Arthur Davidson
Arthur Davidson | |
---|---|
Senator for Holish Islands-2 | |
Assumed office September 22, 2014 | |
Preceded by | Aniani Mahaulu |
Personal details | |
Born | Arthur Anthony Davidson April 27, 1969 Lamnoque, Holish Islands, Zamastan |
Political party | Green Liberal Party |
Arthur Davidson (born April 27, 1969) is a Zamastanian politician and attorney who has served as the Senator for Holish Islands' 2nd district since 2014. A member of the Green Liberal Party, Davidson has written, sponsored, and passed legislation advancing women's rights, affirmative action, same-sex marriage, and single-payer healthcare. He has pushed for economic reforms to address wealth inequality nationally, particularly the racial wealth gap. Davidson has pursued measures to reform the criminal justice system, combat climate change, and restructure national immigration policy.
On September 5th, 2023, he announced his candidacy for president in the 2024 election, becoming the second candidate after Euan Gunn to challenge incumbent-President Sabine Armitage. With the GLP's agreed policy to select a single candidate for the election, Gunn and Davidson competed for the nomination, ultimately Davidson secured it in February 2024.
Early life and education
Senate
Elections
On December 20, 2013, Davidson announced that he would explore running for the senate seat then occupied by Aniani Mahaulu in the 2014 election, ending speculation that he would challenge then-Governor Lea Kimo in the 2014 gubernatorial election. About a month later, Mahaulu—then 89 years old—announced that he would not seek reelection in 2014. Mahaulu died in June 2014, leaving his seat vacant. Davidson ran against BCP-candidate Bazel Webb. Davidson defeated Webb in the general election, 54.9% to 44.0%.
Tenure
Presidential campaign
On September 5th, 2023, Davidson announced his campaign for the GLP nomination for President of Zamastan in the 2024 presidential election. Before his announcement, it was widely speculated that he would run for president but he expressed uncertainty about it. "We are going to end the long spell of twenty years worth of executive conservative overreach in this country," Senator Davidson said in his campaign announcement. "I am running to join the world in the state of true liberalism. Freedom of the individual, responsible oversight, and no more institutional failure with lax guides. We have seen that the liberal side of this country is vehemently popular and is often in the majority of public opinion, but the conservative clampdown of the past, not 1, not 2, not 3, but 6 presidential administrations has resulted in our ideology's inability to gain executive function. Moderation isn't the key at this point, it's a full embrace of liberal values. It is time to organize, time to galvanize, time to take back our democracy."
"Let us cross the ocean of our divides and walk across our sturdy bridge to higher ground," Davidson said, symbolically gesturing to the Samson Ocean in the background at the outdoor event in Lamnoque. A sense of community "is fracturing across our nation right now, worn down by the petty and vicious nature of our politics," he added. "We are all tired of the shutdowns and the putdowns, the gridlock and the grandstanding. It is time to heal the heart of our democracy and renew our commitment to the common good."
Davidson also said he will "focus on getting things done" as president. "Let me be blunt: For too long leaders in Tofino have sat on the sidelines while others try to figure out what to do about the changing economy and its impact on our lives, what to do about the disruptive nature of new technologies, income inequality, the political and geographic divides, the changing climate, the tumult in our world," he said. "For a moment, let’s stop seeing those obstacles as obstacles on our path. Did we view the snow as an obstacle? No we did not. Let’s see those obstacles as our path."
He entered the race as the second GLP candidate, after Euan Gunn, widely seen as a moderate choice. However, Davidson's standing with the Progressive Alliance Party served to boost his standing among the more left-leaning caucuses, and Davidson quickly rose in favorability ratings among candidates. Within a month after Davidson announced his candidacy, former-Governor Antonio Erresi, Senator Lauren Saunders, and every Liberal member of the Congressional Hall from the Holish Islands endorsed him. Governor William Ortesia sparked controversy when he joked at a charity dinner that he would sign an executive order to remove Davidson as senator so he would lose the race, but Davidson quipped days later that he and Ortesia were on good terms despite differing politics.
Political positions
Davidson has been called a liberal and progressive. As a senator, he has a liberal voting record. In a February 2023 interview with Samuel Divian, Davidson said, "there's nothing in that realm of progressive politics where you won't find me."
Davidson supports long-term deficit reduction efforts to ensure economic prosperity, cap and trade taxation to combat climate change, and increased funding for education. He has spoken in favor of creating a federal job guarantee and baby bonds (low-risk savings accounts that minors get access to at age 18). In the Senate, he has emphasized issues of racial and social justice. He played a leading role in the push to pass the Take a Step Act, a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill. He supports the legalization of cannabis and decriminalization of many other drugs. Davidson supports abortion rights, and also supports a single-payer health care plan through the expansion of ZamCare.
On foreign policy, Davidson supports scaling down Zamastanian military personnel in exchange for modernizing equipment and aiding allies through supply. He was a critic of the 1999-2005 War in Vulkaria and the Terehan War.
Despite his reputation as a progressive, progressives have criticized Davidson on occasion. In 2017, he voted against a proposal to lower prescription drug prices, which led to criticism that he was too dependent on corporate support.