由买买提看人间百态

boards

本页内容为未名空间相应帖子的节选和存档,一周内的贴子最多显示50字,超过一周显示500字 访问原贴
SanFrancisco版 - 与加州参议院第7选区候选人Steve Glazer的 会谈记录
相关主题
SD 7选举候選人分析where to live if work in downtown san francisco
华人参政:SD7候选人近距离观感 - Susan BonillaSF DownTown工作 在哪租房
为什么,5/19 SD7要投Steve Glazer一票要搬到三蕃了,各位大侠们建议一下租房地点。
Silicon Valley Chinese Association Endorses Steve Glazer for State Senate新人求教
求同存异-选举中的民主和集中求推荐Dublin/Pleasanton/Walnut Creek的real agent和OB
请大家推荐一下Orinda, Lafayette, Walnut Creek附近的公寓吧!City上班的都住哪里?
为女儿上K发愁,三藩的家长请进在三藩上班,住Danville可行吗?
住在东湾的吼一嗓子吧买房求推荐地点
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: my话题: glazer话题: want话题: steve话题: sd7
进入SanFrancisco版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
l****h
发帖数: 271
1
加州参议院第7选区(SD7)因为前任议员升任国会议员产生空缺。将在三月17日举行特殊
初选 (Special Primary Election),如果初选没人获得超过50%的选票,五月19日将举
行特别终选(Special General Election) 决定最后胜负。经过SCA5抗争的华人朋友都
很清楚州议员职位的重要性。议员们提议和评审加州各项法律法规,包括加州宪法。
积极关心,参与议员的选举可以帮助支持符合华裔价值观念的候选人,保护华裔的利益。
另注:California Senate District 7 (SD7) 包括两个县的下列城市:
Alameda County: Dublin, Livermore, Pleasanton
Contra Costa County: Antioch, Brentwood, Clayton, Concord, Danville,
Lafayette, Moraga, Oakley, Orinda, Pittsburg, San Ramon, Walnut Creek
这次SD7特别选举最初一共有五位候选人。 唯一的共和党候选人Michaela Hertle 最后
关头决定退出选举,其他候选人包括Steve Galzer (D), AD 14 Assemblywoman Susan
Bonilla (D), Former AD16 Assembly woman Joan Buchanan (D), 以及Terry Kremin
(D) . Hertle退出的时候跨党派背书民主党候选人Steve Glazer。 可惜她退出的决定
太晚,选票没法更改, 还是会出现一个共和党候选人选项。Hertle 最近发出邮件呼吁
所有支持共和党的选民投票给Glazer.
SVCA (Silicon Valley Chinese Association) 派出几名代表,和候选人之一,温和民
主党人士Steve Glazer面谈询问他的竞选动机以及华人关心的议题的立场。下面是会谈
的会议记录。我们总的感觉是在所有有效的民主党候选人中,Glazer的立场非常接近共
和党,特别是他提倡的fisical conservative, pension reform, anti-BART strikes,
anti-union。 他说大学入学应该是merit based and color blinded. Glazer也提到
当年犹太人大学入学的配额,表示理解华裔反对SCA5的动机。 希望该会议记录能帮助
SD7华人选民积极参选,选出最符合自己理念的候选人。
Meeting Minutes with Steve Glazer, candidate for SD7
Written by Crystal Lu
Time: 3-4:30 p.m. Saturday, February 15, 2015
Location: Pleasanton
Guest: Steve Glazer
Q: Why did you decide to run for the Senate position representing SD7?
------------------------
A: I want to utilize my experience and leadership to benefit the residents
of the East Bay. I have a lot of passion about the issues; but it’s not
just about ambition. I didn’t need to run for AD16 or SD7. If you really
NEED to do that, there are certain things that you believe must be said to
be successful, principally pleasing party leaders. I have been involved in
politics for a very long time and don’t want my campaign to be about
pleasing powerful interests. In fact, reducing the power of special
interests is one of the reasons that I AM running. I want to lead; but it’s
not just about ambition. The typical attractants to a politicians don’t
work for me. No special interest groups are propping me up.
