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Jose Cortes
Jose Cortes (Peace and Freedom Party of California) ran for election to the U.S. House to represent California's 51st Congressional District. He lost in the primary on June 7, 2022.
Cortes completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. Click here to read the survey answers.
Biography
Jose Cortes was born in Lakewood, California. Cortes' career experience includes working as a healthcare and benefits administrator.[1]
Elections
2022
See also: California's 51st Congressional District election, 2022
General election
General election for U.S. House California District 51
Incumbent Sara Jacobs defeated Stan Caplan in the general election for U.S. House California District 51 on November 8, 2022.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | ![]() | Sara Jacobs (D) | 61.9 | 144,186 |
Stan Caplan (R) | 38.1 | 88,886 |
Total votes: 233,072 | ||||
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Nonpartisan primary election
Nonpartisan primary for U.S. House California District 51
Incumbent Sara Jacobs and Stan Caplan defeated Jose Cortes and Barrett Holman Leak in the primary for U.S. House California District 51 on June 7, 2022.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | ![]() | Sara Jacobs (D) | 60.5 | 91,329 |
✔ | Stan Caplan (R) | 37.2 | 56,183 | |
Jose Cortes (Peace and Freedom Party of California) ![]() | 2.2 | 3,343 | ||
![]() | Barrett Holman Leak (D) (Write-in) ![]() | 0.0 | 55 |
Total votes: 150,910 | ||||
![]() | ||||
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
Endorsements
To view Cortes' endorsements in the 2022 election, please click here.
2020
See also: California's 50th Congressional District election, 2020
General election
General election for U.S. House California District 50
Darrell Issa defeated Ammar Campa-Najjar in the general election for U.S. House California District 50 on November 3, 2020.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | ![]() | Darrell Issa (R) | 54.0 | 195,521 |
![]() | Ammar Campa-Najjar (D) | 46.0 | 166,869 |
Total votes: 362,390 | ||||
![]() | ||||
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 50
The following candidates ran in the primary for U.S. House California District 50 on March 3, 2020.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | ![]() | Ammar Campa-Najjar (D) | 36.5 | 74,121 |
✔ | ![]() | Darrell Issa (R) | 23.1 | 47,036 |
![]() | Carl DeMaio (R) | 19.9 | 40,347 | |
![]() | Brian Jones (R) | 10.6 | 21,495 | |
![]() | Marisa Calderon (D) (Unofficially withdrew) ![]() | 5.7 | 11,557 | |
Nathan Wilkins (R) | 2.1 | 4,276 | ||
Jose Cortes (Peace and Freedom Party of California) ![]() | 0.9 | 1,821 | ||
![]() | Helen Horvath (Independent) ![]() | 0.6 | 1,249 | |
Henry Ota (Independent) | 0.4 | 908 | ||
![]() | Lucinda Jahn (Independent) ![]() | 0.2 | 410 |
Total votes: 203,220 | ||||
![]() | ||||
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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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
- Matt Rahn (R)
- Larry Wilske (R)
- Sam Abed (R)
- Duncan Hunter (R)
- Bill Wells (R)
- Hunter Spears Duncan (R)
- David Edick (Independent)
- Alex Balkin (D)
Campaign themes
2022
Video for Ballotpedia
Video submitted to Ballotpedia Released May 9, 2022 |
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Jose Cortes completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Cortes' responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
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|- Housing and healthcare should be Constitutionally guaranteed human rights
- We must end the endless wars and bring all the troops home. We should use the money to pay for important social services, and pay reparations to all nations affected by imperialism and colonialism.
- Full rights for all immigrants; abolish ICE/DHS. Defund and demilitarize the police. Jail killer cops!
In 2020, the number of people who became homeless for the first time in San Diego County more than doubled. We need to take immediate action to ensure access to housing for everyone in our community. This is not an issue of supply and demand: in 2020 there were an estimated 5 thousand people living on the streets of San Diego, and about 57,000 housing units sitting empty on any given night. This level of inequality and inefficiency in our economic system is absurd, inhumane and unacceptable; we need socialism.
When the costs of food, housing, and medication go up, people find a way to pay for them, because we have no other option. We need to dispel the myth that a capitalist “free market” will make essentials of life like housing or healthcare less expensive. This has been proven false time and time again. Housing and healthcare should not be profit-making ventures.
I urge anyone who is inspired by my campaign to apply to join the PSL and get involved (www.PSLweb.org/join). Just a few years ago I felt hopeless and disillusioned with politics, but getting involved with the PSL has shown me that workers can take an active role in history.
