What's New
The latest additions to the campaign website:
Coming Up
Upcoming campaign events:
- 11 February 2007 to 7 March 2007
- deadline for potential candidates to register out of
other parties to run in 3 June 2008 P&F primary
- 13 November 2007 to 8 December 2007
- deadline for potential candidates to be registered as Peace
& Freedom to run in 3 June 2008 P&F primary
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P&F Campaigns in San Diego County
Local Candidates
State Senate
There were no Peace and Freedom Party candidates for State Senate in
San Diego County.
However, the San Diego County Peace and Freedom Party suggested
that our supporters vote for the Libertarian candidate Jesse Thomas in the 40th
Senatorial District, where no Peace and Freedom candidate ran against
Democratic Party incumbent Denise Moreno Ducheny. He came in third of three
candidates, with 3,982 votes (2.9%).
U.S. House of Representatives
Miriam Clark of Encinitas ran
for the U.S. House of Representatives in the 50th Congressional District,
which is entirely within San Diego County, including Del Mar, Solana Beach,
Encinitas, Carlsbad, San Marcos, Escondido and part of the city of San Diego
(parts of Bay Park, Pacific Beach, La Jolla and University City; Bay Ho,
Clairemont Mesa, Del Mar Heights, North City, Carmel Valley, Sorrento Valley,
Miramar, Mira Mesa, Rancho Peñasquitos; and part of Rancho San Bernardo).
She came in fourth of four candidates, with 3,353 votes (1.5%).
The San Diego County Peace and Freedom Party also suggested that our
supporters vote for the Libertarian candidate Dan Litwin in the 51st
Congressional District, where no Peace and Freedom candidate ran
against Democratic Party incumbent Bob Filner.
He came in third of three candidates on the ballot, with 2,790 votes (2.4%).
State Assembly
There were no Peace and Freedom Party candidates for State Assembly in
San Diego County.
Local Non-partisan Offices
The San Diego County Peace and Freedom Party recommended that its
supporters write-in Linda Brown for Superior Court Judge, Office No. 36.
Because she was an unofficial write-in, election officials did not count
any votes cast for this candidate, so no information is available on
how many votes she received.
The San Diego County Peace and Freedom Party recommended that its
supporters write-in three activists for San Diego Community College
Board:
- Michel Madrigal (Trustee Area A)
- Bob Alba (Trustee Area C)
- Ayesha Newell (Trustee Area E)
Because they were unofficial write-ins, election officials did not count
any votes cast for these candidates, so no information is available on
how many votes they received.
Though no P&F-endorsed candidates ran for the San Diego Unified
School District's Board, the San Diego County Peace and Freedom Party suggested
votes for two other candidates, Katherine Nakamura in Trustee Area B and John
de Beck in Trustee Area C. Nakamura was elected with 115,488 votes (59.81%),
and de Beck received 166,718 votes running unopposed.
Peace and Freedom Party Central Committees
No members of the Peace and Freedom Party Central Committees were
elected from San Diego County in 2004, and the
webmaster is not aware of
any candidates only for Central Committees from the county elected in the
June 2006 primary election. However, Mary Lou Finley (1st Supervisorial
District), Miriam Clark (3rd Supervisorial District), and Janice Jordan
(4th Supervisorial District) became elected members of the Central Committees
when they were nominated for Board of Equalization, Congress and Governor,
respectively.
Local Measures
The San Diego County Peace and Freedom Party organization took
positions on at least three measures that were on the ballot November 7th
in San Diego County. They opposed to Proposition A (San Diego County
Regional Airport Authority), an advisory measure on creating a commercial
airport at MCAS Miramar.
With our opposition Proposition A was defeated by a vote of 278,470 Yes (38.17%)
to 451,097 No (61.83%).
They also opposed Propositions B and C,
City of San Diego charter amendments which will, respectively, require
popular votes on any increases in public employee retirement benefits and
allow the city to contract out city services.
Despite our opposition, both of these measures passed,
Proposition B by a vote of 214,788 Yes (69.94%) to 92,302 No (30.06%), and
Proposition C by a vote of 185,688 Yes (60.37%) to 121,906 No (39.63%).
Regional Candidate
Mary Lou Finley
is running for Board of Equalization in the 3rd Board of Equalization District,
which includes all of San Diego County.
She came in third of three candidates, with 91,467 votes (4.5%) district-wide
and 15,989 votes (4.4%) in San Diego County.
