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February 25, 2009 11:20 PM UTC

Meet David Canter

  • 14 Comments
  • by: Steve Harvey

( – promoted by Colorado Pols)

David Canter, one of the two Democratic candidates for Congress in CD-6, sat down recently to talk with me about why he is running, and what he feels qualifies him for the position. Here are some excerpts from that conversation:

SH: David, tell me why you decided to run for Congress.

DC: First and foremost what motivated me was the past eight years of the Bush-Cheney administration, what some might call the “Cheney-Bush administration.” Under the Bush administration, our country lost sight of those qualities that made this country great, and it seemed to me as though we lost our way a little bit. I made a decision that, rather than sit on the sidelines and watch things happen, it was my time to get into the game and actually make a difference and make a change.

SH: What qualities do you bring to our political process?

DC: One of them is compassion. It breaks my heart to think of how we turned our backs, and I say how we as a country turned our backs, on the people of New Orleans following Katrina. It touches my heartstrings when I see children suffer, and I think we can do better. The qualities I bring are compassion and integrity. Focusing on the district that I am running in, District 6, there’s a recognition that I would be representing everybody in that district. I think under ten years of Tancredo, and the last three months of Congressman Coffman, we haven’t had representation. When I say “we,” I mean the people of my district have not had representation. They don’t care about the independents. They don’t care about the progressives. They don’t care about the Democrats. When I get to Washington D.C., I’m going to recognize that I represent everybody. I will lend an ear to everybody in my district, and a voice to those people who have been silenced for just far too long.

SH: What in your background do you think prepares you for the role of Congressman?

DC: I think that being a husband for 21 years, of being a father of 3 kids, of three teenagers, those life experiences give me certain insight into what’s going on in the world around us. Specifically, dealing with issues about education is…, if you were to ask me to rank my top priorities, they would be education, health care, and renewable energy. Education is the top issue for me. I look around and see where our kids are going in this country, and what they’re not doing…, in other words, we need to make education a priority, we need to change the dynamic and have people view education as an investment in our future, not merely as a cost. Far too many people look at education and say, “oh, it’s going to cost too much.” The last two measures that were voted down in Douglas County, I know that they were approved in Cherry Creek, but what some people did, unfortunately, was they said, “how much is it going to cost,”  and “I don’t feel like bearing that cost.” We need to readdress and reidentify what education is.

As an aside, I went to a presentation a few weeks back that was done by a Democratic business development group, and one of the advisors to the governor was there. He was talking about how wonderful things are here in the state of Colorado, with businesses coming in, providing additional incentives for businesses to organize here in the state of Colorado. Although we’re hurting here in the state, we don’t have it nearly as bad as some of the other states do. When we talk about the decrease in the housing market, comparing Colorado, which has an 8 to 9% decrease in the housing market, to California, which has a 30 to 50% decrease in the housing market; big differences. But one of the major pieces that’s missing here in the state of Colorado is education. This was coming from the economic advisor to the governor who, by the way, is not a Democrat, but is a Republican. And I agree with him. We need to readjust our thought processes as far as where education fits into the mix. I think that we need to provide incentives to kids to go to college, prepare our kids better for going to college…. The latest numbers that were coming out as far as the amount of time that teachers at the college level, professors at the college level, have to retrain their kids in remedial measures in terms of getting them ready to actually take college courses while they’re in college. They should not have to do that. Our kids should be better prepared to go to college in the first instance.

With the last stimulus package, I think there was an increase in the Pell grant funding to help our kids go to college. I think that’s a great start. Which, as an aside, of course Mike Coffman voted against the stimulus bill. I understand that he has his reasons, but they certainly don’t ring true to me, and I don’t think they ring true to the people of Congressional District 6, nor do I think they ring true to the people of the state of Colorado.

SH: What strategies do you favor for improving education in Colorado?

DC: In general terms, I think it’s got to go top to bottom. By top to bottom, I mean that we start with the educators. We need to provide incentives to teachers to make them really want to stay in that profession, and foster an environment where they are valued, not only monetarily, but by the community around them. And then from the bottom up, helping to provide…, and I know that Barack Obama has talked about this as well…, providing some type of incentives or encouragement, at the very least, of parental involvement at the pre-school levels. I am very blessed that I have three pretty bright kids. And I have been involved with my kids’ education from the get-go, from day one. When my wife wasn’t working, my wife would go to the schools and she would help volunteer in the classes and read to the kids, and then take some of the students aside to help them with their reading. Again, very involved. The part I found somewhat humorous was, whenever there were back-to-school nights, when my wife and I would show up in the classrooms, the teachers would look at my wife and me and joke about how often they see us. So I understand the important role that parents play in a child’s education.

With respect to the kids, I think that standardized testing is good, but I don’t think it’s the be all, end all as far as education; I think we need to have a more qualitative approach, and a more flexible approach….

