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Related: About this forumArizona Senate Candidate Richard Carmona: No wonder the Republicans are scared.
This is a great political ad. Good luck to the Arizona Senate Campaign!
Tx4obama
(36,974 posts)avebury
(10,952 posts)Lochloosa
(16,068 posts)Hell, if he was a repug he would have my vote.....NOT!
skamaria
(329 posts)I had to go to wiki to find if he was a Democrat. I guess you have to sort of hide it if you live in Arizona.
TrollBuster9090
(5,955 posts)you have to make the race about the man, not the party. Basically the reverse of what Scott Brown is doing in Massachusetts right now. He's not a Republican. He's apparently a member of the 'Bipartisan Party,' whatever the heck that is.
janx
(24,128 posts)I'm next door in NM, and the people I know in AZ (Flagstaff, Sedona, and some rural areas) are definitely not Republicans.
TrollBuster9090
(5,955 posts)After all, there was a day when New Mexico was considered a solid Republican state.
geckosfeet
(9,644 posts)Richard Henry Carmona (born November 22, 1949) is an American physician, police officer, public health administrator, and politician. He was a vice admiral in the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and served as the seventeenth Surgeon General of the United States. Appointed by President George W. Bush in 2002, Carmona left office at the end of July 2006 upon the expiration of his term. After leaving office, Carmona was highly critical of the Bush administration for suppressing scientific findings which conflicted with the Administration's ideological agenda.
In August 2006, Carmona returned home to Tucson, Arizona.[1] In November 2011, he announced he would seek the Democratic Party's nomination for United States Senate in the hopes of succeeding outgoing Republican Senator Jon Kyl, despite being registered as a political Independent.[2]
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Criticism of Bush administration
On July 10, 2007, Carmona, along with former Surgeons General C. Everett Koop and David Satcher, testified before the United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform about political and ideological interference with the Surgeon General's mission. Carmona accused the Bush Administration of preventing him from speaking out on certain public health issues such as embryonic stem cell research, global climate change,[17] emergency contraception, and abstinence-only sex education, where the Administration's political stance conflicted with scientific and medical opinion.[18]
Carmona also testified that the Bush Administration had attempted for years to "water down" his report on the dangers of secondhand smoke and pressured him not to testify in the tobacco industry's racketeering trial: "Anything that doesn't fit into the political appointees' ideological, theological or political agenda is ignored, marginalized or simply buried."[19][20] According to Carmona, he was even ordered not to attend the Special Olympics because the event was sponsored by the Kennedy family, and was told to mention President Bush three times on every page of his speeches.[13] The Washington Post subsequently identified William R. Steiger as the Bush Administration official who had blocked release of Carmona's report on global health because it conflicted with the Administration's political priorities.[21]
janx
(24,128 posts)Very well done.
NoMoreWarNow
(1,259 posts)I think ultimately a party succeeds on the basis of their candidates-- how compelling they are and how good at messaging. Seems like the Dems may be getting better at this.