All of San Diego County is in the Fourth Appelate District of the State Court
of Appeal. There are six judges up for confirmation from its Division 1, four
from its Division 2, and two from its Division 3. The San Diego County Peace
and Freedom Party urges a no vote on the confirmation of all twelve appelate
judges on the county's ballot. All twelve appelate judges were confirmed with
No votes ranging from 379,816 (25.0%, on Patricia D. Benke) to 452,229 (30.5%,
on Joan K. Irion) district-wide and from 105,692 (21.03%, on Patricia D. Benke)
to 128,549 (26.79%, on Jeffrey King).
Statewide Candidates
The Peace and Freedom Party candidates for statewide partisan public offices were:
- Governor: Janice Jordan (5th of 6 candidates
on the ballot with 69,934 votes (0.8%) statewide, 5,425 votes (0.6%) in
San Diego County)
- Lieutenant Governor: Stewart Alexander
(6th of 6 candidates with 43,319 votes (0.5%) statewide, 2,832 votes (0.3%) in
San Diego County)
- Secretary of State: Margie Akin (6th of 6
candidates with 91,483 votes (1.0%) statewide, 7,484 votes (0.9%) in
San Diego County)
- Treasurer: Gerald Sanders (6th of 6
candidates with 71,726 votes (0.8%) statewide, 7,064 votes (0.9%) in
San Diego County)
- Controller: Liz Barrón (4th of 6
candidates with 212,383 votes (2.5%) statewide, in 5th place with 13,679 votes
(1.8%) in San Diego County)
- Attorney General: Jack Harrison (5th of
5 candidates with 100,797 votes (1.1%) statewide, 8,156 votes (1.0%) in
San Diego County)
- Insurance Commissioner: Tom Condit (5th of
6 candidates with 187,618 votes (2.2%) statewide, 13,745 votes (1.8%) in
San Diego County)
- U.S. Senator: Marsha Feinland (5th of
6 candidates on the ballot with 117,764 votes (1.3%) statewide, in 4th place
with 9,044 votes (1.2%) in San Diego County)
Statewide Measures
There were thirteen propositions on the statewide ballot November 7th,
assigned proposition numbers 1A through 1E and 83 through 90. At its August
26th-27th State Convention, the Peace and Freedom Party took positions
supporting Proposition 87 (oil severance tax to support alternative energy)
and Proposition 89 ("Clean Money" public financing of candidates
for state offices, limit corporate funding of ballot measure campaigns) and
opposing the other eleven propositions.
- Proposition 1A (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Transportation Funds." This measure eliminates the loopholes in
provisions of the state constitution requiring gas sales tax money to be used for
transportation. We don't think the legislature's hands should be tied to require
the state to spend money on roads and transit even if it may be needed more
urgently for education and health care.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 1A.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 1A passed by a statewide vote
of 6,400,587 (77.0%) Yes to 1,916,925 (23.0%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 599,606 (81.0%) to 141,325 (19.0%).
- Proposition 1B (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Transportation Bonds." This measure authorizes the sale of $19.9
billion in bonds to be used for various transportation projects.
We generally oppose bonds, that require ordinary people to pay taxes to those who
can afford to invest in bonds, instead of taxing those who can afford to pay in
order to meet social needs.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 1B.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 1B passed by a statewide vote
of 5,112,142 (61.4%) Yes to 3,218,657 (38.6%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 452,477 (61.1%) to 288,738 (38.9%).
- Proposition 1C (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Housing Bonds." This measure authorizes the sale of $2.85
billion in bonds to be used for various housing-related programs.
We generally oppose bonds, that require ordinary people to pay taxes to those who
can afford to invest in bonds, instead of taxing those who can afford to pay in
order to meet social needs.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 1C.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 1C passed by a statewide vote
of 4,814,850 (57.8%) Yes to 3,521,055 (42.2%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 404,644 (54.6%) to 337,403 (45.4%).
- Proposition 1D (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"School and College Bonds." This measure authorizes the sale of $10.4
billion in bonds to be used for construction projects at K-12 schools and public
universities and community colleges.
We generally oppose bonds, that require ordinary people to pay taxes to those who
can afford to invest in bonds, instead of taxing those who can afford to pay in
order to meet social needs.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 1D.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 1D passed by a statewide vote
of 4,754,868 (56.9%) Yes to 3,602,055 (43.1%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 390,266 (52.7%) to 350,421 (47.3%).
- Proposition 1E (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Flood Control Bonds." This measure authorizes the sale of $4.1
billion in bonds to be used for various flood control projects.
