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Christopher Katsoulis

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Christopher Katsoulis

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Christopher Katsoulis was a 2016 Democratic candidate for the Fifteenth Essex District of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.

Campaign themes

2016

Katsoulis' campaign website highlighted the following issues:

Education

  • Less testing, more teaching. Students can opt out of the MCAS in grades 3-8, but it is a state requirement that high school students pass the MCAS in order to recieve their diploma. The pressure of the MCAS eats up classroom time, narrows curriculum, and destroys children's love of learning.
  • Christopher is opposed to expanding the Charter School System. The expansion of charter schools requires averting funds away from public schools and allocating them to charter schools. Our public school systems need every penny to ensure that a majority of our children receive the proper education they deserve.
  • Just because Christopher does not support expanding charter schools, that does not mean he cannot understand the benefits and importance charter schools have. Christopher believes that public schools and charter schools ought to communicate and work together to strengthen education. They should share ideas and teaching strategies that have been proven effective.
  • To increase high school graduation rates and offer an innovative approach that has not been done in public high schools, Christopher strongly advocates implementing a cooperative education program for our high schoolers. This idea comes from a successful charter school in Lawrence called Notre Dame Cristo Rey High School. Watch the video below to better understand how the coop program is paid for and how it works.

Opioid Epidemic

  • Keep people who are already addicted to opioids alive by making all of the effective tools available in this regard. Naloxone, a drug that reverses opioid overdose, should be made as widely available as possible. Just as those who are allergic to bees or other allergens carry around an EpiPen, those who use opioids should be able to have Naloxone on hand. Christopher advocates for making Naloxone an over-the-counter drug because someone who is struggling with addiction will not seek their primary care physician for a prescription, plus it is readily available to family members who can reverse the overdose in case first responders arrive too late.
  • Provide enhanced training for physicians so that they become more adept at screening for, recognizing, and treating addiction. We need to make sure that physicians have the kind of training in addiction medicine that will help interrupt the flow of newly-created prescribed opioid addictions.
  • Make it as difficult as possible for opioid pain medications to be used in ways other than the ways they were intended or prescribed. ​As examples, we could stop approval of any new opioid painkillers that are not clearly safer than existing ones and remove from the market all high dose opioid analgesics that are easily crushed.
  • Educate the public about the risks of prescription pain medications, especially in our schools.

Healthcare

  • Christopher believes that healthcare is a basic human right. Everyone should have access to high quality, affordable healthcare without going bankrupt. That's why Christopher supports "An Act Establishing Medicare for All in Massachusetts", which would create a single payer health care system for Massachusetts, guaranteeing first rate healthcare coverage for every resident of the state, while saving money for state and local governments, businesses, and residents.

Economic Growth and State Revenue

  • Legalize marijuana. Christopher believes it is time we legalize a natural substance that is less harmful and addicting than alcohol and something that many people use regardless of the law. We should tax and regulate marijuana the same way we do with alcohol and tobacco. Colorado and Washington have proved that marijuana has the potential to bring in hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue. Also, thousands of jobs would be created as a result of marijuana legalization.
  • Christopher supports gradually increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour.
  • Shifting healthcare to a single payer system would save the state billions of dollars per year.
  • Massachusetts should invest more in solar and wind energy, creating thousands of jobs in the process.
  • Christopher strongly supports stronger collective bargaining rights for unions who represent many of our working people and their families. Stronger collective bargaining results in higher wages, better benefits, and safer work environments.
  • Close corporate tax loopholes that ultimately affects working class people and small businesses.
  • Force the richest 1% in Massachusetts to pay their fair share of taxes.[1]
—Christopher Katsoulis, [2]

Elections

2016

See also: Massachusetts House of Representatives elections, 2016

Elections for the Massachusetts House of Representatives took place in 2016. The primary election took place on September 8, 2016, and the general election was held on November 8, 2016. The candidate filing deadline was June 7, 2016.

