Who Is Joni Ernst’s Husband?
Her husband is Gail Ernst(m. 1992; div. 2019)
How old?, Bio details and Wiki
Joni Ernst (Joni Kay Culver) grew up on 1 July, 1970, is a US Senator from Iowa. Find Joni Ernst’s Bio details, How old?, How tall, Physical Stats, Romance/Affairs, Family and career upbeen in a relationship with?s. Know net worth is She in this year and how She do with money?? Know how She earned most of networth at the age of 50 years of age.
Famous for | Joni Kay Culver |
Business | N/A |
How old? | 51 years of age. |
Zodiac Sign | Cancer |
Born | 1 July 1970 |
Born day | 1 July |
Birthplace | N/A |
Nationality |
Famous people list on 1 July.
She is a member of famous Senator with the age 51 years of age./b> group.
Joni Ernst How tall, Weight & Measurements
At 51 years of age. Joni Ernst height not available right now. We will upbeen in a relationship with? Joni Ernst’s How tall, weight, Body Size, Color of the eyes, Color of hair, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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How tall | Not Available |
Weight | Not Available |
Body Size | Not Available |
Color of the eyes | Not Available |
Color of hair | Not Available |
Who Is Joni Ernst’s Husband?
Her husband is Gail Ernst(m. 1992; div. 2019)
Family | |
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Parents | Not Available |
Husband | Gail Ernst(m. 1992; div. 2019) |
Sibling | Not Available |
Children | 1 |
Joni Ernst income
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2021-2021. So, how much is Joni Ernst worth at the age of 51 years of age. Joni Ernst’s income source is mostly from being a successful Senator. She is from . We have estimated Joni Ernst’s net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
income in 2021 | $1 Million – $5 Million |
Wage in 2021 | Reviewing |
income in 2019 | Pending |
Wage in 2019 | Reviewing |
House | Not Available |
Cars | Not Available |
Source of Net Worth | Senator |
Joni Ernst Social Network
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On wiki | Joni Ernst On wiki |
Imdb |
Life time
Ernst opposes legalized abortion. In January 2021, Ernst petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider Roe v. Wade, the landmark case legalizing abortion in the US. Ernst has also introduced legislation to defund Planned Parenthood and other family planning organizations and supported legislation to prohibit all abortions after five months of pregnancy.
In 2021, she voted to acquit Donald Trump in his impeachment trial on both articles of impeachment (abuse of power and obstruction of Congress). Ernst argued that Trump had learned his lesson, and that he would not ask a foreign leader to investigate his rivals again without going through the proper channels. At the same time, she suggested that Joe Biden could be impeached if he becomes President over his actions in Ukraine; there is no evidence of any wrongdoing by Biden in regards to Ukraine.
In May 2021, she praised Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, saying, “Generally, I feel [Trump’s] done a very good job. He was right on it from day one prohibiting travel from certain countries and so forth. I think it was the right thing to do.”
On January 3, 2019, the first day of the 116th US Congress, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell released a roster of the Senate Judiciary Committee confirming Ernst and Marsha Blackburn’s membership, the first female Republicans on the committee.
In March 2019, after the Special Counsel Investigation concluded and Attorney General William Barr released a summary of the report by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, Ernst called for a release of the report’s full findings: “I strongly believe that as much of the report that can be made public should be — barring any national security threat. Taxpayers have paid millions for this investigation; it’s only right that they see its findings.”
In March 2019, Ernst was one of thirty-eight senators to sign a letter to US Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue warning that dairy farmers “have continued to face market instability and are struggling to survive the fourth year of sustained low prices” and urging his department to “strongly encourage these farmers to consider the Dairy Margin Coverage program.”
In April 2019, Ernst and Debbie Stabenow led five other senators in a letter to Agriculture Secretary Perdue urging the Agriculture Department to implement conservation measures in the 2018 Farm Bill “through a department-wide National Water Quality Initiative, which would build off the existing initiative housed at the Natural Resource Conservation Service.”
In June 2019, Ernst confirmed she had spoken with President Trump and EPA Administrator Andrew R. Wheeler when they were in Council Bluffs on limiting the EPA’s issuing of small refinery waivers, saying President Trump had kept his promise but that the “EPA has a harmful habit of handing out small refinery waivers like candy — doing so behind closed doors, with no congressional oversight.”
In July 2019, Ernst was one of sixteen Republican senators to send a letter to Acting Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russell Vought, Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin encouraging them to work with them to prevent a continuing resolution “for FY 2021 that would delay the implementation of the President’s National Defense Strategy (NDS) and increase costs” and that the year long continuing resolution suggested by administration officials would render the Defense Department “incapable of increasing readiness, recapitalizing our force, or rationalizing funding to align with the National Defense Strategy (NDS).”
