
U.S. House of Representatives - District 1
District 1 — U.S. House of Representatives
Get the facts on the California candidates running for election to the District 1 — U.S. House of Representatives
Find out their top 3 priorities, their experience, and who supports them.
About this office
News and links
News
Events
Videos
April 30, 2018 - Harlen Adams Theatre at Chico State University, Chico, CA
Starting at 7 pm, the June 5, 2018 candidates for Representative, California 1st Congressional District give opening and closing statements about their priorities in this election. Questions from the audience and the press were asked of the candidates.
Candidates participating: Jessica Jones Holcombe, Marty Walters, Gregory Edward Cheadle, David Peterson, Lewis Elbinger, Audrey Denney
Candidates
Doug La Malfa
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- Our elected officials should be beholden only to the...
- Guarantee universal, high-quality healthcare through...
- I will fight for north state workers to bring more...
- Supports Medicare for All by ensuring every American...
- Supports affordable housing and increased access to...
- Increased funding for vocational training and tuition-free...
- Rural Economic Development
- Sustainable and Productive Forestry
- Universal Healthcare
- Decrease Bipartisan friction
- Campaign reform - NO money from outside the congressional...
- Mandatory legislative review time prior to pasage....
David Peterson
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Lewis Elbinger
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Candidate Contact Info
My Top 3 Priorities
- Our elected officials should be beholden only to the people they serve, not to corporations and special interests.I do not and will not take contributions from corporations, or the PACs they support
- Guarantee universal, high-quality healthcare through Single-Payer/ Medicare for All
- I will fight for north state workers to bring more jobs to our region, increase job readiness and workforce development through improved career and technical education
Experience
Experience
Biography
Audrey has a rich background in agriculture, education, and nonprofit leadership.
She holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree in Agricultural Education from California State University, Chico. She taught agriculture at CSU, Chico for six years and is now in her third year as a Senior Learning Designer at Vivayic where she designs learning strategy and curriculum for worldwide agricultural organizations.
Her volunteer work includes serving on the board of directors for Cristosal, an internationally renowned human rights organization and the mission committee of Bidwell Presbyterian Church in Chico, CA.
Audrey’s passion for the north state and commitment to working with people of all backgrounds make her the only choice to represent California’s 1st congressional district.
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Political Beliefs
Political Philosophy
I believe that Congress can, and must, do better. I feel called to ensure the North State has a representative who listens to them and fights for them.
We live in troubled times. Yet, troubled times give rise to big ideas, big movements, and big change. I am running for Congress because I want to be a part of the movement that inspires all people to engage with politics on a deeper level, to offer our talents, and to take our seats at the table.
It is my conviction that if we listen to each other and work together, it will be our hope, our success, and our joy that unite us.
I am incredibly proud to be a California Democrat and I will be an asset to my party and constituents. Our party is the party that champions the inherent rights and dignity of all people. That sentiment is at the core of my faith and the core of who I am , how I make decisions, and how I will lead.
Candidate Contact Info
My Top 3 Priorities
- Supports Medicare for All by ensuring every American has access to affordable healthcare
- Supports affordable housing and increased access to renewable energy, especially solar, and bringing broadband to all rural areas of the district
- Increased funding for vocational training and tuition-free public universities for qualified students
Experience
Experience
Education
Community Activities
Biography
For many working families, the skyrocketing costs of healthcare, housing, education, and basic living expenses has taken the American dream out of their reach. Families earning minimum wage must choose between paying rent or putting food on the table. Between 2009-2014, 58% of all new income went to our country’s top 1%, while 1 in 5 children in America still live below the poverty line.
Those aren’t just numbers to me. I was one of those kids.
A democracy means a chance for all of us to improve our lives, not just the lives of the wealthiest Americans. Yet, since the 1980’s, the lion’s share of opportunities in our nation have remained in the grip of billionaires and multi-millionaires instead of working families. In many of our rural districts, over 50% of households live on an annual income of less than $50,000 – with over 25% living on less than $25,000 a year. In order to truly make America the land of opportunity again, we must provide a living wage of at least $15 per hour to ALL workers and provide our students with access to free public university education and vocational training.
Some of the hardest work in our country is done by the people whose labor ensures we have food on our tables and a roof over our heads – regardless of whether our families came to America in our lifetime or generations ago. My husband immigrated to the US from Holland, and my great-grandparents immigrated here from Slovenia and Croatia. My great-grandmother was a laundress and my great-grandfather poured cement.
