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Brown, Lt
The California's 4th congressional district election, 2006 was an election for the United States House of Representatives. The two major party candidates were longtime incumbent John Doolittle (R) and challenger Charles Brown (D). more...
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Doolittle retained his seat with 104,307 votes (49%) compared to Brown with 97,022 votes (46%).. Libertarian Dan Warren got 5% of the vote.
Primary
In the Republican primary on June 6, 2006, Doolittle was challenged for his party's nomination by Mike Holmes, the mayor of Auburn. Citing Doolittle's score of -4 on its scorecard, Republicans for Environmental Protection endorsed Holmes. Doolittle raised more than $1.1 million in campaign contributions, more than 14 times that of Holmes, as of the last reporting deadline before the election. Doolittle won the primary with 67% of the vote. Doolittle’s tally in the GOP primary was a decline in both real numbers and margin of victory, however, compared to previous years and represented less than 42% of the overall votes cast in all parties' primaries for the 4th-district seat.
Democratic challenger
Charles D. "Charlie" Brown (born 1949) was a retired U.S. Air Force Lt. Colonel. Brown graduated from the United States Air Force Academy in 1972 and served 26 years on active duty in the Air Force, primarily as a pilot, first flying helicopters during the Vietnam War, and then fixed wing aircraft. He held a master's degree in aviation management from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and a California teaching credential. Brown was elected to two terms on the Supervisory Committee of the Sierra Central Credit Union and two terms as vice president of the Roseville Police Association. He worked for eight years on the professional staff of the Roseville Police Department after retiring from the Air Force.
A social moderate, Brown identified his other top priorities as: protecting Social Security; keeping American jobs at home; stopping out-of-control deficit spending; strengthening national security while bringing the war in Iraq to a quick and secure resolution; supporting strong, safe schools; ensuring clean water and air; and making good healthcare accessible to everyone. Brown is pro-choice, saying, "the government doesn’t get to make personal decisions for Americans, no matter how much they might like to do so.... I don’t have to approve. I don’t even have to understand. It’s not about me. It’s about individual liberties."
General election campaign
Themes
Brown defined his number-one issue as "the Constitution, including the Second Amendment" and questioned whether the Republican leaders in the George W. Bush administration and the 109th Congress genuinely believed in individual liberties in light of policies allowing spying without a warrant on American citizens; or in small government given huge and ineffective bureaucracies; or in fiscal responsibility having run up huge deficits. He characterized the incumbent, John Doolittle, as being among extremists who had taken over the party and allowed corporations to binge on federal contracts in the midst of a war while underfunding the Veterans Administration and neglecting the needs of middle-class families.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
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