Duncan Hunter (Former Presidential Candidate)

Duncan Hunter
CA
Biography
HUNTER, Duncan Lee, a Representative from California; born in Riverside, Riverside County, Calif., May 31, 1948; graduated from Rubidoux High School, Riverside, Calif., 1966; B.S., Western State University, San Diego, Calif., 1968; J.D., Western State University, San Diego, Calif., 1976; United States Army Airborne, 1969-1971; lawyer, private practice; elected as a Republican to the Ninety-seventh and to the thirteen succeeding Congresses (January 3, 1981-present); chair, Committee on Armed Services (One Hundred Eighth and One Hundred Ninth Congress).
DUNCAN HUNTER'S RECORD ON SCIENCE
Congressman Hunter dropped out of the 2008 Republican Presidential Primary on January 19.
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[edit] Energy
Congressman Hunter voted against an amendment to the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (H.R. 6) which would have raised Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards to 33mpg by 2015. During a Republican debate in May 2007, Congressman Hunter voiced support for weaning America off of oil from the Middle East and ending taxes on alternative energy sources.
[edit] Evolution/Intelligent Design
[edit] Global Warming
[edit] Healthcare
Congressman Hunter believes that healthcare should be based on a free-market system where consumers are free to “pursue their own health choices.” In order to reform healthcare, he proposes public access to health care providers’ fee schedules, the ability for health care to be bought across state lines and cost saving initiatives .
[edit] Stem Cell Research
Congressman Hunter voted against the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2007 (S. 5), which would have expanded federal funding to embryonic stem cell research. He cosponsored the Alternative Pluripotent Stem Cell Therapies Act of 2007 (H.R. 322), which would provide federal funds for research on stem cells coming from sources other than human embryos.
[edit] Speeches on Science and Health Policy Issues
[edit] SCIENCE IN THE DEBATES:
Des Moines Register Republican Debate, December 12, 2007
Question: So are you willing to increase the [biofuel] mandate?
Hunter: You know, I'd say instead of mandates, incentives. The problem with mandating only biofuels -- and you know, ethanol's not the -- is not the greatest thing in show business. You use a lot of energy to create ethanol, and there's other biofuels out there -- biodiesel, et cetera. But by giving incentives in R&D and by bringing our government laboratories together with business, with our educational institutions, the United States can become the center with a grand new industry of energy innovation. We can be the leaders in the world in this. But you don't want to -- you don't want to push away things like hydrogen, fuel cells and other things. Incentives is the way to go. And we should take the entire array of alternative energy sources and give incentives to private enterprise to get involved and get into the business of delivering us a great product. And we can produce a great new industry for this next generation.
MSNBC/Politico.com Republican Debate, May 3, 2007
Question: Congressman Hunter, Kay Thomas from Honolulu, Hawaii, wants to know if you watched Al Gore's environmental documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth."
Hunter: No, I didn't watch it. But, you know, I think that global warming and the need to be energy-independent gives us a great opportunity. I think we should bring together all of our colleges, our universities, the private sector, government laboratories, and undertake what, for this next generation, will be a great opportunity and a great challenge to remove energy dependence on the Middle East and, at the same time, help the climate. I think we can do that. We need to take taxes down to zero for the alternative energy sources. We need to make sure that all the licensing from our laboratories that goes to the private sector goes to the American manufacturing sector for these energy systems.