For years, tax loopholes and low rates have given advantages to corporations, real estate and passive investors – to the detriment of wage earners and working families. This needs to stop NOW.
Because of the lobbying power of insurance and pharmaceutical companies, we are the only developed nation that does not provide universal healthcare to its citizens. Healthcare is a right, not a privilege for those who can afford it. We must elect members of Congress who place the needs of their voters before those of large corporations.
Roosevelt envisioned four key freedoms for America: Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear. To these freedoms I would add: the right to know our vote counts.
Let’s take dark money out of our political process.
Let’s take America back for the people!
Who supports this candidate?
Featured Endorsements
Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California Education Fund (5)
We must support a federal farm bill which provides increased incentives for development and usage of technology for water conservation and to stem the tide of farm nutrients and waste runoff into streams, putting our drinking water, animals and plant growth at risk. I support the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to install irrigation systems that help prevent groundwater contamination.
Rather than prioritizing new reservoirs, we must first repair our existing levees and dams, 4,000 of which are considered in disrepair. I will fight for funding to repair aging pipes and faulty meters of our drinking water infrastructure which result in the loss of 2 trillion gallons of treated drinking water each year.
I would co-sponsor The Rebuild America Act which would invest $12 billion per year to repair dams that provide drinking water, irrigation, hydropower, and flood control. A lack of investment and prioritizing infrastructure repair of our at-risk dams and reservoirs led to the collapse of the Oroville Dam spillway and the subsequent evacuation of 200,000 residents in our district. The Act would also invest $6 billion per year for states to improve our access to clean drinking water and another $6 billion to improve wastewater plants and storm water management.
Managing our forests is critical to our access to clean water. More than 60% of California’s developed water supply originates in the Sierra Nevada where forests play a key role in our water quality. Many of the Sierra forests are overgrown, resulting in high-density, smaller trees and undergrowth which compete for resources, such as water, and pose a risk of increased fires, impacting the quality of our water. Forest thinning is therefore directly related to our access and quality of water. According to the Nature Conservancy, if the current scale of forest restoration is increased three-fold, there could be up to a 6% increase in the mean annual streamflow for individual watersheds.
In order to ensure that our access to clean water is available to all Californians, not just special interest groups, I oppose any federal regulations, such as H.R. 23, that reverse California state water laws and jeopardize our environment.
Through increased federal funding, we can improve California’s quality and access to water; from underground basins, by improving the infrastructure of our current reservoirs, and by managing our forests while fighting to protect our environment and the long-term viability of our water supply.
Americans spend more per capita than any other country in the world, amounting to one-sixty of our economy. Yet, despite the hefty price tag, the United States remains the only developed country which does not provide universal healthcare to its citizens.
Americans deserve the right and assurance that regardless of age or the nature of the medical care required, they have access to healthcare, without exclusions and without limits.
Universal healthcare would lower the costs of services and prescription medication through a single payer plan with reduced administrative costs by removing the involvement and interference of private insurance. Although median household incomes have not increased significantly since the 1980’s, healthcare costs have risen exponentially. Business owners and their employees have been shouldering the burden of these high costs. Even for those workers who have insurance through their employers, the costs passed on to workers particularly for coverage of a spouse and children are outpacing increases in a worker’s income.
By lowering healthcare costs, employers will have greater flexibility to raise wages and lower the contributions for healthcare required by employees, resulting in more take-home pay for working families. Americans would no longer need to make the difficult choice between paying for rent and food or paying for healthcare, or filing bankruptcy because a family could not afford the high cost of a medical procedure.
Through universal healthcare, our citizens who have the courage and aspire to start new businesses will have greater flexibility and freedom to ensure that they and their employees have access to healthcare.
The Affordable Care Act significantly expanded access to healthcare for millions of Americans through subsidies, eligibility for Medicaid, and the increased protections against lifetime limits on coverage and exclusions due to pre-existing conditions. Universal healthcare would build further on the achievements of the ACA by ensuring all Americans have access to coverage by putting the interests of our citizens first above the profit interests of the insurance and pharmaceutical companies.
Rural communities are especially in need of expanded access to medical care and services provided by local clinics. By providing expanded student loan forgiveness to healthcare professionals and promoting communities which are welcoming of new members regardless of their race or religion or who they love, we can attract talented healthcare providers to our rural districts. I support funding to increase access to medical services in rural communities to meet the needs of residents in remote locations and to encourage more families to live in our beautiful region of California.
