Osage County Elected Officials & Representation

Welcome to Osage County elected officials and representation — this page provides an overview of the current county, state, and federal leaders serving our community. We also include notes on 2024 vetting participation for Republican officeholders where applicable (vetting is a local committee process to confirm alignment with Republican principles for candidates running under the Republican label — it does not replace voter choice in primaries or general elections).

County-Level Representation

OCRC’s first year of vetting candidates running as Republicans was for the 2024 election cycle. Republican incumbents seeking to run for re-election, or any candidate seeking these offices, must complete vetting with OCRC in 2026.

Office Current Holder Party Year Elected or Appointed Next Election Vetting Status
Presiding Commissioner Darryl Griffin R 2022 2026
Commissioner District 1 Jeff Peters R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
Commissioner District 2 Dale Logan R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
County Sheriff Michael Bonham R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
Prosecuting Attorney Amanda Grellner R 2022 2026
County Treasurer Valerie Prater R 2022 2026 Vetted 2026
Collector of Revenue Denise Nolte R 2022 2026
County Assessor Tina Kammerich R 2024 Vetted 2024
County Clerk Brooke Dudenhoeffer Not Stated Appointed 2024 2026
Coroner A.J. Probst 2024 2028 Did Not Vet
Public Administrator Brenny Montgomery R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
County Recorder Cindy Hoffman D 2022 2026
Surveyor Timothy Hamburg D 2024 2028
Circuit Clerk Beth Billington D 2022 2026

State-Level Representation

Candidates for state-level offices are invited to vet but not required to do so by the State Republican Committee. Nonetheless, in 2024 a number of state-level candidates voluntarily completed the vetting process, including several who lost in the primaries such as Bill Eigel, Jay Ashcroft, Chris Wright, Will Scharf, Tim Baker, Shane Schoeller, and Lori Rook.

Senatorial Districts

Osage County is in Senatorial District 26, along with Gasconade, Franklin, Warren, and (part of) West St. Louis counties.

Legislative Districts

Osage County is in Legislative District 61, along with Miller, Gasconade, and Montgomery counties.

Office Current Holder Party Year Elected or Appointed Next Election Vetting Status
Governor Mike Kehoe R 2024 2028
Lieutenant Governor David Wasinger R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
Secretary of State Denny Hoskins R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
Attorney General Catherine Hanaway R Appointed 2025 2028
State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick R 2022 2026
State Treasurer Vivek Malek R 2024 2028 Vetted 2024
State Senator (District 26)  Ben Brown R 2022 2026
State Representative (61st District) Bruce Sassmann R 2024 2026

Federal-Level Representation

Candidates for federal-level offices are invited to vet but also are not required to do so by the State Republican Committee. In 2024, the candidate for Missouri’s 3rd congressional district (CD3), Bob Onder, voluntarily participated in vetting. US Congressman Eric Burlison representing Missouri’s 7th congressional district (CD7) also participated in vetting in 2024.

Since Osage County will be moving to CD5 in 2027, the primary and general elections in 2026 will decide who our new member of congress will be. Currently, Emanuel Cleaver (D) holds the seat. OCRC invites Republican candidates who decide to run for this congressional seat to vet and introduce themselves to Osage County voters.

2026: Congressional District 3

Currently, Osage County is in Congressional District 3, represented by US Congressman Bob Onder.

2027: Congressional District 5

Redistricting passed by the State Legislature and signed by the Governor in September 2025 will move Osage County to CD5.

Office Current Holder Party Year Elected or Appointed Next Election Vetting Status
President Donald J. Trump R 2024 2028
US Senator Josh Hawley R 2024 2030
US Senator Eric Schmitt R 2022 2028
US Representative Bob Onder R 2024 2026 Vetted 2024

Judicial Branch Officials Serving Osage County

Missouri has a three-tier court system: Supreme Court (highest), Courts of Appeals (intermediate), and Circuit Courts (trial level, including Osage County in Circuit 20). Missouri courts are intended to be independent and impartial. Here’s how judicial positions affecting Osage County are selected and how voters participate.

Supreme Court & Courts of Appeals

(Statewide & Eastern District)

  • Supreme Court: 7 judges (chief justice + 6 others)
  • Court of Appeals: 3 districts. Osage is in the Eastern District (based in St. Louis), which has 14 judges
  • Nonpartisan under the Missouri Nonpartisan Court Plan (merit selection).
  • Judges are appointed by the governor from a panel recommended by a nonpartisan commission, then face retention elections (yes/no vote) every 12 years.
  • No party labels on the ballot.
  • Osage County voters participate in retention elections for:
  • Current Status: Check the Missouri Courts website or ballot for upcoming retention questions.

Judicial Court − Circuit 20

(Trial Courts – Osage, Franklin, Gasconade Counties)

  • Missouri has 46 judicial circuits. Osage County is in Circuit 20 (covers Franklin, Gasconade, Osage counties)
  • Partisan elections for circuit and associate circuit judges.
  • Candidates run in Republican or Democratic primaries and general elections.
  • Terms: Circuit judges 6 years; associate circuit judges 4 years.
  • Filing: Candidates pay fee to party committee and file with local clerk or Secretary of State.
  • Osage County voters elect these judges directly — they appear on ballots with party labels.

Learn more from the Missouri Judicial Review Committee at YourMissouriJudges.org

Retention Elections (What Voters See)

  • For Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, and circuit courts in certain metro areas (e.g., St. Louis, Jackson, Clay, Platte, Greene counties), judges run on retention ballots (“Shall Judge X be retained? Yes/No”). No opponent, no party label.
  • In rural circuits like Circuit 20 (Osage), circuit judges are elected in partisan elections (primary + general), not retention.
  • Voters sometimes confuse retention (nonpartisan, yes/no) with partisan elections — retention is for merit-selected judges to decide if they stay.
Position Current Holder Party  Retained, Elected, Appointed Next Election or Retention Vetting Status
Circuit 20 Presiding Judge Ryan Helfrich R 2022 2028
Circuit 20 Judge Craig Hellmann R 2024 2030
Circuit 20 Associate Judge Sonya Brandt R 2022 2026
Supreme Court Chief Justice W. Brent Powell NP 2018 2030
Supreme Court Judge Zel M. Fischer NP 2022 2034
Supreme Court Judge Robin Ransom NP 2022 2034
Supreme Court Judge Paul C. Wilson NP 2014 2026
Supreme Court Judge Kelly C. Broniec NP 2024 2036
Supreme Court Judge Ginger K. Gooch NP 2024 2036
Supreme Court Judge Mary R. Russell NP 2018 2030
Appeals Court, Eastern District Chief Judge John P. Torbitzky NP 2022 2034
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Gary M. Gaertner, Jr. NP 2024 2036
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Robert M. Clayton III NP 2024 2036
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Angela Turner Quigless NP 2014 2026
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Philip M. Hess NP 2016 2028
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge James M. Dowd NP 2016 2028
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Lisa Page NP 2018 2030
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Michael E. Gardner NP 2022 2034
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Thomas C. Clark II NP 2022 2034
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Renée Hardin-Tammons NP 2024 2036
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Michael S. Wright NP 2024 2036
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Rebeca Navarro-McKelvey NP 2024 2026
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Virginia W. Lay NP 2024 2026
Appeals Court, Eastern District Judge Kathleen Hamilton NP 2026 2028