Joni Ernst: 21 Things You Didn’t Know About Her

Iowa’s freshman senator, Joni Ernst, will be in the national spotlight Tuesday night when she gives the Republican Party response to President Obama’s State of the Union address. “I am truly honored,” she said on Facebook after being chosen by the GOP leadership.

Yet few people outside of Iowa really know who she is or what she stands for, beyond the broadest strokes — and a few pig jokes.

Ernst, 44, a former state senator, won a decisive election last November to fill the seat vacated by retiring Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin, coming from behind to beat Democratic Rep. Bruce Braley 52.2 to 43.7. Even before that, she made headlines when she declared in a popular ad, “I grew up castrating hogs on an Iowa farm. So when I get to Washington, I’ll know how to cut pork.”

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One thing is clear: In the high-profile, high-risk task she’s been given, she has her work cut out for her. “She can’t do any worse than any of the other GOPers who have been given the unenviable task in the past,” said Craig Shirley, a Ronald Reagan biographer and conservative strategist, referring to the difficulties experienced by both Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal when they delivered the response. The choices by the GOP to respond to the State of the Union have been more miss than hit over the years, but they are hoping that this selection will be a socko hit for once.

Here are 21 things most Americans don’t know about Ernst as she heads for the limelight on Tuesday night:

1. Born July 1, 1970, she grew up on a farm in Red Oak, Iowa, and was valedictorian of her 1988 graduating class at Stanton High School in Stanton, Iowa. “I grew up walking beans and feeding hogs,” she has said. “My mom made all of my clothes. We went to church every week.” (She is Lutheran.)

2. Enrolling at Iowa State University, she entered the Army ROTC program. “We didn’t have much money,” says Ernst in her bio, “so I was fortunate to be able to attend college with the help of academic and leadership scholarships.” She also earned money for school by working construction jobs with her father during the summer.

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3. In her sophomore year, she led a peer group on an agricultural exchange visit to the Ukraine. “She was responsible for the planning, coordination and execution of the entire travel, itinerary, lodging, feeding and care of the group,” her husband, Gail Ernst, said years later. He added, “This trip fostered more foreign diplomacy and friendship toward the U.S. than all the years of political attempts at diplomacy.”