Suzanne Kosmas: Difference between revisions
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'''Suzanne Kosmas''' is a member of the [[United States House of Representatives]] representing the 24th Congressional District of [[Florida]]. | '''Suzanne Kosmas''' is a member of the [[United States House of Representatives]] representing the 24th Congressional District of [[Florida (U.S. state)|Florida]]. | ||
She voted against the [[Affordable Health Care for America Act|November 2009 health care bill]] but for the [[ Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act|final]] in March 2010. | She voted against the [[Affordable Health Care for America Act|November 2009 health care bill]] but for the [[ Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act|final]] in March 2010. |
Revision as of 14:31, 19 March 2023
Suzanne Kosmas is a member of the United States House of Representatives representing the 24th Congressional District of Florida.
She voted against the November 2009 health care bill but for the final in March 2010.
Committee assignments
Congressional caucuses
Voting ratings
Sources: Links to the voting ratings guides of the above organizations together with brief descriptive information on the organizations themselves, may be found at: http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Interest_group/Catalogs
2008 Election
Candidate | Party | Vote total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|
Suzanne Kosmas | Democrat | 211,284 | 57.20% |
Tom Feeney | Republican | 151,863 | 41.11% |
Gaurav Bhola | Independent | 6,223 | 1.68% |
Source: Federal Election Results - final official tally
2010 Election
She is opposed by Republican Sandy Adams.
In October 2010, the Washington Post reported that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee defunded ads for her district, preferring to spend them in an election where there was a better chance of success.[1] Her seat was targeted by the conservative 60 Plus Association. [2]
Reference
- Representative Suzanne Kosmas - official Congressional web site
- ↑ Aaron Blake (12 October 2010), "DCCC pulls out of six vulnerable districts", Washington Post
- ↑ Jim Kuhnhenn (9 September 2010), "Two GOP-leaning groups spending $5 million in ads", Huffington Post