In October 2019, Ernst was one of six senators to sign a bipartisan letter to President Trump calling on the president to “urge Turkey to end their offensive and find a way to a peaceful resolution while supporting our Kurdish partners to ensure regional stability” and opining that leaving Syria without installing protections for American allies endangers both them and the US itself.
In January 2019, Ernst was one of thirty-one Republican senators to cosponsor the Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act, a bill introduced by John Cornyn and Ted Cruz that would grant individuals with concealed carry privileges in their home state the right to exercise this right in any other state with concealed carry laws while concurrently abiding by that state’s laws.
In January 2019, during the 2018–19 US federal government shutdown that resulted after President Trump demanded 5.7 billion toward a border wall, Ernst told reporters that she would “tend to agree that not all areas of our border need a physical barrier” and that the US would not need a barrier in areas “adequately patrolled by Border Patrol agents”, with “technology to monitor those areas without having a physical barrier”, and if agents could “adequately respond in a timely manner to illegal border crossing”.
In 2019, amid extensive criticism of King by Republican politicians after King made controversial remarks about white supremacy, Ernst rebuked him. The New York Times wrote that Ernst’s belated distancing from King might harm her 2021 re-election efforts, as she previously “had spent years embracing Mr. King.” Art Cullen, editor of The Storm Lake Times, criticized the timing of Ernst’s response, writing “the hypocrisy is epic and comic.” The editorial board of The Des Moines Register questioned why it took national condemnation for Ernst to rebuke King. Ernst did not make an endorsement in King’s 2021 Republican primary race.
In July 2019, Ernst accused Speaker of the US House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi of “slow-walking” the passage of a North American trade agreement and stated that she believed there was enough support in the Democratic-controlled House and Republican-controlled Senate to ratify the agreement: “By and large, Americans think it’s a good way to go.”
She was elected vice chair of the Senate Republican Conference in November 2018.
On June 13, 2018, Joseph Dierks, 34, of Waterloo, Iowa was sentenced to six years in prison for threatening “…to kill or otherwise harm ..” Ernst. The six year sentence, which exceeds sentencing guidelines, was imposed on Dierks for threatening comments he made while awaiting trial.
In May 2018, Ernst was one of nine Republican senators to introduce a rescission package meant to fulfill President Trump’s wish to curb spending by $15.4 billion as part of an attempt to roll out the legislation to ensure it reached the Senate floor within a 45-day window while avoiding a filibuster from Democrats.
In December 2018, Ernst voted to confirm Kathy Kraninger as the next Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in a decisive vote. The measure ultimately cleared the US Senate chamber with all 50 present Republicans voting in favor of the confirmation and all 49 Democrats voting in opposition.
In June 2018, Ernst said of Administrator of the Environmental Protection How old?ncy Scott Pruitt, “He is about as swampy as you get here in Washington, D.C., and if the president wants to drain the swamp, he needs to take a look at his own Cabinet.”
In April 2018, following the missile strikes against Syria carried out by the US, France, and the United Kingdom, Ernst stated that she was “uncomfortable going forward” in the event that President Trump wanted to commit more American troops there, citing the US presently having “an effort to fight against ISIS in the region” as the main focus. In December, after President Trump announced the withdrawal of American troops in Syria, Ernst was one of six senators to sign a letter expressing concern for the move and their belief “that such action at this time is a premature and costly mistake that not only threatens the safety and security of the US, but also emboldens ISIS, Bashar al Assad, Iran, and Russia.”
In June 2018, Ernst stated her disagreement with President Trump’s decision to suspend joint military exercises with South Korea and questioned why they would be suspended given their legality. In July, Ernst advocated for the US continuing military exercises in South Korea in the event that talks between the US and North Korea did not continue.
In March 2018, Ernst voted to table a resolution spearheaded by Bernie Sanders, Chris Murphy, and Mike Lee that would have required President Trump to withdraw American troops either in or influencing Yemen within the next 30 days unless they were combating Al-Qaeda. In November 2018, following the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Ernst stated that Saudi Arabia was “great strategic partner” but that Congress should consider a legislative response due to the commitment of the US to human rights and the rule of law. Ernst furthered that President Trump should become involved “if there are indicators coming from those intelligence agencies”. In December, Ernst warned against a resolution withdrawing American support for the Saudi Arabia-led intervention in Yemen possibly complicating peace talks in Yemen and that Saudi Arabia should be punished for Khashoggi’s death but that “those consequences are I see as right now are separate from the discussion of the Saudis and their actions in Yemen engaging the Houthis.”
