The Denver Post
September 26, 2006
7th District rivals clash over change
Dem Ed Perlmutter ties Rick O'Donnell to Bush and the GOP Congress.
The Republican touts his "real solutions."
By Christopher N. Osher
Denver Post Staff Writer
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Seventh congressional district candidates, Ed Perlmutter
and Rick O'Donnell
are all smiles before an open forum debate at The American
Mountaineering
Center n Golden Monday evening. (Post / Andy Cross)
|
The two candidates running for the 7th Congressional District seat
clashed in their first debate over which man could best bring a
change of direction for the country.
Democrat Ed Perlmutter said the country was fed up with President
Bush and the Republican Congress. He argued that his opponent would
be a rubber stamp for Bush.
"I believe that this election is about changing the way we
do business in America," said Perlmutter, a former state senator.
"We cannot continue to have more of the same."
Republican Rick O'Donnell, the former head of the Colorado Commission
on Higher Education, agreed that change was needed, but he said
that he was the candidate with the ideas and the energy to bring
about that change.
"We are going to get change with whomever because the incumbent
congressman is not returning to Washington," O'Donnell said.
"The question is what type of change. I believe we need new
ideas. We need real solutions. We need honesty."
The two candidates are vying for the seat vacated by Republican
Bob Beauprez, who is running for governor. The debate at the American
Mountaineering Center in Golden drew about 200 people.
Perlmutter said that under Bush, America's financial footing has
eroded, the war in Iraq has turned out badly and the wealthiest
1 percent of the population benefited from Bush's policies while
the middle class suffered.
"One of my kids has epilepsy and for years and years and years
and years there has been a line item in the National Institute for
Health budget for epilepsy research, and that has been zeroed out
because our budget is so upside down," Perlmutter said.
Holding up a book detailing his positions, O'Donnell encouraged
people to examine his stances and compare them to Perlmutter's.
"Listening to my opponent tonight, I think he could be running
for congress in Florida, or Georgia or Michigan," O'Donnell
said. "It's the national Democrat playbook, rubber stamp, impugn
the Bush administration, be angry about everything that's wrong
with Washington."
He said that when he checked Perlmutter's website, he found "zero
on education, zero on economic growth and zero on jobs creation
and zero on how to fix Social Security."
Perlmutter touted his experience as a legislator, stressing his
work on local transportation issues and growth-control legislation
and his successful effort to pass a bond issue and mill levy for
Jefferson County schools.
O'Donnell pointed to his record with Gov. Bill Owens administration,
where he was policy director, head of the Department of Regulatory
Agencies and eventually head of the Colorado Commission on Higher
Education.
"I come to this race with a track record of reform,"
O'Donnell said.
Staff writer Christopher N. Osher can be reached at 303-954-1747
or cosher@denverpost.com.
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