I taught for two years at the University of California, Davis. I taught courses in public speaking and communication. And I loved every minute of it. I recognized that there were some students who were gifted in the course work that I was teaching, and there were some that were struggling. And I realized that you can’t just teach everybody the same way….

I think as far as teachers are concerned, that they’re probably the most overworked and underpaid and underappreciated class of professionals that we have. The teachers that I know are getting to school an hour before the kids do…, my kids get to school around 7:15…, and they typically stay an hour and a half to two hours afterward….

I’ll share with you a personal story. My wife received a call that she may lose her job. She called me crying, and she said “what are we going to do? What are we going to do if we lose my job?” What I told her is that we’re going to regroup, we’ll focus on what’s important, and we’ll move forward. I share that with you because that’s how I approach the economy right now. We need to focus on what’s important, and move on from there….

When my wife received this phone call, we had a family meeting about it. We had a conversation at our dinner table with my three kids about the economic crisis that’s confronting the country, as well as the economic crisis that was confronting our family. My number 2 son, Sam, who’s now 15, he’ll be 16 in April, he asked my wife and me whether it would make a difference if he got out and got a job and was able to contribute $500 a month to a household fund. As much as my wife and I appreciated the gesture, which was truly heartfelt, it dawned on me that we’ve now moved from a time when two incomes are not sufficient; you may need now to start putting the kids to work to off-set some of the costs to the family. I had that conversation with a friend of mine who is a police officer. He’s going through the same thing. He is trying to get his kids to go back to work so that they can help support the expenses that the family has, the only problem is that, where he lives, there are no jobs. So, it’s a very, very tough economic situation. Tough decisions have to be made. Going back to the qualities I bring to the table, as I said, are my real life experiences, my real life experience dealing with the economic crisis on the home front, and making those tough decisions, which I think will translate into decisions we have to make down the road as a district, and as a country.

Comments

14 thoughts on “Meet David Canter

    1. if Reagan and Canter were running against each other. As is, it’s just another demonstration of your commitment, as a faithful representative of the belligerent and destructive right, to being as counterproductive, irrational, and anatagonistic as possible. Truth is, conservatives aren’t the answer: conservatives are the problem.

      Which reminds me: It’s remarkable how your party idolizes somehow who became famous by announcing that government is the problem, and then increased the size of government by unprecedented leaps and bounds while simultanously eliminating all of its most useful functions (and leading to thousands if not millions of needless deaths by doing so). Not to mention selling arms to Iran, a fanatical regime militantly antagonistic to the United States, in order to fund Central American terrrorists bent on overthrowing a democratically elected government. Gee, what a hero.

      Ideology may be inevitable, but at least you can try to reduce the disconnect between your ideology and reality.

    1. It’s the beginning of a journey, and of a learning curve as a candidate, but there are a growing number of people behind him, and I’m one of them. David understands that to be a good candidate and a good congressman requires putting together and energizing a top-quality team, and he’s off to a good start assembling that team. The important thing is to become someone who the CD-6 Democrats can rally around, whose candidacy we all can feel a part of, and David has a style that can facilitate that.

      David wants to bring the values I think all good Democrats want to bring to Washington: The importance of social justice, of investing in our future, of taking care of our people, and he wants to do it in a way which doesn’t leave anybody behind, especially not his Republican constituents he would also be representing in CD-6.

      Of one thing, there’s no doubt: The Democrats CAN win in CD-6, and, for the good of the nation, MUST win in CD-6, because not only did we give the country ten years of the biggest hate-monger since Joe McCarthy (Tancredo, of course), but we have now continued our record of embarrassing ourselves and injuring the nation by selecting as his replacement that ethically and intellectually challenged political hack, Mike Coffman.

      In an interview that appeared today in the Columbine Courrier (a South Jeffco rag published by Evergreen Newspapers), Mike Coffman said that what Obama was failing to do that was so important was to boost people’s confidense in the economy, and then in the next paragraph insisted that the stimulus package couldn’t succeed (thereby acting in a calculated manner to reduce people’s confidence to score political points). That was just one example of what, to me, were a series of highly obstructionist, politically expedient statements made with absolute irresponsibility to the public welfare and absolute commitment to his own perceived political advantage.

      So we Dems need to focus on an imperative mission in CD-6: Find our best candidate, and work together to get him elected. David Canter is currently that guy, and I’ll give him whatever support and assistance I’m able to.

        1. informative ads that focus on issues and political agendas. There’s nothing wrong with critiquing an opponent’s political positions in an electoral contest. But, for my part, I wouldn’t support any personal attacks of an extra-political nature, unless they involve abundant evidence of “high crimes and misdemeanors,” excluding such things as infidelity, tax issues of a less than astronomical scale, and other dysfunctional political fodder.

          Mike Coffman is vulnerable enough on the issues, and on the agenda reasonable, well-informed, and fair-minded people would choose for our country. Let’s attack him on that battle-ground, and win both a moral and political victory in the process.

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