In August 2018, Ernst was one of ten Republican senators to cosponsor a bill amending federal law to add a guarantee on the availability of health insurance to Americans including those with pre-existing conditions regardless of the outcome of a lawsuit against the Affordable Care Act filed by Republican-controlled states.
In June 2018, Ernst, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Patrick Leahy wrote a letter to US Defense Secretary James Mattis of their being “deeply troubled by the department’s decision to send twenty-one active and reserve JAGs to the border on temporary orders to prosecute immigration cases” and expressing the view that dispatching “twenty-one trial counsel from military courtrooms to prosecute immigration cases is an inappropriate misapplication of military personnel” before urging Mattis to maintain the military lawyers within the military justice system.
In July 2018, Ernst was one of thirty-one Republican senators to submit a resolution endorsing Immigration and Customs Enforcement and opining that its abolition “would allow dangerous criminal aliens, including violent and ruthless members of the MS-13 gang, to remain in communities in the US.”
Ernst opposes net neutrality and praised its repeal by the Federal Communications Commission. In May 2018, Ernst voted against legislation that would have overturned the FCC’s ruling and restore net neutrality.
In 2018, as Trump imposed tariffs as part of his trade policy and other countries responded in kind, Ernst said she was willing to give the president some leeway but worried about the impact on farmers. In May 2019, amid a trade war between the US and China, Ernst said she did not like tariffs but that the “president’s way of negotiating … brings people to the table.” She said that Iowa farmers are “disappointed” but that they recognize “that China is the one that is forcing this.”
In January 2018, Ernst was one of thirty-six Republican senators to sign a letter to President Trump requesting he preserve the North American Free Trade Agreement by adapting it for the modern economy. In August 2018, Ernst warned that failure to finish trade deals would “reflect negatively upon our Republican candibeen in a relationship with?s” and advocated for completing NAFTA and continuing to work with the European Union.
In 1992, Ernst (then named Joni Culver) married Gail Ernst. The Ernsts have one daughter, Libby. Gail Ernst has two daughters from his previous marriage to Ingrid Nesbit, which ended in Separation from spouse. On August 27, 2018, Ernst announced that she and her husband were in the process of obtaining a Separation from spouse. In a sworn affidavit, Ernst stated that she declined then-candibeen in a relationship with? Trump’s offer of becoming his vice presidential candibeen in a relationship with?, because Gail “hated any successes [she] had and would belittle [her] and get angry any time [she] would achieve a goal”, and that she made “sacrifices … out of concern for Gail and [their] family.” Gail stated that he “gave up his aspirations” to support Ernst’s pursuit of her political ambitions. The Separation from spouse was finalized in January 2019, with Joni Ernst alleging that Gail had verbally and mentally abused her and on one occasion physically assaulted her. The Ernsts accused each other of infidelity; both denied the respective accusations.
On January 12, 2017, Ernst questioned Secretary of Defense nominee James Mattis on whether he would pledge to prioritizing cutting wasteful spending, stopping sexual assault and retaliation in the military, and enhance national security missions by leveraging the different abilities of “our guard and reserve forces”; Mattis committed to each. Later that month, Ernst announced her intent to introduce legislation that would redirect funding for Planned Parenthood to other women’s health care providers and that she already had a bill meant to overturn a policy of the Obama administration securing grants from Planned Parenthood to Title X family planning, furthering this would be accomplishable with a “pro-life president in the White House and pro-life majorities in the House and Senate”. President Trump signed the latter bill into law on April 13, 2017.
On February 16, 2017, Ernst condemned the behavior of Russia as “totally unacceptable” and said President Trump would be needed in leading the US to “show strength against Vladimir Putin” during a call with reporters. In July 2018, Ernst stated that she would proceed with caution if the US collaborated with Russia to form “a way we can partner and put a lid on Iran” and that she did not believe ” Russia would ever be a true friend or ally to the US of America.” She cited North Korea as an example of a country where the US should cautiously work with leadership to develop “a resolution where the world becomes a safer place” if possible. Following the 2018 Russia-US summit later that month, Ernst stated her hope that President Trump “delivered a strong message behind closed doors that Russia will continue to be punished for their illegal annexation of Ukraine in 2014, their abhorrent support for the murderous Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria and their aggressive actions in U.S. domestic policy” and added that she was hopeful Trump had talked with Putin about the role of Russia in the Balkins amid Kosovo’s continued threats by the hybrid warfare tactics of Russia in Serbia.
