Joshua Sharf
From Ballotpedia
Joshua Sharf was a Republican candidate for District 6 of the Colorado House of Representatives. The primary election was on August 10, 2010, and the general election was on November 2, 2010.
Elections
2010
Sharf was defeated in the November 2 general election by incumbent Democrat Lois Court.[1][2]
| Colorado House of Representatives, District 6 General election (2010) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidates | Votes | |||
| 19,153 | ||||
| Joshua Sharf (R) | 10,724 | |||
Campaign themes
2010
Sharf's website highlighted the following campaign themes:
- Taxes, The Budget, and the Economy
- Excerpt: "I will work to repeal the job-killing taxes imposed by our legislature this past session."
- Energy
- Excerpt: "I will encourage clean, cost-competitive electricity sources such as clean coal, nuclear, and natural gas."
- Education
- Excerpt: "I will Protect charter schools against efforts to undermine their ability to operate independently, free of red tape and union interference."
- Representation
- Excerpt: "I will protect citizen oversight of our legislature by opposing any effort to limit the initiative process."
- Healthcare
- Excerpt: "I will work to reduce insurance costs through increased choice, but eliminating costly mandates on insurance policies, permitting purchase of out-of-state policies, and encouraging Health Savings Accounts."
External links
- Unofficial list of primary candidates
- Biography from Project Vote Smart
- Joshua Sharf campaign website
- Joshua Sharf facebook page
- Joshua Sharf twitter page
Footnotes
Current members of the Colorado House of Representatives
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Julie McCluskie
Majority Leader:Monica Duran
Representatives
District 1
Javier Mabrey (D)
District 2
Steven Woodrow (D)
District 3
Meg Froelich (D)
District 4
Cecelia Espenoza (D)
District 5
Alex Valdez (D)
District 6
Sean Camacho (D)
District 7
Jennifer Bacon (D)
District 8
District 9
Emily Sirota (D)
District 10
Junie Joseph (D)
District 11
Karen McCormick (D)
District 12
Kyle Brown (D)
District 13
Julie McCluskie (D)
District 14
Ava Flanell (R)
District 15
Scott Bottoms (R)
District 16
Rebecca Keltie (R)
District 17
Regina English (D)
District 18
Amy Paschal (D)
District 19
Dan Woog (R)
District 20
Jarvis Caldwell (R)
District 21
Mary Bradfield (R)
District 22
Kenneth DeGraaf (R)
District 23
Monica Duran (D)
District 24
Lisa Feret (D)
District 25
Tammy Story (D)
District 26
Meghan Lukens (D)
District 27
Brianna Titone (D)
District 28
Sheila Lieder (D)
District 29
Shannon Bird (D)
District 30
Rebekah Stewart (D)
District 31
Jacque Phillips (D)
District 32
Manny Rutinel (D)
District 33
District 34
Jenny Willford (D)
District 35
Lorena Garcia (D)
District 36
Michael Carter (D)
District 37
Chad Clifford (D)
District 38
Gretchen Rydin (D)
District 39
Brandi Bradley (R)
District 40
Naquetta Ricks (D)
District 41
Jamie Jackson (D)
District 42
Mandy Lindsay (D)
District 43
Robert Marshall (D)
District 44
Anthony Hartsook (R)
District 45
Max Brooks (R)
District 46
Tisha Mauro (D)
District 47
Ty Winter (R)
District 48
Carlos Barron (R)
District 49
Lesley Smith (D)
District 50
Ryan Gonzalez (R)
District 51
Ron Weinberg (R)
District 52
Yara Zokaie (D)
District 53
District 54
Matt Soper (R)
District 55
Rick Taggart (R)
District 56
Chris Richardson (R)
District 57
District 58
Larry Suckla (R)
District 59
Katie Stewart (D)
District 60
Stephanie Luck (R)
District 61
Eliza Hamrick (D)
District 62
Matthew Martinez (D)
District 63
Dusty Johnson (R)
District 64
Scott Slaugh (R)
District 65
Lori Sander (R)
Democratic Party (43)
Republican Party (22)