Whether our ancestors came to America many generations ago or whether we were born overseas and America is now our home, such as for my husband, Vincent, who is originally from a farming community in The Netherlands, we have always been proud of our diversity and ingenuity and the hard work and entrepreneurship of immigrants who have made America the prosperous nation we know today.
When my great grandmother and great grandfather immigrated to northern California, they took in laundry and poured cement to make a living and ensure a stable life for their children. Like my great grandparents, many of our current immigrants and first generation Americans are prepared to perform difficult work harvesting our fields and building our homes and key infrastructure while enriching our communities. For these reasons, I am a fierce advocate for immigration reform, including the “blue card” program supported by Senators Feinstein and Harris to provide a legal pathway for undocumented farm workers to stay in America and eventually obtain citizenship.
For most of the children of undocumented immigrants who came to America while very young, our country is the only country they know. They are our friends and neighbors, fellow students and co-workers. I have had the honor and sincere pleasure to get to know two DREAMers in our district who are leaders in our fight for the rights of all immigrants nationally and by meeting with members of the Silicon Valley business community, including Mark Zuckerberg, and our senator in California, Kamala Harris.
Our nation’s greatest leaders, Martin Luther King and Cesar Chavez, fervently fought for our civil rights and the rights of farm workers. And, in decades past, we have made progress against racism and discrimination through the Civil Rights Act and legislation to protect those who perform dangerous and labor-intensive work. Yet, the current administration and attorney general would turn our country back not only to a pre-Obama era but a pre-Civil Rights era. We will not let America slip backwards. We are moving this country forwards, and we are electing members of Congress who firmly condemn white supremacy and neo-Nazism.
We will not stand by silently in the face of injustice. We will continue to rekindle the flame held by the Statute of Liberty and carry the torch for our immigrants and refugees.
America is now and will always remain a land of immigrants.
Managing our forests is critical to our access to clean water. More than 60% of California’s developed water supply originates in the Sierra Nevada where forests play a key role in our water quality. Many of the Sierra forests are overgrown, resulting in high-density, smaller trees and undergrowth which compete for resources, such as water, and pose a risk of increased fires, impacting the quality of our water. Forest thinning is therefore directly related to our access and quality of water. According to the Nature Conservancy, if the current scale of forest restoration is increased three-fold, there could be up to a 6% increase in the mean annual streamflow for individual watersheds.
In order to ensure that our access to clean water is available to all Californians, not just special interest groups, I oppose any federal regulations, such as H.R. 23, that reverse California state water laws and jeopardize our environment.
Through increased federal funding, we can improve California’s quality and access to water; from underground basins, by improving the infrastructure of our current reservoirs, and by managing our forests while fighting to protect our environment and the long-term viability of our water supply.
A democracy means a chance for all of us to improve our lives, not just the lives of the wealthiest Americans. Yet, since the 1980’s, the lion’s share of opportunities in our nation have remained in the grip of billionaires and multi-millionaires instead of working families. In many of our rural districts, over 50% of households live on an annual income of less than $50,000 – with over 25% living on less than $25,000 a year. In order to truly make America the land of opportunity again, we must provide a living wage of at least $15 per hour to ALL workers and provide our students with access to free public university education and vocational training.
Some of the hardest work in our country is done by the people whose labor ensures we have food on our tables and a roof over our heads – regardless of whether our families came to America in our lifetime or generations ago. My husband immigrated to the US from Holland, and my great-grandparents immigrated here from Slovenia and Croatia. My great-grandmother was a laundress and my great-grandfather poured cement.
For years, tax loopholes and low rates have given advantages to corporations, real estate and passive investors – to the detriment of wage earners and working families. This needs to stop NOW.
Because of the lobbying power of insurance and pharmaceutical companies, we are the only developed nation that does not provide universal healthcare to its citizens. Healthcare is a right, not a privilege for those who can afford it. We must elect members of Congress who place the needs of their voters before those of large corporations.
Roosevelt envisioned four key freedoms for America: Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear. To these freedoms I would add: the right to know our vote counts.
Let’s take dark money out of our political process.
Let’s take America back for the people!