In October 2017, Ernst was one of ten Republican senators to sign a letter to acting director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosive (ATF) Thomas Brandon requesting that the bureau review an Obama administration decision on bump stocks with the belief “that this renewed review and determination will keep our citizens safe and ensure that federal law is enforced.”
Ernst opposes the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). She voted for all three versions of the American Health Care Act (AHCA) of 2017 that came up for the Senate during the Republican effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.
In March 2017, Ernst voted for the Broadband Consumer Privacy Proposal that removed the FCC’s internet privacy rules and allowed internet service providers to sell customers’ browsing history without their permission.
In 2017, she announced her opposition to Donald Trump’s ban on transgender individuals serving in the armed forces.
In May 2016, Ernst was placed on Chris Cilizza’s short list as a possible vice presidential running mate for Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign to become the 45th President of the US. Other media outlets included her as a possible benefit to Trump’s campaign as well. On June 16, Ernst said no one had “reached out” to her and that she was content with this. On July 4, she and Trump met privately. Trump selected Governor Mike Pence of Indiana on July 15.
In 2016, along with U.S. Senators Deb Fischer, Charles Grassley, and Ben Sasse, Ernst introduced “Sarah’s Law” in honor of Sarah Root, a 21-year-old female student in Omaha who was killed in a street racing crash in January 2016.
In February 2016, Ernst criticized the Obama administration’s ISIS strategy as ineffective.
Ernst’s relationship with Steve King, a House Representative known for his racist rhetoric and support for far-right politicians, has been criticized. In 2016, when King faced a primary challenge for his House seat, Ernst endorsed King, saying he “stands strong for life and liberty.” In 2017, when King attracted criticism for saying “we can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies” and for supporting European far-right politicians, Ernst said she did not condone King’s behavior but she would not ask for his resignation. In 2017, The Des Moines Register wrote a scathing editorial against King, which criticized Ernst for endorsing him in the past and not condemning him. In 2018, Ernst appeared with King at a rally in his district after King had endorsed a Canadian politician with neo-Nazi ties.
Ernst was sworn into the US Senate on January 3, 2015. She delivered the official Republican response to the State of the Union on January 20.
In November 2015, Ernst said the U.S. should halt the immigration of Syrian refugees, calling for a “thorough vetting process”, and commenting that President Obama did not have “a clearly communicated and comprehensive strategy”.
Following her election to the U.S. Senate, she resigned from the Iowa State Senate, effective November 28, 2014.
Ernst received widespread attention for a campaign advertisement she released in March 2014 where she employed a tongue-in-cheek comparison between her experience castrating pigs and her ability to cut “pork” in Congress. Many found the ad to be humorous and it was spoofed by late-night comedians including Jimmy Fallon and Stephen Colbert, Before the ad aired, Ernst had struggled in fundraising, and two polls of the Republican primary taken in February 2014 had shown her in second place, several points behind Republican opponent Mark Jacobs. After it aired, a Suffolk University poll in early April showed her with a narrow lead and a Loras College poll showed her essentially tied with Jacobs. By May, she was being described by the media as the “strong front-runner”.
In an interview with the Des Moines Register on May 9, 2014, Ernst said she was “extremely offended” by comments made by Jacobs in which she was characterized as AWOL due to missing over 100 votes in the legislative session ending April 7, 2014. Ernst stated: “If [Jacobs] had any sort of service like I have, he would’ve understood what AWOL means. I have not been AWOL, I will never be AWOL.” Previously, in an article in The Gazette, Ernst cited her National Guard duty to rebuff criticism about her missing votes, but The Gazette found that only 12 of the 117 missed votes came on days when she was on duty. The other 105 missed votes represented 57 percent of the Iowa Senate votes that session. Ernst’s spokesman said she had a better than 90 percent voting record during her career in the Senate and that she never claimed guard service was the only reason she’s missed votes this session.
In July 2014, Ernst’s campaigning was temporarily paused while she participated in two weeks of National Guard duty. In that same month, Ernst delivered the Republican Party’s weekly address, where she criticized the health care scandal at the Department of Veterans Affairs and pushed for a balanced federal budget and entitlement reform.
Ernst won the 2014 Senate race 52.2% to 43.7%. She is the first woman elected to represent Iowa in either House of Congress.
During her 2014 campaign, Ernst cast herself as an independent Republican. In 2019, Politico characterized her as “a reliable vote for most of Trump’s agenda.” As of January 2021, she had voted in line with Donald Trump’s position 91.1% of the time.
