Darcy Burner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Darcy Gibbons Burner is a Democrat from Carnation, Washington. She was a candidate for Washington's 8th congressional district in 2006, but lost in a close election. She worked for a dozen years in high technology including five years at Microsoft as a Lead Product Manager, working on the .NET Framework. Burner left Microsoft in 2004 to enter politics.
Contents |
[edit] Early life, education, and family
Burner was born November 12, 1970, and grew up in a Republican household in Nebraska farm country. She was adopted at birth. Her father, Ralph Gibbons, spent 20 years in the Air Force, settling with his wife and five kids in Fremont, Nebraska. She was the Civil Air Patrol National Cadet of the Year in 1989.
In high school, Burner was a National Merit Scholar. She worked multiple jobs, both part time and full time, to earn her way through Harvard, graduating in 1996 with a B.A. in computer science and economics. Her jobs included working for Lotus Development, Asymetrix, and, starting in 2000, as a lead product manager for Microsoft .NET.
Burner married in 1993. She and her husband Michael have a son, Henry, born in 2003. They live outside Carnation, Washington.
[edit] 2006 Congressional election
Darcy is a first-time candidate running for Washington's 8th congressional district to unseat first-term U.S. Representative Dave Reichert. She was a volunteer in the unsuccessful campaign of Dave Ross for the same seat in 2004 and has been a local Democratic activist. She decided to run for office after attending a Camp Wellstone training.
Burner has achieved numerous fundraising goals against an incumbent congressman in a congressional district that has so far never been won by a Democratic candidate. On the other hand, in 2004, Democratic Presidential candidate John Kerry won the district with 51% of the vote, making GOP incumbent Reichert one of just 17 House Republicans elected in a district that went Democratic for president.
Because of her strong fundraising, Burner has garnered a number of endorsements. In August 2006, CQPolitics wrote: "though Reichert appears to maintain at least a slight edge in the fall contest, CQPolitics.com has changed its rating on the race to its more competitive Leans Republican category from Republican Favored." [1]. On October 11, they changed their rating to "No Clear Favorite" [2].
Multiple polls showed Burner in a virtual tie with Reichert with just weeks left before the election. In late October the two major Seattle newspapers split in their endorsements: The Seattle Post-Intelligencer endorsed Burner while the Seattle Times, which had endorsed Democrat Dave Ross in 2004, endorsed Reichert.
As of November 10, 2006, the results of the election were too close to call, because of the large number of absentee ballots in the district. By 7:00pm, official tallies showed her trailing by 3,095 votes, with a reported 76% of votes counted.
Burner conceded at a press conference on Tuesday, November 14, 2006.
[edit] Views
Burner describes herself as a "practical progressive".[3][4] Her positions on various areas include:
- Reproductive rights: Pro-choice, supports family planning
- Education: Supports early childhood education
- Environment: Against additional nuclear storage at Hanford, Washington
- Foreign policy: "Supports United Nations efforts to provide essential family planning and healthcare services to poor nations." [5]
- Health care: Supports stem cell research
- Military benefits: Supports extending military health coverage to families of Reservists and National Guardsmen
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Darcy Burner for Congress
- WA 8th District info for Darcy Burner on Our Congress
- Darcy Burner biography from politics.historyguy.com
- Darcy Burner Biography TV Ad
- USA Today: 8th district battle in Washington a surprising tossup Nov. 1, 2006
- NY Times: Liberal Republican suburbs turns furious with GOP Oct. 30, 2006
- NY Times: Winning women? Oct. 29, 2006
- Rankings for Congressional Races The New York Times
- Rankings National Journal
- Seattle P-I: Burner is better Oct 22, 2006
- Seattle Times: Reichert Endorsement Oct 15, 2006
- Audio: Weekday with Steve Scher KUOW 94.9 FM July 7, 2006
- Candidates race to raise cash Sean Cockerham The News Tribune July 18, 2006
- Money pouring into local congressional campaigns: Challenger raises more than Rep. Reichert for second straight quarter Chris Winters King County Journal July 18, 2006
- Quick Bush visit raises fast cash Dean Radford King County Journal June 17, 2006
- '06 Race Focuses on the Suburbs, Inner and Outer Timothy Egan The New York Times June 16, 2006
- Democrats pumped as challenger outpaces Reichert on fundraising Jonathon Martin and David Postman The Seattle Times June 16, 2006
- WA-08: High-profile Fundraising in a Competitive District Rachel Kapachunas Congressional Quarterly Politics June 15, 2006
- Whose Party is it Anyway? Perry Bacon Jr. and Mike Allen TIME June 12, 2006
- Reichert defeat fits into Democrats' national strategy Neil Modie Seattle Post-Intelligencer June 1, 2006
- Political novice takes on GOP's Reichert Ashley Bach Seattle Times, May 16, 2006
- Reichert faces competition for 8th District seat Dean A. Radford King County Journal September 14, 2005
- 2 Democrats enter race for Congress Ashley Bach Seattle Times September 14, 2005
- Two Democrats already have Reichert in their sights The Associated Press the News TribuneSeptember 15, 2005
- Democrats aim to pick up more seats in Congress State's majority party goes on the offensive against Republicans David Ammons Seattle Post-Intelligencer September 19, 2005
- Buzz - State Politics George Howland Jr. Seattle Weekly September 21, 2005
- Washington Congressional Races in 2006
- Young dems strive to get out the vote By Kate Rothgeb, The Daily, October 06, 2005
- Eyeing races for control of U.S. House Joel Connelly, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, December 12, 2005.