Joe Donnelly (born September 29, 1955, Queens, New York, U.S.) is an American Democratic politician who represented Indiana in the U.S. Senate from 2013 to 2019. He previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (2007–13). In 2022, Donnelly became the U.S. ambassador to the Holy See.
Donnelly was born in New York City and raised on Long Island. He attended the University of Notre Dame, receiving a bachelor’s degree (1977) in government and a law degree (1981). During that time, Donnelly married (1979), and he and his wife, Jill, later had two children. He worked for a law firm in South Bend, Indiana, before opening a printing business in nearby Mishawaka in 1996. He served on the state election board for a year (1988–89) and then on a local school board for four years (1997–2001), having lost bids to become Indiana’s attorney general (1988) and a state senator (1990). Undeterred, he ran for the U.S. House of Representatives in 2004 but lost to a well-funded Republican candidate. In 2006, however, he built solid support in predominantly Democratic South Bend and defeated the same opponent.
Donnelly was twice reelected to the House before running for the U.S. Senate in 2012. A moderate in a state long divided between largely Democratic urban areas and Republican suburban and rural districts, he won endorsement from newspapers and business organizations throughout the state. His opponent was Richard Mourdock, a Tea Party candidate who had defeated longtime incumbent Richard Lugar in the Republican primary. Donnelly won the general election, becoming the first Democrat to win a statewide race in Indiana in more than 10 years.
After taking office in 2013, Donnelly positioned himself as a conservative within the Democratic Party while usually voting with it. Breaking with his party on occasion, though, Donnelly, a Roman Catholic, opposed federal funding for abortions and defined himself as pro-life. He also endorsed gun rights. At the same time, he reversed his earlier opposition to same-sex marriage. He took particular interest in military and agricultural affairs, and in 2014 he helped enact a bill requiring annual mental-health evaluations for members of the armed services; it was intended to prevent military suicides.
Donnelly ran for a second term in 2018 but faced a difficult campaign as Republican Pres. Donald Trump was extremely popular in the state. Although he emphasized his conservative position on various issues, Donnelly ultimately lost the election to a Trump supporter, and he left the Senate in January 2019. In 2021 Pres. Joe Biden nominated Donnelly to serve as U.S. ambassador to the Holy See, and he was confirmed by the Senate the following year. Donnelly assumed the post in February 2022.