GOP candidates for Superintendent of Public Instruction debate
For those of you who missed the televised debate last evening, we invite you to meet Margaret Dugan, John Huppenthal, and Beth Price, Republican Candidates for Superintendent of Public Instruction. Find out where they stand on the issues.
This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 30th, 2010 at 5:43 pm and is filed under Education, Elections, Media, We have a voice. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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5 Responses to GOP candidates for Superintendent of Public Instruction debate
Has anyone heard of Beth Price? I attempt to stay informed and I’ve never heard her name before. I was unable tp locate a website which I sought out after I noticed there was no link to one for her, although both Dugan and Huppenthal are linked in the post. What’s the story here? Anyone know?
Price is Priceless. How she qualified for the ballot is a mystery. Seemingly a nice lady who is at least twenty years past her prime. I felt sorry for her when she could not come up with the term PhD in her closing statement.
As to Dugan, I was shocked about her statement re: humans being the only animal not able to teach their young what they want them to learn.
I was also disappointed that she was the only candidate who fully supports full-day kindergarten (taxpayer paid child care for working parents).
It was painful watching Beth Price try to find words to express herself. She couldn’t even remember the fact that she had once earned a doctorate. “Loving children” is not enough to qualify for this exhaustive administrative post. She needs to go love her great-grandchildren. Her time has past.
Margaret Dugan is clearly the most qualified for the job. Huppenthal was lucky he wasn’t tossed off the ballot for his irregularities. His numerous examples of poor judgment are as bad as Price’s memory lapses.
Huppenthal has been a leader on education issues in the Senate for years. He is the most qualified, and is clearly the conservative choice here. As for “lucky he wasn’t tossed off the ballot,” that is completely ridiculous! That was a poor attempt by democrats to get their biggest challenger off of the ballot. And by the way, many candidates circulated petitions while their finance committees were still in the “exploratory” phase.
Has anyone heard of Beth Price? I attempt to stay informed and I’ve never heard her name before. I was unable tp locate a website which I sought out after I noticed there was no link to one for her, although both Dugan and Huppenthal are linked in the post. What’s the story here? Anyone know?
Price is Priceless. How she qualified for the ballot is a mystery. Seemingly a nice lady who is at least twenty years past her prime. I felt sorry for her when she could not come up with the term PhD in her closing statement.
As to Dugan, I was shocked about her statement re: humans being the only animal not able to teach their young what they want them to learn.
I was also disappointed that she was the only candidate who fully supports full-day kindergarten (taxpayer paid child care for working parents).
It was painful watching Beth Price try to find words to express herself. She couldn’t even remember the fact that she had once earned a doctorate. “Loving children” is not enough to qualify for this exhaustive administrative post. She needs to go love her great-grandchildren. Her time has past.
Margaret Dugan is clearly the most qualified for the job. Huppenthal was lucky he wasn’t tossed off the ballot for his irregularities. His numerous examples of poor judgment are as bad as Price’s memory lapses.
Huppenthal has been a leader on education issues in the Senate for years. He is the most qualified, and is clearly the conservative choice here. As for “lucky he wasn’t tossed off the ballot,” that is completely ridiculous! That was a poor attempt by democrats to get their biggest challenger off of the ballot. And by the way, many candidates circulated petitions while their finance committees were still in the “exploratory” phase.