Republican Sam Crump is a former
member of the Arizona House of Representatives,
representing the 6th District from 2006 until his
resignation in January 2010. Crump resigned to
campaign for a US House seat.
"I caught former State Rep. Sam Crump doing interviews with the media outside Sandra Day O'Connor U.S. Courthouse last week while waiting for the first Lawsuit against SB 1070 to finish. Since KTAR and others lacked the integrity to challenge Crump on his info, I felt obligated to at least try.
Crump boasts he co-sponsored SB 1070 and also is proud of supporting Arizona's Employer Sanctions law which has cost tax payers almost 6 million dollars and netted only 2 convictions in 3 years. He is now running for Congress in CD3. Like most Republican Politicians he uses fear to motivate people to vote for him and disregards facts about the Arizona border and immigration. So far they've misinformed the public on murder, rape, welfare, kidnappings, beheadings, disease and even terrorism. But what disturbs me the most is the lack of respect they show towards human life.....unless it's one white rancher.
Political opportunists like Russell Pearce, Jan Brewer and others cannot stop exploiting the unsolved murder of Robert Krantz yet never mention the murders of 9 year old Brisenia Flores and her father by Minutemen or the more recent murder of Juan Verela now listed as a hate crime. White privilege is alive and well in Arizona. It has become perfectly acceptable in most circles."
Center for Arizona Policy
2010 Questions for Congressional Candidates
Position Sought: United States Representative CD-3
Question 5: Amending the United States Constitution to define marriage as between only one man and one woman.
Candidates' Position: Support
Question 8: Protecting healthcare workers from being required to perform procedures that violate their moral or religious beliefs.*
Candidates' Position: Support
Question 10: Adding “sexual orientation,” “gender identity,” or “gender expression” to the protected classes of race, religion, age, sex, and ancestry in discrimination law.
Candidates' Position: Oppose
Question 14: Repealing the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which states that marriage is the union of one man and one woman and declares states do not have to recognize same-sex marriage from other states.