The conventional wisdom tells you that the more you say, the worse off you
are. Therefore you don’t want to put your positions out. That’s why you
don’t see much on my opponents’ Websites. They think they can win based on
endorsements and big names you are associated with. I’m the exact opposite
- I want to be judged by my positions. I want to be transparent. My
positions are laid out on my Website GlazerforSenate.com.
So one of the things that set me apart from my opponents is the transparency
issue. I’m not trying to say I’m your perfect candidate, but I put my
positions out there for you to judge, and I have been consistent throughout
the years.
I bring many assets to this race. I am well known. I have a track record of
being independently minded. I have a strong donor base, which makes me
competitive against the special interest money.
The best representative in Sacramento is one that represents your community
first and foremost, not powerful interests. When I vote, I want to vote
based on what is in the best interest of the voters in my district, not what
the party in Sacramento thinks is best. That why I’m comfortable calling
myself an independent Democrat.
One example is the legislation, supported by my opponents, that caps the
reserve fund schools can set aside. I am opposed to this state mandate.
School districts need the autonomy and flexibility to save money from a
future state budget shortfall. Our representatives need to protect our
district interests despite pressure from party leaders or the Governor.
Another example is the high speed rail. I like the idea of the High Speed
Rail, but we don’t have a financial plan that makes it viable. I would
rather see the money used to improve our local roads, highways and transit.
Again, this is not the party line, nor does it align with Governor Brown but
it is the right position for this district.
My independence has a price to be paid. The unions funds 90% of the
democratic campaigns, but they have not and will not give me one single
dollar, because they don’t feel they can own me. I won’t be controlled by
any interest groups.
Q: What assets do you bring to the race?
------------------------
A: First, my positions on issues. I’m socially progressive and fiscally
conservative. These two things don’t have to conflict with each other. I
want the government to help people in need, to do great things for the
people, but every dollar has to be spent efficiently. This way taxpayers
would want to give you another dollar to spend. So you have to be fiscally
conservative to be socially progressive. Party labels are simply labels. It
’s the issues that count.
Secondly, I am well known in the district from my active political
involvement against the BART strikes, as a ten-year city council member and
from my previous service as a senior advisor to Governor Brown.
Thirdly, my funds have been mostly raised through individual contributions,
not from big special interest groups.
Lastly, from my commitment to be a bi-partisan problem solver in Sacramento.
I have a track record of working with all parties to advance important
policy improvements. I want to do big things, take big steps, to make the
political situation better.
Q: What is your position on Prop 209
------------------------
A: College admission should be merit-based and color blind. I sit on the
Board of Trustees for the 23-campus California State University system. We
want to have an inclusive and diverse student body. We should work earnestly
to help students of all backgrounds be college ready. Unfortunately, there
are underrepresented groups and we need to do more work with the K-12 and
community college systems to provide extra help to those students. But merit
should should be the driver for admission to the university. I come from a
Jewish heritage and know the historical discrimination against Jewish
people with the implementation of arbitrary student quotas in universities.
I would not want to repeat that mistake with anyone else.
Q: To many of us, public education is the biggest issue. What’s your view
on this issue?
------------------------
A: I am a strong supporter of our public school system. I believe in a
decentralized education policy which gives more power to local school boards
rather than letting Sacramento decide everything. We need to put in place
objective standards to hold school districts accountable for performance, so
we can be confident that the kids are being best served..
We need to providing greater state funding for our schools. We need to give
parents more involvement and choices within our public schools system. I
support public charter schools.
Teachers are our most important asset and we need to reward them better for
good performance. I also support raising teacher salaries. It’s crazy that
a person staffing a BART booth gets paid more than the average teacher.
Q: There are demands for companies in Silicon Valley to increase workforce
diversity. What’s your opinion?