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Political Beliefs
Position Papers
Read more on our policy positions here: http://www.holcombeforcongress.com/endorsements/
Read more on our policy positions here: http://www.holcombeforcongress.com/endorsements/
Read more on our policy positions here: http://www.holcombeforcongress.com/endorsements/
Candidate Contact Info
My Top 3 Priorities
- Rural Economic Development
- Sustainable and Productive Forestry
- Universal Healthcare
Experience
Education
Biography
As an environmental scientist for 30 years, I’ve cleaned up big messes, responded to disasters, and managed large, complex projects, cutting through a tangle of regulations to get stuff done. I’ve worked around the world at the intersection of environmental protection and economics, and now I’m ready to work for you.
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Political Beliefs
Political Philosophy
I understand the importance of our region to the success of California and the United States, and I want our government to better support our hard work through good-quality healthcare and education, living-wage jobs, twenty-first century infrastructure, smart environmental management, and retirement security. As a single mother who raised three young adults in Plumas County, I know how challenging it can be to find success in our rural communities.
We can create a New Rural Economy in Northern California by collaborating with our small businesses and entrepreneurs and building upon the District’s unique resources and character. We can put sustainable forestry front and center, reducing wildfires and protecting watersheds while preserving ecosystems, creating jobs, and keeping public lands accessible for recreation. We can develop new local industries, making products that help us respond to climate change. We can bring back rural communities as centers for arts and culture, services, and remote work, all supported by reliable high-speed internet. Let’s make that our reality.
Candidate Contact Info
My Top 3 Priorities
- Decrease Bipartisan friction
- Campaign reform - NO money from outside the congressional district, $1000 maximum campaign contribution per enitity
- Mandatory legislative review time prior to pasage. Minimum of 1 business day per ten pages of legislation including pages referred to in the bill itself.
Experience
Experience
Education
Community Activities
Biography
I always wanted to be a pediatrician. My undergraduate degree was in psychology with an emphasis in physiological psychology and premed. I went on to graduate school and got a Master of Public Administration with a concentration in Healthcare Administration. It was during this time I also got my California real estate broker's license that gave me the flexibility to work independently rather than be confined to racial lines still lingering in the real estate field. My plans to go to medical school were interrupted when my then 20-month-old son was diagnosed with cancer and had to go through 38 months of chemotherapy. I went on to law school and then jumped into politics because I was not content to sit on the sidelines and complain and do nothing.
The education I have been blessed to acquire comes with a responsibility - the responsibility in my mind is to work to better society rather than work to enrich myself.
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Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California Education Fund (5)
The power grid would be the first priority. WIth respect to the roads, bridges, etc., we must first deal with the assault on our acquifers which is causing the land to sink, leading to the crumbling of our roads.
The status quo is unacceptable. Rewarding people for healthy lifestyles is the only way we can have a viable healthcare system that will benefit all Americans. A country that allows for the prevelance of alcoholics and alcohol abuse, legal and illegal drug addicts and abuse, gluttony, and obesity, cannot sustain a viable healthcare system.
The immigration laws that are already on the books. We don't need more laws on the sublect.
Agriculture in California is responsible for 80 percent of the water used, yet it represents only 2 percent of the economy. I would therefore support agricultural products that are not water intense.
One cannot legislate civility. One must lead by example.
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Political Beliefs
Political Philosophy
I am an 1856 Republican. In the 1856 era, White Republicans were killed along with the Black slaves they sought to free. The point being, the 1856 Republicans were committed to principle, fairness, justice, and equality. The modern day Republican is sorely lacking in these qualities. I am a strong believer in the Constitution of the United Sates as the rule of law. Moreover, I believe in individual responsibility.
The two party system is ruinous for the country in that it is nothing more than a two-headed snake that is manipulated by corporate interests. We must get money out of politics. I have proposed that for congressional races that no money should come from outside the district and that the maximum contribution to a candidate should be $1000 per entity.
With respect to healthcare, I am a proponent of prevention of disease and disease states and personal responsibility. Mandatory vaccination should not be allowed unless exemptions for religious and personal beliefs are allowed. Moreover, pharmaceutical companies must be held accountable, hence liable for vaccine injuries. Parents and guardians should be able to sue the vaccine manufacturers directly. Also with healthcare funding, alcohol and tobacco companies should be taxed to the level their products impact the health and welfare of the population.
Videos (5)
This video talks about my views in general.
This is a video of one of my appearances on CNN.
This is a video of one of my appearances on CNN.
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