In 2014, when asked about President Barack Obama’s recess appointments, Ernst referred to Obama as a dictator who should be “removed from office” or face “impeachment.” She said, “He is running amok. He is not following our Constitution.”
In 2014, Ernst expressed support for a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget, as well as a reduction in spending on entitlement programs and discretionary spending. She has expressed support for a partial privatization of Social Security accounts for young workers while protecting Social Security for seniors and those nearing retirement.
Ernst rejects the scientific consensus on climate change and said in 2014, “I don’t know the science behind climate change, I can’t say one way or another what is the direct impact from whether it’s manmade or not.” Ernst added that any regulatory role by the government to address climate change needs to be “very small.”
Ernst has proposed eliminating the Environmental Protection How old?ncy and criticized its interpretation of the Clean Water Act as applied to farms. In a Republican primary debate in May 2014, Ernst said she would have voted against the 2014 U.S. Farm Bill and stated her view that the Clean Water Act is damaging for business. Ernst has expressed her opposition to cap-and-trade. She supported President Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accords in 2017.
When asked whether she supports the limited airstrikes conducted in Iraq in August 2014, Ernst said: “What I can say is what I would have supported is leaving additional troops in Iraq longer and perhaps we wouldn’t have this situation today.”
Ernst opposes expanding gun control and has an “A” rating from the National Rifle Association (NRA). Since 2014, Ernst has received $3,124,273 in financial support from the NRA.
In July 2013, Ernst announced that she would seek the Senate seat held by retiring Democratic Senator Tom Harkin. Ernst received the endorsement of Iowa Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds in October 2013. She was also endorsed by 23 current and former state legislators. In March 2014 the Ernst campaign was endorsed by former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. In May 2014, she was endorsed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Ernst voted for a fetal personhood amendment in the Iowa Senate in 2013 and has said that she would support a federal personhood bill.
Ernst has proposed eliminating the Internal Revenue Service. During the 2013 legislative session, Ernst worked on legislation which reduced property taxes in Iowa. She says she supports a “fairer, flatter, and simpler” federal tax code. In 2017, she voted for the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
In 2013, Ernst said Congress shouldn’t bother to pass laws “that the states would consider nullifying”, referring to what she describes as “200-plus years of federal legislators going against the Tenth Amendment’s states’ rights.” Courts have consistently ruled that nullification is unconstitutional. During the 2014 Senatorial general election, the Ernst campaign argued that she did not support nullification, and that “her comments on it were about encouraging Iowans to send her to Washington to pass good laws.”
Ernst supports open carry legislation which allow guns to be carried openly in public. In February 2013, Ernst co-sponsored a resolution addressing “the Iowa General Assembly’s refusal to recognize or support any statutes, presidential directives, or other regulations and proclamations which conflict with the Second Amendment of the Constitution of the US and which are expressly preempted by the rulings of the US Supreme Court”.
In 2012, Ernst answered “Yes” when asked if she would support legislation that would “nullify ObamaCare and authorize state and local law enforcement to arrest federal officials attempting to implement [it].”
Ernst was elected to the Iowa State Senate in a special election in 2011 and re-elected in 2012. She represented District 12, which serves the southwest part of the state. Ernst was a member of the Education, Appropriations, Veterans Affairs, Rules and Administration and Health and Human Services committees of the senate.
Ernst endorsed Paul Ryan’s partially privatized Medicare model in a 2011 Iowa Senate vote. According to an August 2014 article in The Gazette, she has not laid out a detailed plan for Medicare reform.
Ernst was elected the Montgomery County Auditor in 2004 and re-elected in 2008.
Ernst joined Iowa State University’s ROTC program at age 20 and then the US Army Reserve after graduating. She served as a logistics officer and attained the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Iowa National Guard. In 2003–2004, she spent 12 months in Kuwait as the company commander of the 1168th Transportation Company, during the Iraq War. Near the end of her career, she served as the commanding officer of the 185th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion at Camp Dodge, the largest battalion in the Iowa Army National Guard. Upon her retirement from the military in 2015, Ernst had served 23 years in the Army Reserve and the Army National Guard.
She served in the Iowa Army National Guard from 1993 to 2015, retiring as a lieutenant colonel. Ernst is the first woman to represent Iowa in Congress and the first female combat veteran elected to the US Senate.
Joni Kay Ernst (née Culver; born July 1, 1970) is an American veteran and politician serving as the junior US Senator for Iowa since 2015. A Republican, she served in the Iowa State Senate from 2011 to 2014.