------------------------
A: We are talking about the private sector. There are already laws about not
discriminating against current or future employees. There has to be a very
compelling reason for the government to get involved in the business of a
private employer. The government should not tell the private sector how to
run their business. In my community, we had a conflict between an existing
business and a competitor that wanted to locate there. My position was that
you have to let the free market, not government, make these choices. As long
as the new business met all of the rules and regulations, it was not
government’s role to decide winners or losers.
Q: What are the top things you want to do if you were to be elected?
------------------------
A: People often ask me what would be the first bill you want to introduce if
you are elected. I’d say let’s not make too many bills! There are enough
laws on top of existing laws. There should be a higher bar for new bills.
What I want to do is first establish fiscal stability with the state budget.
That’s the most important thing. Just raising taxes may not be the answer,
which is a different view from many in my party including my opponents in
the race. I want government to help those in need, but we need to
demonstrate to taxpayers that we can be accountable and efficient in the use
of their money. When we have developed that taxpayer confidence, they will
be open to supporting more worthwhile programs for people.
Secondly, I want to promote bi-partisanship. I want to work across the
political aisle to solve problems rather than just demonize those with a
different party affiliation. I have prior successes in bipartisanship. For
example, I agree with many Republicans who oppose rom Governor Brown on the
High Speed Rail. Another example is that Catharine Baker and I have similar
views about our underfunded public pension system. We belong to different
parties, but we share many views, despite our different party affiliation.
Many candidates talk about bipartisanship, but when was the last time they
really stood up from their own party leaders to collaborate with other party
? I have a proven record of doing this on BART, pensions, High Speed Rail,
taxes, etc.
Q: What do you expect Asian supporters to do?
------------------------
They can communicate my platform, qualifications in a form suitable for
their communities. They can prepare materials in their languages, call
their friends to engage, donate to my campaign, and so on.
I have campaign offices in Lafayette and Orinda which are used for making
phone calls to voters in the district. People can go there or work with us
on remote phone banking. Voter turnout will be low in this special election
so voter outreach is very important. The Chinese American community can make
a big impact if they are organized to turn out. The Tri-Valley is one of
my top priorities for outreach.
参考网址
* http://www.glazerforsenate.com/ Steve Glazer For Senate 官方网站,给出了非常纤细透明的立场,值得选民仔细阅读;
* http://patch.com/california/walnutcreek/lone-republican-california-senate-district-7-drops-out-race-endorses-steve-glazer 唯一的共和党候选人Michaela Hertle 退出选举,跨党派背书Steve Glazer
* http://www.joanbuchanan.com/ Buchanan for Senate 官方网站。遗憾的是,她的网站没有提供任何热点问题的立场。选民很难决定她的理念是否符合自己的。
* https://www.facebook.com/JoinSusanBonilla Susuan Bonilla Facebook page. 我
们没有找到她的官方竞选网站。很难了解她的立场。
* http://www.kremin.us/ Terry Kremin 官方竞选网站。
d*****y
发帖数: 87
2
谢谢你们的努力,虽然不在这个区,还是要顶一下!
f****t
发帖数: 2724
3
水晶呀, 你还是给翻译成中文吧。 估计这里没有几个有耐心看完英文的
e***r
发帖数: 34
4
多谢!
差点投出了废票。不知道Michaela退选了。
发动了4张票
1 (共1页)
进入SanFrancisco版参与讨论
相关主题
买房求推荐地点求同存异-选举中的民主和集中
住在Lafayette的朋友请给点建议请大家推荐一下Orinda, Lafayette, Walnut Creek附近的公寓吧!
有人了解orinda vs lafayette vs moraga吗?为女儿上K发愁,三藩的家长请进
有住东湾lafayett的朋友吗。。说说这个地方怎么样?住在东湾的吼一嗓子吧
SD 7选举候選人分析where to live if work in downtown san francisco
华人参政:SD7候选人近距离观感 - Susan BonillaSF DownTown工作 在哪租房
为什么,5/19 SD7要投Steve Glazer一票要搬到三蕃了,各位大侠们建议一下租房地点。
Silicon Valley Chinese Association Endorses Steve Glazer for State Senate新人求教
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: my话题: glazer话题: want话题: steve话题: sd7