Lifelong southeast side resident, Tim Ping, formally announces his candidacy for Indiana State Representative District 90 today.
Ping is running to succeed the current State Representative, Mike Murphy, who has decided to run for Congress. "I am excited to take my many years of public service to the Legislature where I can advance the issues that matter to our district," said Ping.
Ping is the Chief Information Officer for the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, a position he accepted to assist the Daniels administration in bringing innovative and effective public programs as well as genuine fiscal discipline to state government.
"I am proud of my fiscally conservative record during my public sector service and look forward to taking the same fresh, aggressive, conservative values to the State House."
Ping served his country as a member of the United States Marine Corp during the Viet Nam War. Today, Ping serves in a number of volunteer capacities and currently is a Commissioner in the Metropolitan Development Commission, a Commissioner in the Indianapolis Redevelopment Commission and a Scout Leader where he chairs a pack committee consisting of over 100 cub scouts.
Ping and his wife Jennifer are the parents of three children and continue to live on the southeast side of Indianapolis where Ping was raised before attending and graduating from Indiana University. The Pings attend Southport Presbyterian Church.
Dedicated to the advancement of the State of Indiana by re-affirming our state's constitutional principles that: all people are created equal; no religious test shall be imposed on our public officials and offices of trust; and no special privileges or immunities shall be granted to any class of citizens which are not granted on the same terms to all citizens. Advance Indiana, LLC. Copyright 2005-16. All rights reserved.
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Tim Ping Officially Enters District 90 Race
You read it here first. Now Tim Ping is making his Republican candidacy for state representative in District 90 official. Ping is seeking to replace State Rep. Mike Murphy, who is running in next year's hotly-contested 5th District congressional race. Ping currently serves as the CIO for the Department of Natural Resources and serves as a member of the Metropolitan Development Commission. Ping will face at least one other opponent, City-County Councilor Mike Speedy, who announced his bid recently. Speedy recently angered many conservatives when he joined all but one other Repubican councilor, Christine Scales, in voting for the tax, spend and borrow bailout of the CIB. Here's Ping's announcement:
I knew Tim about 30 years ago when we were neighbors in the same apartment complex and both worked at NAC.
ReplyDeleteTim is humble, sensible, articulate and trustworthy.