We generally oppose bonds, that require ordinary people to pay taxes to those who
can afford to invest in bonds, instead of taxing those who can afford to pay in
order to meet social needs.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 1E.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 1E passed by a statewide vote
of 5,305,852 (64.2%) Yes to 2,962,546 (35.8%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 453,825 (61.6%) to 283,129 (38.4%).
- Proposition 83 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Punishment for Sex Crimes." This measure increases the penalties for
people convicted of sex crimes, prevents all registered sex offenders from ever
living in a city, and requires life-long electronic monitoring of many registered
sex offenders. This measure will waste money by increasing the number of people
in prison and harassing low-risk ex-prisoners while failing to reduce crime.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 83.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 83 passed by a statewide vote
of 5,926,800 (70.5%) Yes to 2,483,597 (29.5%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 578,379 (76.6%) to 177,046 (23.4%).
- Proposition 84 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Bonds for Water & Natural Resources." This measure authorizes
the sale of $5.4 billion in bonds for water quality, flood control and parks.
We generally oppose bonds, that require ordinary people to pay taxes to those who
can afford to invest in bonds, instead of taxing those who can afford to pay in
order to meet social needs.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 84.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 84 passed by a statewide vote
of 4,431,945 (53.8%) Yes to 3,807,005 (46.2%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 364,272 (49.6%) to 369,468 (50.4%).
- Proposition 85 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Parental Notification about Abortion." This initiative was part of the
anti-choice movement's strategy to chip away at legal abortion in the United States.
It would have endangered the lives of teenage women who are afraid to tell their
parents about preganancies.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 85.
With our opposition, Proposition 85 was defeated by a statewide vote
of 3,868,714 (45.8%) Yes to 4,576,128 (54.2%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 384,747 (50.9%) to 372,042 (49.1%).
- Proposition 86 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Cigarette Tax." This measure would have quadrupled the state tax on
cigarettes and used the money raised for various health and child development
programs. We oppose cigarette taxes as regressive, making lower-income people
pay relatively more than higher-income people. More lower-income people are
smokers, and low-income smokers would pay a much higher part of their incomes
in cigarette taxes than higher-income smokers.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 86.
With our opposition, Proposition 86 was defeated by a statewide vote
of 4,136,358 (48.3%) Yes to 4,425,689 (51.7%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 351,967 (45.9%) to 414,518 (54.1%).
- Proposition 87 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Oil Severance Tax for Clean Energy." This measure would have created a
new oil severance tax, raising $4 billion that would have been used for research,
development and promotion of alternative clean and renewable energy.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote YES on 87.
Despite our support, Proposition 87 was defeated by a statewide vote
of 3,861,217 (45.4%) Yes to 4,635,265 (54.6%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 319,913 (42.0%) to 440,103 (58.0%).
- Proposition 88 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Parcel Tax for Education." This measure would have created a new,
regressive statewide parcel tax to be used for various programs in K-12 education.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 88.
With our opposition, Proposition 88 was defeated by a statewide vote
of 1,947,312 (23.3%) Yes to 6,396,956 (76.7%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 156,578 (21.0%) to 588,136 (79.0%).
- Proposition 89 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Public Funding of Political Campaigns." This is the "Clean Money"
initiative put on the ballot by the California Nurses Association. It would have
provided public funding of campaigns for state elective offices to candidates who
agree not to spend any other money and show broad support by collecting enough $5
"qualifying contributions" from potential constituents, funded by an
increase in the corporate income tax. The measure would have also limited corporate
contributions to campaigns for and against ballot measures. While this measure
wasn't perfect (among other things, Demopublican candidates can much more easily
qualify for more public funding than can progressive third party and independent
candidates), it would still have been a big step forward to reducing the control of
corporations and the rich over electoral politics.
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote YES on 89.
Despite our support, Proposition 89 was defeated by a statewide vote
of 2,124,728 (25.7%) Yes to 6,132,618 (74.3%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 178,439 (24.1%) to 559,122 (75.9%).
- Proposition 90 (the voter pamphlet's
summary,
analysis,
arguments
for and against and rebuttals, and
the full text (as PDF) are available):
"Property Rights." This measure was a deceptive Trojan Horse. While
promoted as protecting small property owners from losing their homes or
businesses to well-connected developers, what it actually would have done was to
restrict government's ability to take any action that might reduce the value
of property (e.g., protect the environment, regulate land use, require fair
treatment of tenants).
The Peace and Freedom Party urged that you vote NO on 90.
With our opposition, Proposition 90 was defeated by a statewide vote
of 3,932,043 (47.6%) Yes to 4,324,722 (52.4%) No.
In San Diego County, the vote was 394,216 (53.7%) to 340,425 (46.3%).
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