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Published: Tuesday, October 31,
2000
Clear choices for voters in 14th Congressional
District
Incumbent Eshoo faces three challengers
by Marc Burkhardt
Although the race for the 14th Congressional District
has attracted little attention, the candidates involved say the
glaring differences in their philosophies and policies present a
clear choice for voters.
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Anna
Eshoo
Age: 57
Occupation: Incumbent
Residence: Atherton
Comments: "We have a fiscal responsibility to use the
(federal budget) surplus prudently. If we proceed with good
sense, we can continue to produce surpluses."
Bill
Quraishi
Age: 63
Occupation: Engineer
Residence: Palo Alto
Comments: "Two billion dollars have been spent on the
election so far. Are we truly representing the people of this
country?"
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The incumbent, Anna Eshoo, is emphasizing her experience on Capitol
Hill and leadership in such issues as transportation, health care,
education and e-commerce. Her opponents--Republican Bill Quraishi,
Libertarian Joseph W. Dehn and Natural Law Party candidate John
Black--emphasize their "outsider" status, stating government should
be controlled by the public and not special interests.
Eshoo, 57, was first elected to the House of Representatives in
1993. Her prior experience includes 10 years on the San Mateo County
Board of Supervisors and one year as Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy's
chief of staff. She was also the first woman chair of the San Mateo
County Democratic Party.
Among the accomplishments of her most recent term, Eshoo takes
particular pride in authoring the Early Education Act to expand
pre-kindergarten programs like Head Start; co-authoring the Patients'
Bill of Rights to provide individuals with direct access to specialists
and hold health plans accountable for denying needed care; writing
legislation to provide all Medicare beneficiaries with affordable
prescription benefits; and creating a uniform standard for business
to accept digital signatures in e-commerce.
Eshoo said her success in pursuing such legislation highlights
her ability to garner bipartisan support and her tenacity to see
an issue through to the bitter end.
"I just keep going," she said.
If elected, Eshoo promises to work on protecting the state's environment
and bolstering California's education system, as well as encouraging
and building upon the success of Silicon Valley's high-tech fueled
economy.
"We have a fiscal responsibility to use the (federal budget) surplus
prudently," she said. "If we proceed with good sense, we can continue
to produce surpluses."
Quraishi, 63, is an electrical and nuclear engineer who owns a
local engineering firm. He decries the influence of special interests
in politics, and has called the financing of campaigns "obscene,
immoral and un-American and non-representative of the American people."
"Two billion dollars have been spent on the election so far," Quraishi
stated in an interview. "Are we truly representing the people of
this country?"
Quraishi, who supports term limits for politicians, added that
he will work without pay if elected.
His campaign has also placed a great emphasis on education. Although
he doesn't support vouchers for private schools per se, Quraishi
said he does back any method or process--including providing tax
credits for families that send students to private schools--that
gives parents more control over their children's education.
"Education starts at home," he said.
Quraishi has also called for a coordinated plan to relieve traffic
congestion in the area, opposes offshore drilling and favors adding
prescription drug benefit to health care programs.
Joseph W. Dehn III has a background in computer programming and
Internet services. The 46-year-old believes the most important issue
facing the public today is the role government plays in Americans'
lives.
"Every other party says they have a plan for how you should live,"
Dehn wrote in his candidate's statement for the League of Women
Voters of Palo Alto Voters Guide. "Libertarians say: you should
decide.<\p>.<\p>.and take responsibility for your own choices."
Dehn also favors using the federal surplus to give money back to
taxpayers, either through direct rebates, tax cuts or by paying
down the federal debt.
John Black has worked as a Transcendental Meditation instructor
since 1970. He is the director of the nonprofit Maharishi Vedic
School in Palo Alto.
In his Voters Guide campaign statement, Black, 56, condemns the
political system for allowing corporate and special interest to
"bribe" legislators, resulting in "biased, short-sighted and ineffective
policies."
Black advocates preventative health care programs; the pursuit
of renewable, safe energy sources; supplanting "soil-destroying,"
"water consuming agribusiness" with organic agricultural methods;
and education reform.
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