United States Senator Directory

Dean Barkley

Dean Barkley served as a senator for Minnesota (2002-2003).

  • Independent
  • Minnesota
  • Former
Portrait of Dean BarkleyMinnesota
Role Senator

Current assignment referenced in the congressional directory.

State Minnesota

Representing constituents across the Minnesota delegation.

Service period 2002-2003

Years of public service formally recorded.

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Biography

Dean Barkley served as a Senator from Minnesota in the United States Congress from 2002 to 2003. A member of the Independent Party, Dean Barkley contributed to the legislative process during 1 term in office.

Dean Barkley’s service in Congress occurred during a significant period in American history. As a member of the Senate, Dean Barkley participated in the democratic process and represented the interests of constituents.

Dean Malcolm Barkley (born August 31, 1950) is an American attorney and politician who briefly served as a United States Senator from Minnesota from 2002 to 2003 as a member of the Independence Party of Minnesota. The founder and chair of the Minnesota Reform Party (later renamed the Independence Party), he was the chairman of Jesse Ventura’s successful upset bid for governor of Minnesota in 1998. Ventura subsequently appointed him director of the state’s Office of Strategic and Long Range Planning. After Senator Paul Wellstone died in a plane crash just weeks before the 2002 election, Ventura appointed Barkley to fill Wellstone’s Senate seat. His brief tenure ended when Republican Norm Coleman was elected and sworn in to fill the seat. Barkley has run for office four times. Inspired by Ross Perot’s 1992 presidential campaign, he first ran for Congress as an independent in that year’s election in Minnesota’s 6th congressional district, but lost. He unsuccessfully ran three times for the U.S. Senate: in Minnesota’s 1994 Senate election, in 1996, and in 2008. He received 5%, 7%, and 15% of the vote in each election, respectively.

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