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| CATEGORIES ABOUT ARIZONA 1ST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT ELECTION, 2006 | |
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The Arizona 1st congressional district election, 2006 was an Election for the United States House Of Representatives . The two main candidates were two-term Republican incumbent Rick Renzi and Democratic civil rights attorney Ellen Simon . Renzi defeated Simon by a 52% to 44% margin. CANDIDATES Republican
Democratic
Early life and education Simon was born and raised in a suburb of with a bachelor's degree in political science and urban studies . In 1979 she received a law degree from Suffolk University Law School . Legal career Simon served as law clerk to Judge Ann Aldrich, United States District Court, Northern District of Ohio, from 1983 to 1984. Cache of biography at EllenSimon.law , accessed October 16, 2006. After clerking, she became a well known civil rights attorney in the Cleveland area, founding her own firm, and specializing in employee protection law. She was the lead attorney in a several landmark Ohio cases. Among those were winning the first discrimination case of its kind, on behalf of an AIDS patient who was refused admission to a hospital, and winning a case in Ohio's first same-sex sexual harassment trial. [http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:GcfloeP6RV0J:www.ellensimonlaw.com/ellen%2520simon%2520biography.htm+%22ellen+simon%22+%22law+clerk%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=6&client=firefox-a] In July 2001, the National Law Journal ranked her as one of the "Nation's Leading Litigators." Simon has taught Employment Law at the Cleveland-Marshall College Of Law . Personal Simon is married to Blaine Tanner, who has become a campaign issue. Tanner and his previous wife separated in 1991. After the separation, there were allegation that Tanner was a "deadbeat dad." Jon Kamman, "Woes of candidate's husband cloud race" , ''Arizona Republic", August 17, 2006 In response, Simon and Tanner filed a libel suit that asked for an injunction against Pamela Tanner, who lives in Canada, saying that she made numerous false and defamatory claims in the postings and accusing her of trying to extort $10 million from them by threatening media exposure. Just days before the Arizona Democratic primary, a Canadian court ruled against the ex-wife. Aaron Blake, "Renzi challenger wins injunction against husband’s ex-wife" , ''The Hill'', September 6, 2006 Libertarian
PRIMARY CAMPAIGN Arizona has an open-primary. There were seven candidates who ran in the September 12 , 2006 primary, five of them Democratic, Libertarian David Schlosser, and Republican Rick Renzi. Renzi collected 37,644 votes and Schlosser 606. Among the five Democrats, Simon won a decisive victory. 2006 primary election results , Arizona Secretary of State's Office, accessed October 16, 2006 GENERAL ELECTION At one point, Renzi appeared to have an easy race for his third term when Democrat Jack Jackson Jr., a Native American former state representative, dropped his challenge. Democrats then drafted civil rights attorney Ellen Simon , who won the Democratic primary. Despite entering the race in May, Simon had been able to raise $821,595 as of August 23. However, she still trailed Renzi significantly in cash on hand as Renzi held on to a slight lead in the polls. In mid-August ''CQPolitics'' changed their rating of this race from Safe Republican to ''Leans Republican''.1 The most recent ''Cook Political Report rating was: '''Leans Republican'''.'' Nevertheless, Renzi was able to hold onto his lead, and won by eight percentage points. 2006 General Election (Unofficial Results) , U.S. Representative in Congress - District No. 1, Arizona Secretary of State's Office, accessed November 13, 2006 REFERENCES EXTERNAL LINKS |
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