U.S. HOUSE - MINN. DISTRICT 7

Transcription

U.S. HOUSE - MINN. DISTRICT 7
U.S. HOUSE - MINN. DISTRICT 7
Representatives serve two-year terms with an annual salary of $174,000.
*incumbent
Collin C. Peterson*
Party: DFL
Education: B.A.
Business
Administration and
Accounting,
Minnesota State
University
Moorhead
Political/career
experience: Minnesota State Senate,
1977-1986 U.S. House of
Representatives, 1991-present.
Torrey N. Westrom
Party: Republican
Education: Bemidji
State University,
William Mitchell
College of Law
Political/career
experience:
Minnesota state
representative
1997-2013, Minnesota state senator
2013 to present
5. How will you work to
ensure successful
funding of the FargoMoorhead Diversion?
2. What are the biggest
issues facing the nation
and the 7th District?
3. What changes, if any at
all, would you make to the
Affordable Care Act?
4. What would you do to
help farmers in the 7th
District?
Voters in the 7th District should
keep me in office because I
have always been and will
continue to be an independent
voice on the issues most
important to them. My district is
rural and agricultural, and I will
continue to be a champion for
our rural communities, farmers
and small business by listening
to my constituents and working
on their behalf in Washington
DC.
What’s most important to me is
continuing to be an independent
voice on the issues for
Minnesota’s Seventh District in
Washington DC. I represent my
district and I’m proud to serve
as the top Democrat on the
House Agriculture Committee.
Earlier this year I helped write
and pass a bipartisan five-year
farm bill, and I will continue
working with USDA to make
sure that the bill we passed is
implemented as it was intended.
I also plan to continue my work
to help mitigate flooding in the
Valley.
In 2010, I voted no on the
Affordable Care Act because I
did not believe it would lower the
cost of heath insurance, it would
not fix the regional disparities in
our Medicare reimbursement
rates, and it would only cover
around 30 percent of the
uninsured people in my district.
However, we need to make sure
that we keep elimination of preexisting condition exclusions
and keep children on a parent’s
health plan until they’re 26. I
think there’s room to fix and
improve many of the problems.
As the top Democrat and
Ranking Member of the U.S.
House Agriculture Committee, I
helped write and pass a
bipartisan five-year farm bill,
and I will continue working with
USDA to make sure that the bill
we passed is implemented as it
was intended. There is much
work left to be done, and I will
work to protect challenges to
the crop insurance program so
that our farmers continue to
have a safety net in the years
to come.
As work continues to bring
permanent flood protection to
the Red River Valley, I will
continue to support funding for
a diversion and for water
retention projects that will help
to mitigate flooding throughout
the Valley. As this process
moves forward, I will continue
my efforts to bring people
together so we can achieve
permanent flood protection for
the region.
Like many Minnesotans, I am
concerned that our nation is
heading down a dangerous path
of unsustainable spending
money we don’t have, but I
firmly believe that by sending
new leadership to Washington
now, we can reverse course and
get our country back on track.
We need someone who will
stand up to the big spenders in
Washington, instead of rubberstamping the President’s failed
liberal policies.
Voters are worried about out of
control spending, our
increasing debt, ObamaCare
and the overreach from the
EPA. Skyrocketing health
insurance premiums under
ObamaCare are hurting
families and small businesses.
Farmers are worried about the
impact of the Environmental
Protection Agency rule that
would redefine “navigable
waters” and open the door for
more costly regulation. I believe
we should rollback government
overreach and focus on
smaller, smarter government.
I believe we need to repeal
ObamaCare immediately.
There are a handful of decent
policies that exist in this 2,400
page law, like coverage for preexisting conditions or allowing
children up to the age of 26 to
stay on their parent’s insurance,
but most of the bill has proven
to be unpopular and
unworkable. I will work to
repeal ObamaCare and start
over with bipartisan, common
sense solutions for doctors and
patients. We need reform that
increases flexibility, expands
options, and lowers costs.
I was raised on a dairy farm,
and know firsthand the hard
work and sacrifice that goes
into running an agribusiness. I
will be a strong and vocal
advocate for agriculture in
Congress, and fight for policies
that help keep Minnesota a
leader in agriculture, starting
with reining in an out-of-control
EPA and protecting policies
that support ethanol and
renewables. Farmers who work
in the field, not bureaucrats in
Washington, know best how to
maintain and protect America’s
heartland.
Flood diversion in FargoMoorhead is a top priority for
both Minnesotans and North
Dakotans. A plan and
implementation strategy that
meets the needs of both states
can only be found through
dialog and compromise. I will
work on a bipartisan basis with
state and federal officials to
secure funding for a plan that
will provide a solution that
works for residents and
landowners for generations to
come.
1. Why should voters
choose you over your
opponent?
Candidates’ answers are in their own words and were not altered. However, in some instances, longer responses appear online.
Read more about these and other candidates online at www.inforum.com