krier joined the law firm of Lang, Lado, Green, Coghlan & Fischer and specialized in civil cases. She actively recruited women into Republican political causes. She was vice chairman of the Bexar County GOP from 1979 to 1981, during which time Reagan won the party's presidential nomination and then unseated Carter. Krier served on a bipartisan commission to propose legislative reforms on a task force for women and minorities established by Governor Bill Clements, the first Republican governor of Texas since 1873.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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