Age, Biography and Wiki

Paul Bennecke was born on 1978 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States. Discover Paul Bennecke's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 45 years old?

Popular As N/A
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Age 45 years old
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Born , 1978
Birthday
Birthplace Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States
Nationality United States

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Paul Bennecke Height, Weight & Measurements

At 45 years old, Paul Bennecke height not available right now. We will update Paul Bennecke's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Paul Bennecke Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Paul Bennecke worth at the age of 45 years old? Paul Bennecke’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United States. We have estimated Paul Bennecke's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Source of Income

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Timeline

2019

Bennecke lives in Atlanta with his wife, the former Jennifer (Jen) Englert, and their sons, Barron, Nate and Jackson. Under Gov. Sonny Perdue, she served as top assistant to Georgia First Lady Mary Perdue, as Executive Director of the Georgia Children’s Trust Fund, and finally as Executive Director of the Governor’s Office for Children and Families (GOCF). She was reappointed to the GOCF post by Governor Nathan Deal in 2011, but resigned that fall after the birth of their first child.

2018

Paul N. Bennecke (born 1978), an American political consultant for candidates of the Republican Party, is the former Executive Director of the Republican Governors Association (RGA). He was appointed to that position in December 2014 and ended his term December 31, 2018, having previously served as Deputy Executive Director and Political Director of the RGA from January 2007 to January 2011.

For the 2018 cycle, the RGA raised and spent a record $180 million when 38 gubernatorial elections where up. RGA won 20 of the 36 states in 2018 including battleground contests in Florida, Georgia, Ohio, Iowa, and Arizona. Despite huge headwinds for the GOP, unprecedented funding from democratic aligned groups, and a record number of open-seat and incumbent defends, the RGA successfully held on to a majority of the states.

2016

The follow-up in 2016 was the challenge of a presidential year, when behavioral Democrats typically swell the voting electorate, and the wild-card of the Donald Trump candidacy. RGA raised $60.7 million in cash -- most ever for a presidential year (besting the previous records from 2008 and 2012). Bennecke's RGA helped winning candidates take governorships in Missouri, New Hampshire and Vermont from the Democrats, while holding Indiana (vacated suddenly in July by Mike Pence). They suffered a net loss only in North Carolina (which went to a recount). The result was 33 Republican Governors, the most for the party since 1922, and one short of the all-time record.

2015

Bennecke's initial year as RGA Executive Director, 2015, saw a win in Kentucky (by outsider Matt Bevin) and an unexpected loss in Louisiana, as Senator David Vitter flamed out in scandal after a contentious all-party primary, and failed to recover.

2013

Republican setbacks in the 2013 Virginia statewide elections gave Democrats control of the State Senate through the ascension of Ralph Northam to the Lieutenant Governorship. Bennecke directed the campaign of B. Wayne Coleman to succeed Northam in the Democratic-leaning, Norfolk-based 6th District, falling short by 11 votes after a lengthy recount in January 2014. Persisting after the Coleman defeat months before, he directed the successful August 2014 special-election campaign of Ben Chafin to the Virginia State Senate, which returned complete control of the General Assembly to the Republicans.

Also in 2013 and for all of 2014, he served as general consultant to the David Perdue campaign for U.S. Senate in Georgia, guiding it to success through three hotly contested primary, runoff and general elections. His 2014 independent-expenditure efforts aided winning candidates in Illinois and Tennessee; further, Bennecke was hired to direct the RGA's IE campaigns in support of GOP gubernatorial nominees in Massachusetts, Kansas, Idaho, and Georgia (all of whom were elected that November).

2012

Continuing his work in the Old Dominion, Bennecke in March 2012 announced the formation of a federal SuperPAC, Independence Virginia PAC, whose sole purpose was to aid the bid of George F. Allen to the U.S. Senate. Allen ultimately lost his bid to Democrat Tim Kaine; Independence Virginia PAC spent $4.9 million to aid the Republican. Bennecke also worked for the independent America 360 Committee in Massachusetts to aid Sen. Scott Brown in his re-election effort; he was defeated by Democrat Elizabeth Warren. Bennecke's close cooperation in both races with Las Vegas billionaire GOP activist Sheldon Adelson was noted.

2011

In the intervening years (2011–14), Bennecke founded his own political consulting firm (Red Clay Strategies), and also joined longtime friend and colleague Tony Simon at the Atlanta-based public-affairs firm, ConnectSouth. In November 2013, ConnectSouth affiliated itself with the Mississippi-based Capitol Resources LLC, whose partners include Henry Barbour. He also formed Jenson Strategic Partners LLC in 2013.

Bennecke spent much of 2011 in Virginia, where he directed a PAC affiliated with Governor Bob McDonnell in its mission to regain control of the Virginia State Senate. The GOP scored a net gain of two seats that November, achieving a 20-20 tie (allowing Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling to cast tiebreaking votes in favor of the GOP for the next two years).

2006

Throughout these years, Bennecke had worked with Nick Ayers, Perdue's 2006 campaign manager. Perdue was elected to a one-year stint as RGA Chairman, and he named Ayers as Executive Director and Bennecke as Political Director (later given the additional title of Deputy Executive Director). The two young Georgians conceived an unprecedented four-year plan to professionalize the committee's operation and implement a long-range strategy, leading up to the 2010 midterm elections, when 37 Governors would be elected.

Their plan was accepted by the Governors, and Ayers and Bennecke served through four gubernatorial cycles encompassing all 50 states. When the two began at RGA, Republicans were reeling from a terrible 2006 cycle, and held only 22 statehouses. When they left in early 2011, the GOP held 29 Governorships, a net gain of seven (including Ohio, Michigan, New Jersey, Wisconsin and Virginia). Bennecke oversaw a budget totalling $35 million in 2007-09, which rose to more than $100 million for 2010 alone.

2000

Bennecke was born in Chattanooga, TN, and attended Dalton State College, then transferred to the University of Georgia. At 21, he was selected as an alternate delegate to the 2000 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia. At 23, he served as Political Director for the campaign to elect St. Sen. Sonny Perdue to the Georgia Governorship. Perdue won despite being heavily outspent by incumbent Democrat Roy Barnes. Subsequently he was named Political Director, and later Executive Director of the Georgia Republican Party, serving under chairman Alec Poitevint. During this 2003-06 period at the Georgia GOP, Republicans seized control of the State House of Representatives (a net gain of 34 seats) and the State Senate (net gain of 8 seats). The party also elected a Lieutenant Governor and Secretary of State, as well as re-electing Perdue in 2006, the first Republican in 134 years to serve as Governor.