Incumbent Linda Dean Campbell defeated Nicholas Torresi in the Massachusetts House of Representatives Fifteenth Essex District general election.[3][4]

Massachusetts House of Representatives, Fifteenth Essex District General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Linda Dean Campbell Incumbent 63.49% 12,904
     Independent Nicholas Torresi 36.51% 7,421
Total Votes 20,325
Source: Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth


Incumbent Linda Dean Campbell defeated Christopher James Katsoulis in the Massachusetts House of Representatives Fifteenth Essex District Democratic Primary.[5][6]

Massachusetts House of Representatives, Fifteenth Essex District Democratic Primary, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Linda Dean Campbell Incumbent 82.67% 1,517
     Democratic Christopher James Katsoulis 17.33% 318
Total Votes 1,835


Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Christopher Katsoulis Massachusetts House. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes


Leadership
Speaker of the House:Ronald Mariano
Majority Leader:Michael Moran
Representatives
Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket District
1st Barnstable District
1st Berkshire District
1st Bristol District
1st Essex District
1st Franklin District
1st Hampden District
1st Hampshire District
1st Middlesex District
1st Norfolk District
1st Plymouth District
1st Suffolk District
1st Worcester District
2nd Barnstable District
Kip Diggs (D)
2nd Berkshire District
2nd Bristol District
2nd Essex District
2nd Franklin District
2nd Hampden District
2nd Hampshire District
2nd Middlesex District
2nd Norfolk District
2nd Plymouth District
2nd Suffolk District
2nd Worcester District
3rd Barnstable District
3rd Berkshire District
3rd Bristol District
3rd Essex District
3rd Hampden District
3rd Hampshire District
3rd Middlesex District
3rd Norfolk District
3rd Plymouth District
3rd Suffolk District
3rd Worcester District
4th Barnstable District
4th Bristol District
4th Essex District
4th Hampden District
4th Middlesex District
4th Norfolk District
4th Plymouth District
4th Suffolk District
4th Worcester District
5th Barnstable District
5th Bristol District
5th Essex District
5th Hampden District
5th Middlesex District
5th Norfolk District
5th Plymouth District
5th Suffolk District
5th Worcester District
6th Bristol District
6th Essex District
6th Hampden District
6th Middlesex District
6th Norfolk District
6th Plymouth District
6th Suffolk District
6th Worcester District
7th Bristol District
7th Essex District
7th Hampden District
7th Middlesex District
7th Norfolk District
7th Plymouth District
7th Suffolk District
7th Worcester District
8th Bristol District
8th Essex District
8th Hampden District
8th Middlesex District
8th Norfolk District
8th Plymouth District
8th Suffolk District
8th Worcester District
9th Bristol District
9th Essex District
9th Hampden District
9th Middlesex District
9th Norfolk District
9th Plymouth District
9th Suffolk District
9th Worcester District
10th Bristol District
10th Essex District
10th Hampden District
10th Middlesex District
John Lawn (D)
10th Norfolk District
10th Plymouth District
10th Suffolk District
10th Worcester District
11th Bristol District
11th Essex District
Sean Reid (D)
11th Hampden District
11th Middlesex District
11th Norfolk District
11th Plymouth District
11th Suffolk District
11th Worcester District
12th Bristol District
12th Essex District
12th Hampden District
12th Middlesex District
12th Norfolk District
12th Plymouth District
12th Suffolk District
12th Worcester District
13th Bristol District
13th Essex District
13th Middlesex District
13th Norfolk District
13th Suffolk District
13th Worcester District
14th Bristol District
14th Essex District
14th Middlesex District
14th Norfolk District
14th Suffolk District
14th Worcester District
15th Essex District
15th Middlesex District
15th Norfolk District
15th Suffolk District
15th Worcester District
16th Essex District
16th Middlesex District
16th Suffolk District
16th Worcester District
17th Essex District
17th Middlesex District
17th Suffolk District
17th Worcester District
18th Essex District
18th Middlesex District
Tara Hong (D)
18th Suffolk District
18th Worcester District
19th Middlesex District
19th Suffolk District
19th Worcester District
20th Middlesex District
21st Middlesex District
22nd Middlesex District
23rd Middlesex District
24th Middlesex District
25th Middlesex District
26th Middlesex District
27th Middlesex District
28th Middlesex District
29th Middlesex District
30th Middlesex District
31st Middlesex District
32nd Middlesex District
33rd Middlesex District
34th Middlesex District
35th Middlesex District
36th Middlesex District
37th Middlesex District
Democratic Party (134)
Republican Party (25)
Unenrolled (1)