Archimedes Ramirez

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Archimedes Ramirez
Image of Archimedes Ramirez
Elections and appointments
Last election

June 7, 2022

Education

Bachelor's

Virginia Military Institute

Military

Service / branch

U.S. Army

Personal
Profession
Surgeon
Contact

Archimedes Ramirez (Republican Party) ran for election to the U.S. House to represent California's 2nd Congressional District. Ramirez lost in the primary on June 7, 2022.

Ramirez completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Archimedes Ramirez served in the U.S. Army and reached the rank of colonel. Ramirez earned a B.S. from Virginia Military Institute. His career experience includes working as a neurosurgeon.[1][2]

Elections

2022

See also: California's 2nd Congressional District election, 2022

General election

General election for U.S. House California District 2

Incumbent Jared Huffman defeated Douglas Brower in the general election for U.S. House California District 2 on November 8, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jared Huffman
Jared Huffman (D)
 
74.4
 
229,720
Image of Douglas Brower
Douglas Brower (R)
 
25.6
 
79,029

Total votes: 308,749
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for U.S. House California District 2

The following candidates ran in the primary for U.S. House California District 2 on June 7, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jared Huffman
Jared Huffman (D)
 
68.7
 
145,245
Image of Douglas Brower
Douglas Brower (R)
 
8.6
 
18,102
Image of Chris Coulombe
Chris Coulombe (R) Candidate Connection
 
8.3
 
17,498
Image of Beth Hampson
Beth Hampson (D)
 
6.7
 
14,262
Image of Archimedes Ramirez
Archimedes Ramirez (R) Candidate Connection
 
5.8
 
12,202
Image of Darian Elizondo
Darian Elizondo (R)
 
1.9
 
4,012

Total votes: 211,321
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Campaign themes

2022

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Archimedes Ramirez completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Ramirez's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

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Neurosurgeon, Board Certified

Service: Colonel U.S. Army (Ret); Battalion surgeon Vietnam; Desert Storm. Education: Virginia Military Institute, B.S, University of Virginia Medical School, Walter Reed Hospital neurosurgical residency.

My Dad was in the U.S. Navy for 24 years; my brothers Vietnam Vets. We appreciate this great Country that let us become citizens after 7 years of evaluation and study of America’s history and Constitution. I want to serve again and return dignity and reason to politics.

As a minority I am disturbed by the harsh attacks and divisiveness around race. You cannot cure discrimination with more discrimination. Similarly, needed equality for transgenders should not come at the expense of advances made by young women in sports - by permitting biological males to compete with girls. I worry that calling fellow white soldiers inherently-racist will drive them out of the military leaving minorities only. As your Representative, there will be no more them-and-us, it will be united Americans. Equal rights, equal treatment, equal opportunities.

We need secure borders immediately. We must stop the drug trafficking that is destroying a generation of our children. Plus, we cannot take care of our population now, there are thousands of homeless U.S. citizens on the streets. Common sense must guide us, not political rhetoric.

We need new representation and this time it does take a brain surgeon. www.archimedesforcongress.com
  • I have a strong military background demonstrating my commitment to my country and fellow man, where I excelled and retired as a Colonel.
  • I know how to solve complex problems. I conduct brain surgery and complex spine surgery which requires unique concentration and team work.
  • I am knowledgeable about the issues facing this country and I am committed to unifying all factions. As a minority and a naturalized citizen I believe I have a perspective that is needed in Congress.
Immigration and secure borders: Drugs coming across our border are killing a generation. I have had to care for and perform surgery on young people who have suffered from drug overdoses and I have had to notify family members of their losses and of permanent damage to their children. It is one thing to lose young men and women to cancer or injuries, but to lose them to drugs is a heartache that destroys an entire family forever.
To be present and not always away from the office. To be respectful to all and to work hard every day to do my best with integrity and kindness, and accepting the input and knowledge of my associates and team - which is what I have done my entire life.
Cutting lawns for three summers in high school; my brother and I had our own business in Norfolk Virginia where my father was stationed in the Navy. That was followed by toll taking at the Hampton-Norfolk bridge tunnel during summers while I was attending Virginia Military Institute.
I support term limits. As in history, this should not become a permanent job that you then pass on to your kids. If it viewed as your only trade/job, you will do what it takes to stay in the job versus doing what is right.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

Campaign website

Ramirez's campaign website stated the following:

Equal Economic Opportunities

All citizens of all colors, backgrounds, religions, genders, etc. should have equal opportunities. No one should be given advantages based solely on the color of their skin; hard work, perseverance, integrity and character should be respected in all. You cannot cure discrimination by discrimination, per Chief Justice John Roberts. That is what the U.S. Constitution says, and all forms of discrimination should be unlawful and the Equal Opportunity Commission should be given more authority to pursue those who discriminate in any respect. I will seek to amplify the EEOC’s authority to seek equal treatment for all regardless of race, religion, gender, etc.


Criminal Reform

The First Step Act was a great step forward. It was spearheaded by Republicans and had bi partisan support and was signed into law by President Trump. It provided for the release of prisoners who had received long sentences for what are misdemeanors today in some cases, and for being imprisoned in part due to their race. Unfortunately, in California it was followed up by “no bail” laws and laxed sentencing for hard core violent criminals now allowed out the street after beating people half to death, robbing and other serious crimes. This has made our cities and even our smaller neighborhoods unsafe. We need to review the results of the First Step law, and others, and keep the good parts and pull back on the parts that result in putting violent criminals back on the street. I am prepared to make that review and offer amendments that fix the loopholes and mistakes.


