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・ Doug Doub
・ Doug Doughty
・ Doug Doull
・ Doug Drabek
・ Doug Draizin
・ Doug Dressler
・ Doug Drew
・ Doug Drexler
・ Doug DuBois
・ Doug DuBose
・ Doug Ducey
・ Doug Duffey
・ Doug Dugger
・ Doug Dumler
・ Doug Dunakey
Doug Duncan
・ Doug Dunlap
・ Doug Dunville
・ Doug Dye
・ Doug E. Davis
・ Doug E. Doug
・ Doug E. Fresh
・ Doug Easlick
・ Doug Eckerty
・ Doug Eddings
・ Doug Edmeades
・ Doug Edwards
・ Doug Eggers
・ Doug Ellin
・ Doug Elliot (politician)


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Doug Duncan : ウィキペディア英語版
Doug Duncan

Douglas M. "Doug" Duncan (born October 25, 1955) is an American politician and member of the Democratic Party. Duncan served as County Executive of Montgomery County, Maryland from 1994 to 2006. Duncan held the office longer than any other county executive in the county's history. In 2006, Duncan was a candidate for the Democratic nomination in the Maryland gubernatorial election. He abruptly dropped out of the race on June 22, 2006, citing clinical depression, handing the nomination to Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley. Following his exit from the gubernatorial race, he was appointed Vice President of Administrative Affairs of the University of Maryland, College Park, where he worked for 17 months. In 2014 he unsuccessfully ran for his old job as Montgomery County Executive. He lost to incumbent Ike Leggett in the Democratic Party primary.
==Early life and education==
Duncan was born on October 25, 1955. The fifth of 13 children, Duncan grew up in the Twinbrook section of Rockville, Maryland, a working-class neighborhood, home to federal employees, teachers, police officers and firefighters.〔http://www6.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/exec/previous_execs/duncan.asp〕 His father worked for the NSA and later worked for the Montgomery County Public Schools as a volunteer tutor and ESOL teacher.〔http://files.usgwarchives.net/md/montgomery/obits/gazettenet/gnet200107.txt〕 His mother worked for the Montgomery County Circuit Court as a courtroom clerk from 1973 to 1999.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Eleanor Duncan, Mother of Former Montgomery County Executive, Dies at 86 )
Duncan attended St. John's College High School in Washington, D.C., graduating in 1973. He graduated from Columbia University in three years, in 1976, earning a Bachelor's degree with a double focus in psychology and political science. Upon graduating, Doug worked for Montgomery County's criminal justice commission, and then spent 13 years in the private sector working in the telecommunications industry.〔
Duncan got his start in politics at an early age, going door-to-door with his mother during John F. Kennedy's presidential campaign, and was the only one of his 12 siblings to follow in his mother's Democratic-activist footsteps.〔

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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