Tallian has been an attorney and partner for Eberhard & Gastineau, based in Portage, Indiana, since 1998. She was previously an associate with Hilbrich, Cunningham & Schwerd law firm after her admission to the bar. In 1993, she became an attorney for Bruce Clark and Associates. As an attorney, she has represented the Portage Township Trustees, Portage Fire Department Merit Board, Porter County Plan Commission, and Board of Zoning Appeals.
Early political career Tallian began her public service career by serving on the boards of various agencies in Porter County. She served as president and board member of the Portage Parks Foundation, president of the Porter County League of Women Voters, and director of the State Board of the League of Women Voters. Tallian first ran for town council in Ogden Dunes in 1991, but lost to the Republican candidate Trusten Lee, a dentist. She previously ran for the bench on the Porter County Superior Court in 2000, but lost to incumbent Judge Jeffrey Thode. Tallian represents District 4, D-Portage, which includes portions of Porter and LaPorte counties.
State Senator, District 4, 2006 Incumbent Democratic candidate Tallian won her first re-election on November 7, 2006, to the Indiana State Senate District 4. She received 19,431 votes to beat her Republican opponent Dale Brewer, the Porter County Clerk, who received 11,622 votes. Tallian's first opponent Paul Childress, who won the Republican primary, dropped out in August, and Brewer was the late entrant.
State Senator, District 4, 2010 During the general election on November 2, Tallian defeated Republican Shawn Olson, receiving 3,031 more votes. She ran unopposed in the May 4 Democratic primary. During the campaign, Tallian was critical of Governor Mitch Daniels and his 2009 cut of US$450 million from primary, secondary and higher education in Indiana, and she vowed to use her position to defend education funding. After the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the
Gulf of Mexico, the public was told Tallian had accepted $500 from the
BP political action committee, which she kept and said it was not a quid pro quo donation. Olson campaigned with Indiana State Senator
Mike Delph (R-Carmel) at a Tea Party rally to advocate for state action against illegal immigration similar to Arizona's controversial legislation. Candidate Tallian accepted endorsements from the Indiana Manufacturers Association, the Indiana Farm Bureau's political action group and several unions.
State Senator, District 4, 2014 In 2014, Tallian ran unchallenged in the Indiana primary election on May 6, 2014, receiving 3958 votes. She went unopposed in the general election on November 4.
2016 Indiana gubernatorial election On May 12, 2015, Tallian officially announced she would seek the Democratic Party's nomination for governor in 2016. She said she decided to run for governor to restore the "balance of power" to the state government, which has been dominated by Republicans. She cited three issues that she believes illustrates how Republican control of state government has created policies more conservative than the electorate: 1) Republicans changed the composition and leadership of the State Board of Education to remove Superintendent of Public Instruction
Glenda Ritz, who at the time was the only statewide elected Democrat; 2) Governor
Mike Pence pushed to repeal the common construction wage that allowed state and local governments to set labor's wages for eight decades; and 3) the Republican majority passed the
Religious Freedom Restoration Act (Indiana), which led to a backlash at the state and national levels. On August 17, 2015, Tallian announced that she would drop out of the race and continue to serve as state senator. While in the running, she could not raise the amount of money or get the support from unions that she needed to mount her campaign. == Personal life ==