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News

Let the 5th District debates begin

Congressional candidates Jane Dittmar and Tom Garrett met August 10 for the first of four forums, and the two agreed on several issues—and disagreed on many more. Around 200 people crammed into the Senior Center for the event sponsored by the Senior Statesmen of Virginia (no relation to the center).

Democrat Dittmar, a mediator, is the former chair of the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors, and Republican Garrett is a former prosecutor serving his second term in the state Senate. Both touted their credentials for working across the aisle.

Both opposed the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, the route of which runs through Nelson County, and both said they’d defy their party’s whips and vote for the interests of the district in Congress.

Dittmar said she was “appalled” at what GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump said about the Khans, a Charlottesville Gold Star family whose son died in Iraq.

“I think Donald Trump is a smart man who sometimes picks dumb words,” said Garrett of his party’s standard bearer.

Garrett used the word “shameful” to describe the Affordable Care Act, the Veterans Administration and the rhetoric on gun safety. “You’re four times more likely to be killed by a knife,” he said. “The problem is not guns, it’s violence.”

Dittmar said that she supported the Second Amendment and universal background checks to keep guns out of the hands of the mentally ill, those prone to violence and terrorists.

When asked what specific project they would take to Washington, Dittmar’s No. 1 issue is Internet service in rural areas. “I’m like a dog after a bone on that one,” she said.

Garrett said he’d work on economic development for the 5th District. And he used several opportunities to bring up Deschutes Brewery, which wanted to locate in Albemarle but the county, under Dittmar’s watch, refused to rezone as much land as the Oregon company needed.

He noted several times the lack of cell phone coverage on Route 20 south, which is in Dittmar’s Scottsville district. “It strikes me as brazen to say that we can have Internet service when we can’t get cell service on 20 south and in North Garden,” he said.

Garrett drew groans from the audience when he expressed doubt that climate change is caused by fossil fuels. “I believe climate change is real,” he said. “I believe as long as there has been a climate it’s been changing.” That response got applause, while protests came when he said, “There is debate about whether it’s man-caused.”

And on the national debt, he proposed that young people be given the opportunity to defer receiving Social Security benefits in return for forgiveness of student loan debt.

Dittmar said it was essential to send different people to Washington. “We sent these warriors to Washington and they don’t know how to govern.”

The candidates will meet three more times before November, and two of those—September 28 and October 10—will be in the Charlottesville area.

tom garrett- eze amos
Republican state Senator Tom Garrett at the Senior Statesmen debate August 10. Photo Eze Amos
jane dittmar-amos
Jane Dittmar seeks the 5th District seat that hasn’t been held by a Democrat since Tom Perriello won it in 2008. Photo Eze Amos
Categories
Opinion

Pols gone wild: Watch what you share, people!

Well, here we are in the thick of the congressional election season, with strivers from both parties jostling and jockeying to grab one of the limited number of golden tickets to the halls of political power. This is, it goes without saying, one of our favorite times of the electoral cycle, as the probability of chaos is high, and the likelihood that some neophyte wannabe Congress-critter will make a truly boneheaded mistake is a near certainty.

Case in point: Mike Webb, a former Army officer who claims to be mounting an independent run in Virginia’s 8th Congressional District (he lost the Republican nomination to Charles Hernick last month). A deeply conservative fellow, Webb is basically running his campaign via his Facebook page, where he posts all manner of self-promotional materials, conspiracy theories and extended religious rants.

This compulsive oversharing finally caught up with Webb on May 16, when he posted a screen grab of a map to illustrate his theory that he had been prank called by an Arlington County Republican Committee member. Unfortunately for him, two other visible browser tabs in the screen grab were very obviously porn sites (please feel free to Google “Layla Rivera tight booty” and “Ivone sexy amateur” to see what’s trending on the world wide Webb).

The best part of this entire story has been Webb’s reaction, which has been in turns completely surreal (Facebook posts that addressed the epistemological question, “Is the Lord against porn?” and detailed “the results of my empirical inquiry that introduced me to Layla and Ivone”), and oddly endearing (his goofy appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live”). One thing’s for sure: Webb’s political career might be toast, but his career as an Internet sensation is surely just beginning.

While Webb was certainly the most high-profile misbehaving Old Dominion candidate we’ve seen lately, he certainly wasn’t the only one. Our other favorite imperfect pols include 11th District Republican John Michael Wolfe who, after filing to run against incumbent U.S. Representative Gerry Connolly, failed to show up at the nominating convention, thereby leaving Connolly completely unopposed, and Charlottesville’s own Michael Del Rosso, who unloaded on his opponent after multiple rounds of balloting to choose the Republican standard-bearer for the 5th Congressional District.

Frazzled after a Hunger Games-style winnowing of the field from four candidates down to two, Del Rosso reached his boiling point when one of the eliminated candidates, Jim McKelvey, made an alliance with the eventual victor, state Senator Tom Garrett, which turned the odds decidedly in Garrett’s favor (have we taken this metaphor too far?). Anyway, Del Rosso’s impassioned speech (in which he complained that Garrett “slandered me in Buckingham County, called me a liar… a snake oil salesman”) obviously did little to help him, as he was roundly defeated on the final ballot.

Finally, we simply must mention our favorite non-candidate of the week: Richmond strip club owner Mike Dickinson, who—after failing to clinch the Democratic nomination in the 7th Congressional District—recently decided against a threatened independent bid to challenge current incumbent Dave Brat. Luckily for us, he’s still promising to run for mayor of Richmond, so perhaps our dreams of conducting an extensive interview in his place of business will come true.

And who knows? Maybe we’ll even see Webb there. Doing research, of course.

Odd Dominion is an unabashedly liberal, twice-monthly op-ed column covering Virginia politics.