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
Cortes' campaign website stated the following:
“ |
Housing for all: make housing a constitutional right, cancel rents and mortgages. In 2020, the number of people who became homeless for the first time in San Diego County more than doubled. We need to take immediate action to ensure access to housing for everyone in our community. This is not an issue of supply and demand: in 2020 there were an estimated 5 thousand people living on the streets of San Diego, and about 57,000 housing units sitting empty on any given night. The answer to the housing crisis is not criminalizing homelessness or building more luxury housing that working people can’t afford. Capitalism is an economic system that operates with one purpose: profits for individuals and corporations. This overarching logic determines how the capitalist owners and their administrators act and think. It also creates inescapable contradictions in the structure of the economy, such as people suffering and dying homeless on the streets while there are houses sitting empty and unused just because they can’t be sold or rented for profit. Ironically, under capitalism, the system that claims to uphold the sacred right of private property, homelessness has become a permanent feature and millions of people are losing their homes through evictions or foreclosures. Under socialism, a home is regarded as personal property, not as a commodity for investment, speculation and profit. Under socialism, housing would be a guaranteed right for everyone, and no individual would be able to own another person’s home. We plan to take the first steps towards housing for all by codifying housing as a guaranteed human right in our Constitution. We would cancel all rent and mortgage debt that has accumulated over the course of the Covid pandemic and immediately halt all evictions, and implement crucial reforms such as rent control. Under socialism, in Cuba for example, despite being blockaded by the United States, there is no homelessness because a home is considered a human right. This was only possible through the elimination of “private property,” including landlordism. In Cuba, after the revolution, by March 1959, utilities and housing rents were reduced by half, and evictions banned. This is our ultimate goal; a world in which the majority of people own their homes, or pay a very small percentage of their income in rent to maintain the housing, rather than a landlord taking half of every paycheck and profiting from such a basic necessity. This is more than just an economic issue. It’s a feminist and LGBTQ issue, an accessibility issue, and a safety issue. When people have access to stable housing, they feel invested in their neighborhood and they’re less likely to commit crimes. Many people, disproportionately women, stay in abusive relationships because they’re unable to find affordable housing on their own; with a housing guarantee they would no longer be forced to choose between a bad living situation and the threat of homelessness. Not to mention artists, musicians, scientists, writers, and other creatives and thinkers who are not able to devote time to their crafts due to capitalist economic constraints would have more opportunities and stability to fully develop their skills and passions. By taking care of our people’s most basic material needs, we can also help them reach their full potential.
I work in healthcare and benefits administration, so this is an issue that I am very familiar with. Every day, I see the cruelty and contradictions of the for-profit healthcare system laid bare: a newborn child who is denied healthcare coverage because of a missed deadline, employees grieving the loss of a loved one who have to fight to have medical expenses covered, workers who simply cannot pay the outstanding balance that they owe the company to maintain their health benefits after taking time off. These are the lucky people, the people who have access to healthcare through their employer, although many are underinsured. Three million Californians have no insurance at all. This is not an issue that capitalism can solve. When the costs of food, housing, and medication go up, people find a way to pay for them, because we have no other option. We need to dispel the myth that a capitalist “free market” will make healthcare less expensive. That has been proven false time and time again. Necessities like medicine, healthcare, housing, food, and water should be guaranteed human rights for all, not an opportunity for corporations and the capitalist class to make a quick buck! Most people support the transition to a single-payer health care system: 57% of all Californians supported replacing private insurance with guaranteed coverage provided by the government, and this was before the COVID-19 pandemic caused millions of Californians to lose their jobs and employer-provided healthcare in the middle of a crisis. No more excuses! If our government has the capacity to occupy, bomb and terrorize countries around the world, then it should have the capacity to provide healthcare. Take that $800 billion from Biden’s Pentagon war budget and put it into social programs that are desperately needed!
