Ed Fallon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ed Fallon | |
State Rep. Fallon |
|
Iowa State Representative, 66th District
|
|
In office 1993 – 2006 |
|
Preceded by | Gary Sherzan |
---|---|
Succeeded by | Ako Abdul-Samad |
|
|
Born | March 1, 1958 Santa Monica, CA |
Political party | Democratic |
Children | Ben, Fionna |
Residence | Des Moines, IA |
Ed Fallon is an American politician from the U.S. state of Iowa. A Democrat, he was a candidate for Governor of Iowa and served as a member of the Iowa General Assembly from 1993 to 2006.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
The son of a member of the U.S. military, Fallon was born in Santa Monica, California in 1958, but spent the majority of his formative years living in Saugus, Massachusetts. After two years at Marlboro College in Vermont, he spent several years traveling around Europe, Canada, and the Middle East. At one point, having exhausted his financial resources, he was homeless for a time before returning to the United States.[citation needed] During his travels, he acquired some fluency in Spanish and French.[1] He knows how to play seven musical instruments, including the guitar, the accordion, the Irish whistle, and the piano.[2]
Upon returning to his native country, he moved to Iowa, where he attended Drake University between 1985 and 1987, earning a bachelor's degree in religious studies. Fallon also worked as a field canavasser for Iowa Citizen Action Network during this period. After graduating from Drake, he became a community organizer in the inner city of Des Moines, the result of his opposition to the then-dominant policies of President Ronald Reagan and other conservative Republicans. Fallon founded the Des Moines Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament which ultimately became Clarion Alliance, a non-profit focusing on peace and conflict resolution issues.
[edit] State legislature
In 1992, he decided to enter electoral politics, challenging Democratic State Representative Gary Sherzan, a ten-year incumbent, for re-nomination. Although Sherzan outspent him by almost a two-to-one margin, Fallon won the primary with 63% of the vote and went on to an easy victory in the general election.[citation needed]
Over the next eight years, Fallon earned a reputation in his district as a progressive legislator.[citation needed] During the 2000 presidential election, he made headlines across the state when he endorsed the candidacy of Green Party nominee Ralph Nader over that of Democrat Al Gore because of Gore's choice of Joe Lieberman as a running mate. Fallon admitted in 2001 that, while people's frustration with the Democratic Party was legitimate, his decision to back Nader was a mistake.
The leaders of the Iowa Democratic Party, angered at Fallon's actions, stripped him of his place as ranking member of the House Local Government Committee. He was voted off the Polk County Democratic Central Committee and, when the state was redistricted in 2001, 70% of his former constituents were moved to another district (which was done through a non-partisan process). Facing a tough, three-way primary in what was, for all intents and purposes, a new district, Fallon was not expected to survive. Instead, he won 68% of the vote in the primary and easily won re-election to a sixth term.
[edit] Run for governor
In October of 2002, after progressive Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone died in a plane crash, Fallon decided that he wanted to emulate Wellstone's impact on his state's politics by running for Governor.[citation needed] After spending almost two and a half years testing the waters and preparing for his run, he announced his candidacy on April 9, 2005 at a rally at the Iowa State Capitol Building, becoming the first candidate to officially declare.
During the course of the race, in which he faced Secretary of State Chet Culver and former state economic development director and Congressman Mike Blouin, Fallon positioned himself as a candidate focused on populist concerns. The main focal point of his campaign was a pledge to enact voluntary public financing of elections, a pledge that he reinforced with his refusal to accept donations from political action committees and lobbyists and his self-imposed limitation of $2400 in contributions per person.[3] He was also in favor of creating a locally-owned renewable fuels industry, universal health care, reforming the Departments of Human Services and Corrections, ending government handouts to big business, and increased funding for public education. He opposed urban sprawl, legalized gambling, factory farms, and the Iowa Values Fund, a multi-million-dollar corporate incentive package that he dubbed "corporate welfare."
In January and March of 2006, more delegates pledged to him were selected to attend the state party convention than those of any other candidate. If no candidate had won 35% of the vote in the primary, convention delegates would have awarded the nomination. In late May, he received the endorsement of the Iowa Sierra Club and the Iowa City Press-Citizen, becoming the first candidate to receive support from a major newspaper.
