San Diego Union-Tribune

Peters the incumbent, but DeBello well known in tech

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mission from 2009-2012.

Peters was elected to Congress in 2013 and last won re-election to the seat in 2018 over challenger Omar Qudrat with about 64 percent of the votes.

The Cook Political Report does not consider this year’s race competitiv­e, and Democrats outnumber Republican­s in the district, which includes Carmel Valley, La Jolla, Point Loma, downtown San Diego, Poway and Coronado.

DeBello earned 32.4 percent of the votes in the March primary, beating Democrat Nancy Casady and independen­t candidate Ryan Cunningham to face Peters on Nov.3.

In an email to The San Diego Union-Tribune, Peters wrote that defeating COVID-19 and rebuilding the economy are the most important issues facing the country.

“To beat the virus, we must trust science and follow the lead of our public health experts, because we cannot fully recover economical­ly until we have a safe vaccine and we get the virus under control,” he wrote.

Peters also said he supports helping the economy with such steps as automatic stabilizer­s, which adjust tax rates and transfer payments such as welfare and Social Security.

He also called climate change the most pressing existentia­l crisis of our time and wrote that the country must decarboniz­e its economic sectors, regulate damaging short-lived climate pollutants, invest in technologi­cal innovation for new fuels and develop carbon-capture technologi­es.

Peters wrote social justice also is an important issue this year and noted that he is an original co-sponsor of the Justice in Policing Act.

“But social justice reform goes beyond police reform,” he wrote. “These inequities have been laid even more bare by COVID which has disproport­ionately hurt communitie­s of color who have less access to health care and make up more of our essential, frontline work force and (are) not able to work from home and protect themselves. All of those things leave communitie­s of color particular­ly susceptibl­e to COVID’s worst effects.”

Among his endorsemen­ts, Peters said his support from Planned Parenthood is particular­ly meaningful this year because this election could affect women’s right to choose. He also noted that he is one of only a few candidates endorsed by both the national and re

gional chambers of commerce.

DeBello couldn’t be reached for comment, but in a recent interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune DeBello said COVID-19 and the economy were also his top issues, and he said he has a record for creating high-paying jobs.

“We need businesses and schools to be both open and safe for our families,” he said. “These goals are not mutually exclusive.”

DeBello said he supports measures that ensure clean air and clear water but saw some proposed solutions as too extreme.

“Environmen­tal alarmism delivers headlines, not solutions,” he said. “Many proposals like the Green New Deal and others supported by my opponent are unrealisti­c and economical­ly disastrous. Rather than playing the politics of climate, I am focused on practical, common sense solutions that reverse human impact. These include carbon-capture technologi­es, bluetech biofuels and other market-driven incentives.”

DeBello said he would work to address what he called a broken immigratio­n system.

“As your congressma­n, I will work to enact sensible immigratio­n and asylum policies that end the gaming of our laws,” he said, adding that he would increase H-1B visas to attract technical talent and would increase border security by using technology and what he called meaningful barriers to stop illegal crossings.

DeBello’s endorsemen­ts include former state Sen. Steve Peace and “Now Hear Me Out” podcast host Harriet Berholtz, both Democrats, as well as former California Gov. Pete Wilson, a Republican. Filings with the Federal Election Committee show Peters has raised about $140,600 this quarter and spent about $102,800, leaving him with about in cash. DeBello’s campaign has raised $11,430 and spent about $202,000, leaving him with about $47,500 in cash.

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