After campaigning on a progressive platform including ending the wars and bringing troops home, former President Barack Obama instead vastly increased the number of troops in Afghanistan during his first six months in office. He then pledged to begin withdrawing in 2011, and later said troops would be completely removed by 2014. Over the years, the Pentagon watered down the plan to have most troops withdrawn by 2015, then have just a thousand by 2017. Donald Trump’s presidential campaign also promised to bring the troops home. But in his first year in power, he too increased the number of troops in Afghanistan — and also in Syria and Iraq — while giving the military the power to continue to increase troop levels as they saw fit, without seeking White House approval. Trump also intensified the deadly air war on the country. On Sept. 11, 2021 President Joe Biden withdrew all troops from Afghanistan. The occupation of Afghanistan had lasted two decades. It cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of Afghan soldiers and civilians, thousands of U.S. soldiers, more than $2 trillion in federal spending, and displaced more than 6.5 million people from their homes. Many were understandably relieved by Biden’s decision. But the withdrawal was followed by the imposition of harsh sanctions on the new Afghani government and the seizure of over seven billion dollars from the nation’s central bank. The U.S. government should withdraw all troops from all the sovereign countries it occupies with more than 800 military bases across the globe. The Biden administration also must not stop at bringing the troops home, but must also remove all the mercenary “private military contractors.” We demand reparations and the right to self-determination for all victims of imperialism and colonialism. We call for an end to the cruel and inhumane blockades and sanctions, especially against Cuba and Venezuela. These blockades prevent food, medicine and other necessities from being imported and are designed to strangle the economy, forcing the world to bend to the will of the imperialist United States. These sanctions and blockades are war crimes that affect vulnerable people like children or the elderly. We call for an end to AFRICOM and imperialist meddling in Africa, an end to the escalating aggression and the propaganda war against China, Iran, Venezuela, the DPRK, and an end to all manifestations of neocolonialism and imperialist aggression. Anyone concerned with climate change and the ecological crisis we face has to be concerned with the United States military. The most obvious reason is that the U.S. military’s carbon footprint is gigantic. If the U.S. military was a country, it would be a bigger greenhouse gas emitter than 140 other countries, and there are only 195 countries in the world! It takes a lot of oil and gas to keep the U.S. empire’s 800 military bases running, not to mention their navy and air fleets which are scattered across the globe. In 2017 alone, the military purchased 260,000 barrels of oil per day. Just one of its jets uses about 3,334 gallons per hour, about what the average car driver uses in seven years. The U.S. military tops the charts for polluters: the most fossil fuels burned, the release of the most greenhouse gases and the biggest source of mercury released into the environment poisoning rivers, lakes and oceans. The Pentagon war machine is the biggest dumper of hazardous materials and medical waste pollution. Having an “environmentalist” or “climate justice” outlook is not just about what an individual can do in their home or consumer choices. It means going after the real culprits of environmental destruction. The U.S. military and weapons manufacturers are among the worst perpetrators of toxic practices in the world.
This is an issue that is very important to me because of my experiences with police brutality in the El Cajon Uprising, the La Mesa Uprising, and other campaigns and rebellions against police terror. My campaign aims to uplift the stories of local people who lost their lives due to police terror and state violence such as Leo Ibarra, Jonathan Coronel, Antonio Martinez, Anthony Harris, Steve Olson, Frederick Jefferson, Dennis Carolino and Toby Diller and so many more. We want to share the stories of people that have faced racist harassment such as Aumaurie Johnson, as well as activists who have been targeted such as Eddie Alvarez or Leslie Furcron. I have faced police repression and harassment myself. San Diego County spends millions of dollars on police and other law enforcement agencies, and has one of the worst records in the entire country when it comes to in-custody deaths. Racism, abuse of power and corruption are rampant. Funds could easily be moved into important social services like housing, healthcare, food, education, leisure-- community programs which actually help address the root causes of crime and build stronger neighborhoods. The Party for Socialism and Liberation stands for the overthrow, dismantling and complete replacement of the police, prisons, military and courts. These core institutions of the capitalist state cannot be reformed into a neutral body. They must be abolished by means of a revolution. We support the fight for reforms while in the current capitalist system that curtail the scale of the capitalist state forces, that reduce their funding and that create additional obstacles to their everyday use of torture and violence. We support reforms that put up roadblocks to everyday repression, and which therefore make it easier for working people to survive, and give them tools to fight the state’s abuse politically and legally. We call for:
Some police officers are now being charged with murder because of the people’s movement, and we will continue to fight for important reforms. This is a far cry from the full justice and social transformation that are needed.