Safer Communities

Crime has skyrocketed, particularly in California, New York City, Detroit, Chicago and other areas. It is now hitting the suburbs with murders, robberies at gunpoint, beatings in places like sleepy Marin County. Without a feeling of safety in our communities we might as well live in warring countries. I propose the use of federal funds to install license recognition cameras in vulnerable communities (to be used ONLY for criminal activity) and to increase the flow of federal dollars to crime prevention and to attempt to remove the no bail situations that are allowing criminals to circulate in and out of prison like staying at a hotel.


Better Education

I believe all parents should have a choice of where to send their children to school, and that choices/options should be encouraged, not refused. During the pandemic it was the private schools and charter schools and religious schools that stayed open. Today there are many regrets about shuttering public schools and the terrible toll that has taken on young students, with suicides and mental illnesses increasing dramatically. I will advocate for action by the U.S. Department of Education to support School Choice and for improvement of public schools and the teaching of STEM classes – and not studies on how to become activists.

Also, I will advocate against CRT or critical race theory being taught in schools. It is so wrong to teach students to hate each other by telling white kids they are “oppressors” and minorities they are “the oppressed.” If I had been told I was “oppressed” when I was a young boy I doubt I would have had the ambition, dreams and drive to become a doctor and a neurosurgeon, which took many years of schooling and belief in myself - - as a minority. CRT is the last thing this country needs; it is the opposite of “unity.” I will work against Department of Education programs and trainings that seek to divide our young students by race.


Healthcare

While we have citizens, including lower middle income U.S. citizens who cannot afford healthcare, can we continue to give free healthcare to all who are here illegally – and coming every day? The federal government which controls immigration, should control immigration. I have seen personally where a patient here illegally is given free healthcare and expensive surgery (the third of three brothers who flew to the U.S. with a congenital heart condition for years that just became a problem when he arrived in the U.S.), while a carpenter with a large mortgage and young family was denied it and his entire family had to pony up funds for a surgery before the doctor was allowed to operate – and then he lost his house because of the bills. I support healthcare for all who need it, and religious and non profit clinics, but, unless immigration is controlled, or more money comes from the sky, one country cannot handle the millions coming across the border last year and this year, and be able to take care of our legal citizens. The buck ends somewhere. Additionally, doctors are leaving the practice in droves, they cannot handle seeing 20 patients a day, each for 15 minutes and no more. Right now there are not enough doctors in the U.S. to deal with the needs.


Immigration

Immigrants should come to the U.S. like I did, the legal way. There is no excuse for letting people jump to the head of the line because they ran across the border illegally. It is not fair to all those law abiding persons who are waiting in line. The federal government is now awash in money from recent Trillion dollar legislation. There should be an immediate appointment of 300 Immigration Judges to hear immigration cases at the border so that valid refugees escaping death threats can be heard, and others who are coming across for other personal or economic reasons are returned. The border should remain under title 42, i.e., limited admission during covid. If covid shots are required of all first responders and while many covid protocols are in effect in the U.S., Title 42 should at the very least apply to non citizens running across the border, or walking in and surrendering to border agents and just being allowed to transfer to the interior with no realistic tracking. While we have thousands of tents on highways and tens of thousands of homeless U.S. citizens we should not allow anyone into the U.S. unless there is great and life threatening need, unless they are in line to get in.


Affordable Housing

We should follow the Habitat for Humanity approach: those who work to build a house get to live there at a lesser, affordable cost. There is a community of smaller homes in Santa Rosa like this, and Habitat for Humanity is helping prospective residents build 80 units in Novato. This should be our model instead of just giving away stuff. Working for what you get gives citizens pride and respect, not just handouts.

I want to see the mentally ill housed in large group facilities, shelters, where they can be observed and treated. I have seen and treated mentally ill patients during my entire career in medicine and it is tragic to watch the mentally ill suffer and be unable to make the right choices and to take care of basic needs. The law must change to allow for confinement in some reasonable, decent way (not the old insane asylums of 50 years ago), because allowing such ill people to exist on the street under the present conditions is far more cruel than compassionate confinement.


Climate

Work needs to be done to preserve the planet, but it can’t be done in a day (it didn’t take a day to get here) and it can’t be done so quickly that it kills off U.S. citizens who cannot afford to heat their homes or drive their cars due to the increase in gas and oil prices. Those most adversely affected are the poor and that includes too many minorities. We must continue to use oil and gas, and natural gas while we are converting to more climate friendly fuels, and to do so in the safest way possible. I support balance - - and agreements to move as fast as possible to climate friendly options and to keep the economy running and people being fed and housed during the in-between process. Very few poor and lower middle class people can afford an electric car. I do not believe that attacking and taxing further the gas and oil companies will help the situation, I think that will make them less willing to provide needed supplies. Another factor: Immigration and climate control. More and more people added to the population equals more and more degradation of the environment, no matter who those people are.[3]

—Archimedes Ramirez's campaign website (2022)[4]

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on May 7, 2022
  2. Archimedes Ramirez For Congress, "About Archimedes," accessed May 16, 2022
  3. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  4. Archimedes Ramirez For Congress, “Issues,” accessed May 16, 2022


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