What civilian jobs has Dylan Blaha held and at which companies?
Executive summary
Available reporting documents Dylan Thomas Blaha as a U.S. Army officer, National Guard captain and a research scientist who performed cancer research at the University of Illinois Urbana‑Champaign; campaign and news profiles identify him as having worked in academia/research and as an Army medic/planner but do not provide a comprehensive corporate résumé listing civilian employers [1] [2] [3] [4].
1. Soldier first, civilian scientist second — how sources describe his non‑military work
News and campaign materials consistently present Blaha’s civilian professional identity as a research scientist with specific mention that he “conducted four years of cancer research at the University of Illinois Urbana‑Champaign,” framing his civilian career around academic lab work rather than employment at private companies [1] [2].
2. Academic affiliation cited repeatedly, not corporate employers
Multiple outlets and his campaign biography refer to research at the University of Illinois Urbana‑Champaign and to degrees in molecular/cellular biology and biochemistry, which supports the claim he worked in university research; none of the supplied sources list private‑sector employers or named biotech/pharma companies where he held civilian jobs [4] [1] [2].
3. Military roles often described as ‘civilian’ experience in profiles — beware conflation
Profiles and interviews foreground Blaha’s military service — combat medic, medical planner, deployed officer and National Guard captain — and some reporting describes him as a “research scientist” or “biochemist.” That combination can create the impression of a conventional civilian workplace résumé, but the sources make a clear distinction between his academic research and his long military career rather than describing corporate civilian jobs [3] [2] [5].
4. What the campaign and journalist bios state explicitly
Blaha’s campaign site and candidate filings present him as a progressive candidate and veteran who “served my country for over twelve years” and who performed cancer research at the University of Illinois; these materials are the primary public records for his civilian background in the reporting provided [6] [7] [8].
5. Missing details and limits of current reporting
Available sources do not mention any specific civilian employers beyond the University of Illinois or list job titles, dates, or company names in the private sector. If you are seeking a full employment history (companies, roles, dates), that level of detail is not present in the cited reporting [1] [2] [4].
6. Conflicting or alternative framings in coverage
Some outlets emphasize his identity as a “biochemist” or “cancer research scientist” [9] [1] [2], while others foreground his National Guard role and activism; both frames appear in the record and can shape how his civilian work is perceived. No source disputes that he conducted university research; no source asserts he held corporate civilian jobs.
7. What to check next for a complete civilian resume
To compile a company‑level civilian employment list you will need primary documents or direct disclosures not present in these sources — e.g., LinkedIn, a detailed campaign résumé, university HR records, or interviews where Blaha names employers. Available reporting does not mention those documents or provide additional employer names [6] [7] [1].
8. Bottom line for readers
Current reporting supports two firm facts: Blaha conducted cancer research at the University of Illinois Urbana‑Champaign and he is an Army/National Guard officer with medical and planning duties; the record supplied does not identify civilian company employers or a private‑sector job history [1] [2] [3]. For a definitive civilian employment list, consult Blaha’s direct disclosures or personnel records not cited here.