Kim Reynolds Age, Career, Politics, Family, Salary and Net Worth

A Photo of Kim Reynolds

This article will answer every question you have about Kim Reynolds. Below are some of the frequently asked questions about her.

  1. What does Kim do for a living?
  2. Who are Kim’s parents and siblings?
  3. What are Kim’s interests and hobbies?
  4. Is Kim married or does she have a girlfriend/boyfriend?
  5. Does Kim have any children?
  6. Where is Kim now?
  7. How tall is Kim?
  8. How much money does Kim earn?
  9. What is Kim’s net worth?

N/B: Please read the entire post to have all your questions answered.

Who is Kim Reynolds?

Kimberly Kay Reynolds Strawn abbreviated as Kim Reynolds is a prominent American politician serving as the 43rd governor of Iowa since 2017. Being a member of the Republican Party, from 2011 to 2017, she served as the 46th lieutenant governor of Iowa. Before she was elected lieutenant governor, she served four terms as Clarke County treasurer and then served in the Iowa Senate from 2009 to 2010. In May 2017, she became governor when Governor Terry Branstad stepped down to become United States ambassador to China. In the 2018 gubernatorial election, she won a full term as governor and was reelected in 2022.

How Old Is Kim Reynolds?

She is 63 years old as of November 2022, having been born on August 4, 1959, in St. Charles, Iowa, U.S. Kim shares her birthdate with celebrities such as; Cole Sprouse, Barack Obama, Dylan Sprouse,  Meghan Markle, Lil Skies, and many more.

Kim Reynolds Family

Who are Kim Reynolds’s Parents?

She was born to Charles Strawn (Father) and Audrey Strawn (Mother).

Does Kim Reynolds have Siblings?

There is no news on the internet showing whether she has siblings or was born as an only child. In case there is news regarding this matter, we will update it here as soon as possible.

Kim Reynolds Education

She received her high school education at Interstate 35 Community School District where she graduated in 1977. After graduating from high school, she attended Northwest Missouri State University where she took classes in business, consumer sciences, and clothing sales and design. Later, she took classes at Southeastern Community College in the late 1980s. And then accounting classes between 1992 and 1995 at Southwestern Community College. She then began taking classes in 2012 in the bachelor of public administration program at Upper Iowa University. However, she did not earn degrees from any of these institutions. But was awarded her Bachelor of Liberal Studies degree in 2016 at Iowa State University of Science and Technology.

A Photo of Kim Reynolds
A Photo of Kim Reynolds

Kim Reynolds Marital Status

She is married to the love of her life Kevin Reynolds. They married in 1982.

Kim Reynolds Kids

She and her husband Kevin have three kids. Three daughters by the name Nicole Reynolds, Jessica Reynolds, and Jeniffer Reynolds.

Kim Reynolds Early Political Career

She served four terms as the Clarke County treasurer. She was then elected to represent the 48th district in the Iowa Senate on November 4, 2008, by defeating Democratic nominee Ruth Smith and Independent candidate Rodney Schmidt. In 2010, she endorsed a ban on same-sex marriage in Iowa.

A Career as Lieutenant Governor of Iowa

Republican gubernatorial nominee Terry Branstad publicly selected Kim to be his running mate as the lieutenant governor candidate on June 25, 2010. The next day, she received the Republican nomination at the Republican state convention. The Branstad/Reynold ticket won the general election held on November 2, 2010. On November 12, she resigned her Senate seat before taking office as lieutenant governor. On January 14, 2011, she was sworn in as lieutenant governor of Iowa. And she went on to co-chair the Governor’s Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Advisory Council, Iowa Partnership for Economic Progress board, and the Military Children Education Coalition. Moreover, she was Branstad’s representative on the board of the Iowa State Fair. In July 2015, she was elected chair of the National Lieutenant Governors Association (NLGA).

A Career as Governor of Iowa

Tenure

She became governor of Iowa on May 24, 2017, upon the resignation of Branstard who stepped down to become United States Ambassador of China. Thus she became Iowa’s first female governor. Her elevation to the governorship created a vacancy in the office of lieutenant governor. And reports indicated that Kim’s selection of a lieutenant governor could be challenged in the Iowa Supreme Court. Kim then announced on May 25, 2017, that Iowa Public Defender Adam Gregg would serve as acting lieutenant governor, to avoid litigation.