Our campaign stands for immediately decriminalizing immigration. We call for:
We frequently hear how immigrants are merely “seeking a better life for their children” and trying to fulfill the “American Dream,” but there is no discussion of why the world is such that people cannot sustain their families in their home countries and must migrate to the United States. Much of the rhetoric around this reform—on both sides of the Congressional debate—accept the terms that undocumented immigrants are criminals. Neither side questions the culpability of U.S. economic and military policies in driving global migration. For Latinos living in the United States, their violent displacement is the faded reflection of the violent political and economic intervention waged upon their home countries by years of intervention and imperialism. While the debate over the pathway to citizenship carries on among ruling class circles in the coming period, it is the role of revolutionaries to explain the real roots of immigration and to expose the capitalists as the real criminals. Immigrants are the products of an economic system, global capitalism, that has reduced opportunities in their home countries, while opening up considerable paths to migration through Western economic, military and cultural penetration of their homelands. While the bulk of this process is celebrated—the free flow of capital and goods across borders—the human beings that react to these trends are described as law-breakers and criminalized. COVID-19 infections among people held in U.S. immigrant detention facilities are skyrocketing. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reported higher-than-ever rates of COVID-19 infections among those held in their custody, reaching more than 50 times the positivity rate of the general U.S. population. Even during the pandemic, ICE has continued to detain people with no regard for the health of those held in its detention centers. During the first year of the pandemic, ICE detained about 138,000 people in facilities that cannot possibly accommodate proper social distancing. Detainees report horrific conditions inside facilities due to inadequate healthcare, lack of personal protective equipment like masks, overcrowding and poor nutrition. In 2020, detainees went on hunger strike at Otay Mesa Detention Center here in San Diego to protest ICE’s blatant abuse and were pepper-sprayed in retaliation. These examples are only a few in the list of human rights violations committed by ICE with impunity. We call for the abolition of ICE and an end to all cruel and inhumane immigration policies, including detention, family separation, deportations and immigration raids. The PSL fights for a movement where the current victims of imperialism are empowered to fight back, and for a world where workers can freely cross borders, but in which no one must for the sake of survival. That means socialism, which in the United States would entail a vast effort to repair and repay those nations oppressed by imperialism, and would liberate the hoarded social wealth to provide a guaranteed living to all.[2] |
” |
—Jose Cortes' campaign website (2022)[3] |
2020
Jose Cortes completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2020. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Cortes' responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
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|Jose was born and raised in the 50th. His father, an immigrant from Colombia, graduated from El Cajon High and his mother has been a teacher in the district for years at the same school where his sister now works. As he studied history in college, he began to think critically about U.S. foreign policy because of its destabilizing and destructive effects overseas, as well as the costs of settler-colonialism on this continent. He was working at a local charter school when the murder of Alfred Olango by the El Cajon PD and subsequent lack of accountability compelled him to take to the streets with other people from the neighborhood to demand justice and an end to police violence. Since then, he has become an organizer with the A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism) as well as the San Diego PSL (Party for Socialism and Liberation). He has been endorsed by the California Peace and Freedom Party, the socialist electoral party founded by veteran revolutionaries from the civil rights movement and anti-war protests of the 1960s. His professional experience includes work in the education and nonprofit sectors where he fought to close corporate tax loopholes to increase school and community funding, canvassed for affordable housing and advocated for protections to help renters and homeowners. Jose works a 40+ hr/week temp job and is running for office on evenings and weekends to represent workers- he is the true people's candidate. A better world is possible!
- Housing, healthcare, education, and a job should be a Constitutional right.
- The working class people of the United States want peace; end the wars and occupations, close U.S. military bases overseas, and bring the troops home!
- The two-party system is failing; we need real alternatives to the corrupt corporate-backed parties.
1. Housing, healthcare, education, and a job should be a human right protected by the Constitution
2. Double the minimum wage and adjust it automatically based on the cost of living
3. Make banks, communications, transportation, energy, and related industries true public utilities for everyone's use and benefit, not for profit
4. Peace with all countries; end U.S. aggression and occupation abroad, bring the troops home; lead the way towards denuclearization
5. Community self-defense, end aggressive policing and abolish mass incarceration; address the root causes of crime (poverty, isolation); protect working class people's right to own firearms
6. Full rights for all immigrants, close the detention camps, demilitarize the border; reparations for descendants of slavery; respect Native American treaties and sovereignty
7. End patriarchy and gender-based oppression; full reproductive rights
8. Full rights for LGBTQ people
9. Protect the environment and stop the military and largest corporations from polluting; for the earth to live, capitalism must end!
Despite mass protests and strikes, very little action has been taken to address climate change. This is because capitalism is an illogical, disorganized
system that cannot deal with this crisis. Individual action by consumers won't solve the problem because the U.S. military and corporations are the biggest polluters; politicians from the two major parties are afraid to stand up to these industries. We need a planned economy that can deal with the climate issue rationally and provide for everyone's basic needs.
Privacy is becoming a huge issue as corporations collect and sell our data and advanced technologies such as facial recognition software become ubiquitous.
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.
See also
2022 Elections
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on May 9, 2022
- ↑ Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ Jose Cortes for Congress, “Issues,” accessed May 19, 2022