Christopher R. Scalzo

Christopher R. Scalzo is an American former politician and businessman.

Christopher R. Scalzo
Member of the Connecticut House of Representatives for the 111th District
In office
1995–1998
Personal details
Born (1963-12-27) December 27, 1963
Peekskill, New York
Political partyRepublican
ResidenceWashington D.C.
Alma materFordham University

Born in Peekskill, New York. Scalzo received his bachelor's degree in economics from Fordham University in 1985. He worked in the currency market. From 1995 to 1998, Scalzo served in the Connecticut House of Representatives and was a Republican, serving the 111th General Assemby district. While serving as a representative, he lived in Ridgefield, Connecticut. In 1998, Scalzo ran unsuccessfully for the office of Connecticut Comptroller, ultimately losing to Nancy Wyman, who went on to become the first woman elected as Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut.[1][2]

After losing the race for Comptroller in 1998, Scalzo worked as a development officer at Yale University from 2000 to 2003. He later relocated to Washington, D.C., where he worked in the United States Department of State in various roles from 2004 to 2009. After leaving the State Department, Scalzo began work in the IBM Global Services arm of IBM. Scalzo currently resides in Washington, D.C., continues to work for IBM, now as a Foreign Affairs Account Manager.[3]

In 2018, he became a Private Sector Fellow at the Dwight D. Eisenhower School for National Security and Resource Strategy.

Notes

gollark: The 15GB figure is for without images. With images (probably downscaled) my copy is 80GB.
gollark: Wikipedia fits into 15GB (minus user pages etc) and it uses horrible inefficient XML.
gollark: If you drop the images and HTML formatting and whatever else most ebooks contain, and do compression better than ZIP does, you could probably reach some *ridiculous* compression ratios.
gollark: An average ebook is something like 1MB and that's for 100000 words + cover image.
gollark: If it's *anything* but "basically 100% of the day" you need batteries.
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