The Kim administration stated that Gregg “[would] not hold the official position of the lieutenant governor” and would not succeed Kim in the event of her inability to serve as governor. In 2018, she proposed cutting $10 million from Medicaid. Whereas in 2020, she proposed a one-cent increase in the state sales tax (bringing it to 8 cents) offset by a phased reduction in the state income tax including a cut in the rate for the top bracket from 9% to 5.5%. After the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges (2015) in 2018, she called same-sex marriage a “settled” issue and said that she did not consider herself obligated to follow the Iowa Republican Party platform provision against same-sex marriage.

Tenure Continuation

She is a staunch supporter of Donald Trump. And has blocked two-thirds of requests from Democratic state Attorney General Tom Miller to join multi-state lawsuits challenging Trump administration policies or to submit amicus briefs in such suits. Among the vetoed requests were proposals to challenge Trump’s policies related to immigration, asylum, abortion, birth control, environmental deregulation, gun policy, and LGBT rights. Moreover, she has blocked Miller from including Iowa in a legal challenge to the Trump administration’s repeal of the Clean Power Plan. In May 2018, she signed a bill to revamp Iowa’s energy policies.

In May 2018 also, she signed a “fetal heartbeat bill” one of the nation’s most restrictive abortion bans. The following year in January, an Iowa state judge struck the law down as unconstitutional. However, Kim chose not to appeal saying she did not believe that “a losing battle” would advance the anti-abortion cause. She then went on and signed into law a bill that forced women getting abortions to wait for 24 hours in 2021. However, an Iowa court struck the law down.

Tenure Continuation

On January 18, 2019, she began her first full term. And in March 2019, she signed into law a bill requiring public universities to protect all speech on campus. From 2017 to April 2020, she restored the voting rights of 543 felons, more than the roughly 200 restorations that he predecessor gave over almost seven years in office. In August 2020, she signed an executive order permitting felons to vote in Iowa elections upon completing their sentences. Previously, Iowa had imposed a lifetime ban on felons voting unless the governor personally restored their voting rights, the strictest law in the country. Kim’s administration arranged for COVID-19 testing to be done in May and July 2020, at Iowa Select’s West Des Moines headquarters and at the Waverly facility.

She then signed into law a bill that shortened the hours of polling places on election Day in March 2021. This reduced the early voting period and required that absentee ballots be received by ballot places before the end of Election Day. Also, she said the legislation would protect election integrity. On April 2, 2021, she signed a bill allowing individuals to carry handguns without a permit, a policy known as constitutional carry. Later that month, she signed legislation that would allow landlords to reject tenants who pay rent with Section 8 vouchers. The following year on March 3, she signed into law a bill that bans transgender girls and women from participating on designated female sports teams.

COVID -19 pandemic

During the COVID-19 pandemic, she discharged public health guidance and scientific recommendations regarding mask mandates. On March 9, 2020, she signed a Proclamation of Disaster Emergency. That month also, she ordered the closures of some recreational businesses and additional school closures and ordered a halt to “non-essential” or elective surgeries, including surgical abortions. Iowa health official advised Kim in April 2020, to enforce face coverings and not ease restrictions.

However, she did not implement a requirement to wear masks in public places. Until the November 2020 election when she ordered the mandatory wearing of masks at large gatherings. Recreational businesses such as bars and restaurants were permitted to fully reopen in June which was followed by surges in coronavirus infections. She said in July 2020, that she would invalidate some school districts’ plans to limit in-person classes to one day a week for most students with online learning on other days. In late January 2021, she signed a bill, passed by the state legislature along party lines.

In 2020, Kim had the lowest approval rating of any governor in the nation because of her handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. With an approval rating of 28% in July and 26% in September. In November 2020, COVID-19 in Iowa peaked but remained high into the next year. In November 2020, she issued a statewide mask mandate. Ordering anyone over age 2 to wear a mask in indoor public spaces. The following year in February, she rolled back mask requirements in indoor public places and restrictions on indoor dining. In May 2021, she signed into law a bill that prohibited businesses and local governments from requiring customers to have proof of vaccination.

2018

She stated in June 2017, that she would seek a full term as Governor of Iowa in the 2018 election. Her decision to have Rep. Steve King co-chair her campaign stirred controversy. As King has a history that has been described as racist. Kim went on and won the Republican nomination for Governor. And went on to defeat Democratic Fred Hubbell and Libertarian Jake Porter in the general election on November 6, 2018. She thus made history as the first woman elected Goverorin Iowa.

Kim Reynolds Height and Measurements

Adding up to her well-curved and beautiful body, she stands at a height of 5ft 6inches (1.67m) and has an unknown weight.

Kim Reynolds Salary and Net Worth

She has a base salary of $130,000 and a net worth of $310 million.