The primary was held on June 6, 2006. With 100% of precincts reporting, the winner was Chet Culver with 57,976 votes, or 39.09%. Fallon ran third out of a field of four, receiving 38,160 votes, or 25.73%. Although this result was not the win that Fallon and his supporters had hoped for, it was considerably in excess of the 5 to 10% that pundits had speculated he might receive at the beginning of the race.
[edit] Post-primary
On November 10, 2006, three days after the midterm elections, during which candidates that Fallon had campaigned for were elected Governor, Secretary of State, and to the state legislature and the United States Congress, he announced in an e-mail to supporters that he would take a hiatus from electoral politics, during which he would form a new political activist organization, dedicated to social justice, clean elections, and encouraging local and state action to address global warming.
On December 28, 2006, Fallon appeared in Des Moines at the first official presidential campaign event of former North Carolina Senator John Edwards, taking tickets and passing out Edwards campaign literature. Edwards, who was the Democratic nominee for Vice President in 2004, has taken positions similar to Fallon's on campaign finance reform and universal health care, and has called for an end to poverty and an immediate withdrawal from the Iraq war.[4]
On January 11, 2007, Fallon announced in an e-mail to supporters that he had co-founded, with his partner Lynn Heuss, a private business called "Independence Movement for Iowa," or I'M for Iowa. According to Fallon, the organization will seek "independence" for Iowa from "special interest campaign contributions"; "poverty, injustice and discrimination"; "fossil fuels and foreign oil"; "government subsidies for big business"; and "government officials who operate without the public's interest in mind, often behind closed doors, and with a lack of integrity and accountability."[5]. Questions were raised about I'M for Iowa in March 2007 about whether the organization was following campaign finance laws and behaving in an ethical manner. "[6] However, these claims were based on the misunderstanding that I'M for Iowa was not a private, unincorporated business.
[edit] Congressional run
On November 21, 2007, it was reported in the media that an organization called "Fallon for Congress" had bought up all websites with the "FallonForCongress" domain name.[7] At that year's Democratic presidential caucus, rumors that Fallon would challenge incumbent 3rd district Congressman Leonard Boswell were confirmed when nominating petitions bearing his name were circulated at polling locations. On January 8, 2008, it was reported that Fallon had formally filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission to form his campaign committee.[8] He formally announced his candidacy in a press conference in Des Moines on January 16, 2008. [9]
Media reports have noted that Fallon carried the 3rd district in the 2006 gubernatorial primary, and examination of the caucus results shows that Senator John Edwards, whom Fallon endorsed, did much better in the district than did Senator Hillary Clinton, whom Boswell endorsed. Edwards carried six counties in the district, while Clinton carried none. (Illinois Senator Barack Obama carried another six counties and the district.)
On November 21, 2007, it was reported in the media that an organization called "Fallon for Congress" had bought up all websites with the "FallonForCongress" domain name.[7] At that year's Democratic presidential caucus, rumors that Fallon would challenge incumbent 3rd district Congressman Leonard Boswell were confirmed when nominating petitions bearing his name were circulated at polling locations. On January 8, 2008, it was reported that Fallon had formally filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission to form his campaign committee.[8] He formally announced his candidacy in a press conference in Des Moines on January 16, 2008. [9]
Fallon was defeated by Boswell in the Democratic primary on June 3, 2008, by a 61 to 39 percent margin, after Boswell and a 527 group operating on his behalf ran a deceptive campaign against Fallon.
[edit] References
- ^ "Exalting the e-word", The Economist, 2006-06-01. Retrieved on 2007-08-05.
- ^ Ed Fallon's Facebook Profile. Retrieved on 2008-04-02.
- ^ Iowa Independent:: Evidence suggests Fallon may challenge Boswell in Dem primary
- ^ Radio Iowa
- ^ Iowa Politics
- ^ Iowa Independent
- ^ Iowa Independent:: Evidence suggests Fallon may challenge Boswell in Dem primary
- ^ CQ Politics | Even More Politics for Dems in Iowa
- ^ Iowa Politics