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Harmeet Dhillon to Contest California Assembly Seat
Though
the Iraq war and the economic downturn have impacted the popularity of
the Republican Party, Harmeet Dhillon, candidate for the 13th Assembly
District in California, is not unduly worried.
"I
am running for a local election, not for the United States Congress.
International or national issues are not much relevant here," Dhillon, who is unopposed in the Republican Primary scheduled for June 3, said.
In
November, she will face popular San Francisco Supervisor Tom Ammiano,
who is also unopposed in the Democratic pri- mary. They will be the
only candidates in the election to the seat currently held by Mark
Leno, who has reached his term limit.
The
district covers the eastern half of San Francisco city and is heavily
Democratic. Of the 260,000 voters, 57 percent are registered Democrats;
Republicans are 9 percent and another 28 percent have no party
affiliation.
"It is a very liberal district. I am not appealing for the Republican vote alone. I am not intimidated by the numbers," Dhillon, an attorney and community activist, said.
She said she has always supported the Republican Party, like her parents who live in North Carolina. "Most
Indians believe in the ideology of the Republicans such as less
government and fiscal restraint. The party also supports com- plete
religious freedom," she argued.
One
third of the population in the 13th district is Asian, though the
number of Indians is few. Again, the prospect of mini- mal community
support is not an issue, Dhillon said, pointing out that Bobby Jindal
had won election as governor of Louisiana with little or no support
from the Indian American community.
She
expects to spend between $100,000 and $500,000 on the election, and
believes that here, the community though few in number will be of huge
help. USINPAC (the US-India Political Action Committee) will organize a
fundraiser in Washington, DC soon, and another is planned in North
Carolina. "The community should help the candidates, as very few from the communi- ty stand for public office," she said.
She
promises to restore California's busi- ness climate for future
generations, less government regulation, more individual freedom,
balanced budgets not based on deficit spending or endless bond
measures, lower taxes and more efficient use of tax dollars, and
ethical political reform and transparency.
Dhillon
opposes the 'Nanny State,' where the government takes care of
individual needs; she is against rent control that will prevent
property owners from investing; she also disagrees with the regulation
that restaurants should publish calorie counts on menus.
Though
her law firm provides health insurance to its six employees, she is
opposed to the law asking small businesses to give insurance coverage
to its employees.
Her
opponent Ammiano, a gay leader, has served as a San Francisco
supervisor since 1994, representing Bernal Heights and the Mission
District. He worked as a teacher and has done stand-up comedy since
1980. Ammiano spearheaded the creation of the city's domestic partner-
ship ordinance and the universal health care ordinance.
Dhillon
is a formidable candidate in the light of her background. She is a
member of the San Francisco Republican Central Committee, and a
delegate of the California Republican Party, appointed by Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger. Her political involvement began during the 1988
presi- dential election, when she was chair of Dartmouth Students for
Jack Kemp.
Punjab-born Dhillon, who moved to North Carolina via England and New York, is a founder and partner of the law firm Dhillon & Smith LLP, which represents businesses, entrepreneurs and executives across many industries.
At
the University of Virginia Law School, Dhillon served on the editorial
board of the Virginia Law Review; she clerked for Judge Paul V Niemeyer
of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in
Baltimore, Maryland, and has successfully represented political
refugees from various troubled regions of the world, including Kashmir,
Tibet and Eritrea. After 9/11, she represented many Sikhs who were
victims of hate crimes.
Dhillon
was recently named to the presti- gious Best Lawyers Under 40 list by
the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association. She served for
three years on the board of the American Civil Liberties Union's
Northern California Chapter. Currently, she is chair of the civil
rights committee of the South Asian Bar Association, a trustee of the
Sikh Foundation, and director of the California Women's Leadership
Association.
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