Harrisonburg voters on Nov. 6 get to weigh in on races for a U.S. Senate seat, the 6th Congressional District seat, two city council positions and three school board members.
The Citizen is publishing the Harrisonburg community voter guide produced by the James Madison Center for Civic Engagement and the students in JMU Professor Andreas Broscheid’s honors political science class, who developed the questions for the candidates and compiled all the answers.
You can download a PDF copy of the Harrisonburg Voter Guide, which includes all the candidates’ answers to questions about their qualifications, priorities and key issues, such as health care, immigration, guns, student debt and local taxes and budgeting. You can also find that voter guide along with all The Citizen’s campaign coverage in each race on our “Harrisonburg’s Election 2018” page.
Below are summaries for each race, but please download the PDF for all the details and candidate answers.
Harrisonburg City Council
The City Council is the elected governing body of the City of Harrisonburg and is made up of five members elected at-large. This means that the city has no wards or districts and that all members represent all citizens equally. You may contact any city council member about any issue regardless of where in the city you live. Harrisonburg City Council hires and supervises a full-time city manager who oversees day-to-day city operations. City Council also approves a city budget, as well as zoning, land use and a Comprehensive Plan. It oversees city revenues, and creates and passes city laws.
In the full voter guide, the five city council candidates responded to questions about their qualifications, as well as:
- How they would involve citizens in the decision-making process;
- Their top priorities, if elected;
- How the city and James Madison University can partner;
- And specific plans for the city’s budget and taxes.
The Five Candidates for Two Available Seats:
Email: carolynwfrank@gmail.com
Website: www.carolynwfrank.com
Email: chris@votechrisjones.com
Website: votechrisjones.com
Email: FrankMcMillanForHarrisonburg@gmail.com
Website: https://www.mcmillan4citycouncil.com
Email: salforcouncil@gmail.com and sal4council@gmail.com
Website: Salromero.org
Email: friendsofpaloma@gmail.com
Website: http://palomasaucedo.org
6th U.S. House District
James Madison described the U.S. House of Representatives as a legislative body with “an immediate dependence on, and intimate sympathy with, the people.” Representatives are elected directly by the people and the Constitution requires that Representatives must stand for election every two years. These requirements make it a political institution that is responsive to the will of the people and that serves as a forum for their political priorities. Membership is based on the population of each individual state. By law, its current membership is set at 435 Representatives, plus nonvoting delegates from the District of Columbia and the U.S. territories. The House possesses the sole authority to impeach federal officials and, in the case of indecisive Electoral College results, to elect a president. While revenue and spending bills traditionally originate in the House, the Senate may amend them as with any other piece of legislation.
The 6th District seat has been held by Republican U.S. Rep. Bob Goodlatte of Roanoke since 1993. Goodlatte decided not to run again this year.
In the full voter guide, the two candidates responded to questions about their qualifications, as well as:
- Their top priorities, if elected;
- How the health care system should be changed;
- Their views on guns;
- What each candidate offers that the other doesn’t.
The Two Candidates for the Open Seat:
Email: contact@benclineforcongress.com
Website: www.bencline.com
Email: comms@jenniferlewisforcongress.com
Website: jenniferlewisforcongress.com/
U.S. Senate
Regardless of size or population, each state has two senators, who serve six-year terms. Unlike the House of Representatives, where all members must stand for election every two years, only one-third of the Senate’s seats are filled with each general election. In Federalist Paper No. 62, James Madison explained the unique nature of the Senate as the cautious, deliberative role it would play in American government. In theory, longer, overlapping Senate terms provide Congress with stability and continuity, and lessen the immediate pressure of public opinion on members of the Senate. Until the 1913 ratification of the Constitution’s 17th Amendment, Senators were elected by the legislatures of their respective states. The Senate shares full legislative power with the House of Representatives. In addition, the Senate has exclusive authority to approve–or reject–presidential nominations to executive and judicial offices, and to provide–or withhold–its “advice and consent” to treaties negotiated by the executive. The Senate also has the sole power to try impeachments.
In the full voter guide, the three candidates responded to questions about their qualifications, as well as:
- How their policies on immigrant and refugees will affect Harrisonburg, which is a refugee resettlement area;
- How they would address burgeoning student debt;
- Their top priorities, if elected.
Three Candidates for One Seat with an Incumbent:
Email: info@timkaine.com
Website: www.timkaine.com
Email: info@coreystewart.com
Website: coreystewart.com
Email: mw@mattwaters.com
Website: mattwaters.com
Harrisonburg City Public Schools Boards
Three following three candidates are running for three spots. For more information about them, see the voter guide document on our “Elections 2018” page.
Acknowledgements:
This Student-Created Voter Education Guide is brought to you by:
Students of Professor Andreas Broscheid’s Honors Political Science Class: Sophie Brause, Calvin Chenault, Kasey Clayton, Grant Colip, Kathleen Connor, Madison Dobscha, Madalyn Ferlazzo, Makeda Fikremariam, Michael Friedman, Aliyah Hall, Charlie Hines, Meredith Lawing, Abby Maltese, Eric Maxwell, Lindsey Monito, Riya Patel, Zach Pennycuff, Lauren Slaughter, William Tyler Strosnider, Ben Uehlinger; and by staff of the James Madison Center for Civic Engagement: Ysabella Chua (Design and Layout), Dr. Carah Ong Whaley.