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Democrat hopes for an upset in 7th District the candidates

November 1, 2008 12:36 am

BY CHELYEN DAVIS
BY CHELYEN DAVIS

RICHMOND--

There's been somebody--usually a Democrat, once an independent--on the ballot against Rep. Eric Cantor for the last four elections. And he's never gotten less than 64 percent of the vote.

Democrat Anita Hartke hopes to change that next Tuesday.

"I say we're going to have a landslide Democratic victory, with Barack Obama and Mark Warner," Hartke said last week. "I think the people are fed up and discouraged with the bad times."

Hartke is a real-estate broker in Culpeper County whose father was a U.S. senator from Indiana.

She says she was motivated to get into the 7th Congressional District race when the housing market started to collapse. She advocates allowing homeowners to postpone some mortgage payments until the end of their loan term to give them some breathing room now to catch up on payments.

Hartke also supports the federal financial bailout, but believes it needs more safeguards for consumers, and more work toward alternative energy sources.

A large part of her argument, however, is that Cantor is "out of touch with the needs of the people."

"In order to have the judgment of what the people need, you have to experience some of these things yourself," Hartke said. "This is the reason why we're going to have that Democratic landslide. It's because the people have had enough.

"We've had enough of the failed policies of George Bush and Eric Cantor."

Cantor, from Richmond, is seeking his fifth term representing Virginia's 7th District. He served in the House of Delegates before that.

Cantor is considered a rising Republican star; he's the chief deputy whip in the House of Representatives, and was given an instrumental role in crafting the financial bailout package.

He has won his re-election campaigns with large vote percentages, and had about $607,000 cash on hand in his campaign account as of Oct. 15; Hartke had just under $10,000.

Cantor said his re-election efforts have been focused on reminding district voters of his record and promising more accountability from Washington when it comes to taxpayer money.

"This election's all about the economy. My message is simply the fact that we have to work very hard to return accountability not only to Washington but to Wall Street," he said last week. "We have to be very focused on the fact that our time should be spent concentrating on creating jobs in our district. Immediately we have to address the economic stability and make sure people regain a sense of confidence in their retirement outlook, regain a sense of confidence in their employment outlook."

Cantor said he supports a moratorium on earmarks, the spending items that benefit projects in congressmen's home districts. Cantor said he refuses to use earmarks now, even though a moratorium hasn't passed and other members do still earmark money for their projects.

He called earmarks "symptomatic of a larger problem in Washington.

"We need to fix it, we need to make sure the federal government works for the people again. There is a lot of waste and pork-barrel spending in Washington."

Chelyen Davis: 804/782-9362
Email: cdavis@freelancestar.com




Eric Cantor
Age: 45
Party: Republican
Education: George Washington University; law degree from the College of William & Mary
Political offices held:

House of Delegates, 1992 to 2001

House of Representatives, 7th District, 2001-present

Family: wife, Diana; three children

Anita Hartke
Age: 48
Party: Democratic
Education: Salem College
Political offices held: none; active in Democratic politics
Family: divorced; three children

ERIC CANTOR (R) TOTAL RAISED THIS PERIOD:

$438,042

TOTAL SPENT:

$404,253

CASH ON HAND:

$607,813

TOP DONORS:

$10,000 each from American Bankers Association PAC, Capital One Associates Political Fund, Deloitte & Touche Federal PAC, Employees of Northrup Grumman PAC

TOP EXPENDITURES:

Payroll, $88,946; fundraising consulting, $36,631; catering, $63,761

ANITA HARTKE (D) TOTAL RAISED THIS PERIOD:

$41,157

TOTAL SPENT:

$31,193

CASH ON HAND:

$9,964

TOP DONORS:

National Committee for an Effective Congress, $3,000; Harold Boyd of Culpeper, $2,400; Keith Hartke and Paul Hartke, both of Reston, $2,300 each

TOP EXPENDITURES:

Advertising in Richmond Times-Dispatch, $3,220; copies, faxes, etc., from Staples, $3,000; gas, tolls, auto repair, $3,000




Copyright 2009 The Free Lance-Star Publishing Company.