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Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

 


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State House Candidate and 'AZ Powergirl' Cara Nicole Trujillo Brings Politics to Phoenix Comicon 2016

Wednesday, June 1, 2016 at 6:03 a.m.

By Ray Stern

Faster than a spinning lobbyist, more powerful than a strike-all amendment — it's AZ Powergirl, celebrity cosplay model, swooping in to save the Arizona Legislature!

Or so voters of Tempe's Legislative District 26 can imagine, now that Cara Nicole Trujillo is officially in the race for the Arizona House of Representatives.

On the heels of a successful signature drive and filing two weeks ago with the Arizona Secretary of State's Office, Trujillo's name will appear on the November ballot as a Green Party candidate in the district, which also captures slivers of Scottsdale, Mesa, and the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. This week, Trujillo will make her regular appearance at Phoenix Comicon. But unlike years past, this time she'll be armed with campaign buttons and soliciting donations for her first-ever bid for public office.

Trujillo will hold her "first campaign rally and fundraiser" at 3 p.m. on Thursday at Phoenix Comicon's Booth AA400/AA402 inside the Phoenix Convention Center, her spokesman, Scott Kelly, announced Tuesday. "Campaign T-shirts as well as posters and pictures with the candidate will be available to the public."

She'll be in a costume, she tells New Times, but hasn't decided yet what she'll wear.

"I am serious about this," Trujillo says of her candidacy. "I felt it was a good time to run. I'm glad people are deciding they want to get more involved, and I want to give people the opportunity to choose something more outside the red-and-blue party system."

She will do that while dressed in her bust-forward red, white, and blue AZ Powergirl outfit, patterned off the DC Comics character Power Girl. Also appearing as Wonder Woman, Supergirl, and assorted other characters, Trujillo is a staple of Phoenix Comicon and events elsewhere across the nation.

As New Times writer Benjamin Leatherman detailed in a 2013 article, Comicon-goers in recent years would've been hard-pressed to miss the statuesque blonde — but her secret identity is similarly high powered: When not posing for pictures with geeky fans, she works as an artist and "one of the creative forces" at 183 Degree Studio, the indie comic-book publishing house she runs with her husband, Alfred Trujillo.

The Mesa resident also volunteers with Arizona Family Rights, a nonprofit activist group that helps people with divorce and custody issues. Trujillo says she has spoken at legislative hearings over the past few years, lobbying for laws that would give divorced parents equal time with their kids. (Both she and her husband were previously married.) Trujillo's experience also includes talking with the "everyday Joe" in her cross-country travels, she says.

AZ Powergirl presents herself as an outsider who may vote with Democrats or Republicans but won't feel beholden to either party. Environmental issues are important to the Green Party candidate — she's a big believer in reusing gray water, for example. She describes herself as "very pro-limited government." Her father is a gunsmith, she says, and she's pro-gun rights for the most part.

She wants to help local businesses, decentralize government power throughout the state, reform asset-forfeiture laws, and improve education. She's not running as a Clean Elections candidate, because she thinks doling out public money to candidates is a "scam." She has knocked on hundreds of doors in recent months and "talked to people personally."

Trujillo is an interesting addition to a legislative race that already has made headlines. Representative Juan Mendez is running for the state senate with the unusual strategy of campaigning as a group with two house candidates. When he outlined that gambit in the Arizona Capitol Times, reporter Hank Stephenson drew fire for repeatedly noting that one of the house candidates, Athena Salman, is Mendez's girlfriend. If successful, Mendez would fill the slot vacated by Andrew Sherwood, a popular Democrat who's moving out of Arizona owing to his wife's new job.

Competitors on the Republican side for an LD-26 house seat include Steven Adkins, a Marine Corps veteran who filed paperwork with the state on Friday.

Trujillo, clearly, will need all of her superpowers to get elected. But she'll use her dress-up power sparingly, she says.

"This is my job," she says. "People will try to use it against me. If I dress up in a suit, people would say I'm a fraud."

Adds Trujillo: "When I go to the Capitol to talk about bills, I'm respectful — I wear appropriate clothing."

UPDATE: A reader asked if the other LD-26 candidates could be mentioned in this article. The answer's yes. At this time, the other Democratic candidates are: incumbent State Representative Celeste Plumlee; House candidate Michael Martinez; and Senate candidate David Lucier. Republicans will be updated here, too.


Is Cara Nicole Trujillo a gun grabber????

While Cara Nicole Trujillo does have a good position on legalizing marijuana she might be a gun grabber???

In this article she says:

Trujillo wants those who buy guns to go through gun safety training.
I think that anybody that has a gun should know how to use it safely and properly. But I certainly don't think the government should mandate safety training for anybody.

Cara Nicole Trujillo also seems to have a good position on religion and government. Here are some comments she made on that:

Trujillo described the important components to sex education: Birth control options and the spread of STDs and STIs.

“Keep all personal, religious and other types of beliefs out of it,” Trujillo said.

Source

District 26 candidates define their positions at debate

Chelsea Shannon and Summer Cordero-Torres, Special for The Republic | azcentral.com 2:25 p.m. MST October 28, 2016

Education spending, legalizing marijuana and gun regulations were among the issues that four candidates for the Arizona Legislature discussed during a recent interview and a debate in Tempe sponsored by the Arizona Citizens Clean Elections Commission.

Two of the four will be elected Nov. 8 to serve in the Arizona House of Representatives in Legislative District 26, which covers parts of Tempe, Mesa, Phoenix and the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian community. No incumbents are running for the House seats in this district.

Democrats Isela Blanc and Athena Salman, and Green Party candidate Cara Nicole Trujillo made their comments during a Clean Elections debate Oct. 10 while Republican Steve Adkins, who did not attend the debate, was interviewed separately.

Education reform

All candidates agreed that education reform is needed and called for more monitoring of how schools are using tax dollars.

Blanc said there needs to be an accounting of money that goes to private and charter schools. She added that more money needs to go to public schools.

Salman wants there to be more money for teachers.

“We are being completely inefficient in funding our schools,” Salman said. “If we paid our teachers a little more we wouldn’t have to keep paying to retrain.”

Adkins agreed with Salman that there needs to be more money for teachers.

“If we pay teacher what they were worth we would see a difference,” Adkins said.

Both Adkins and Trujillo questioned if the money is not already there. Trujillo suggested auditing schools to see if the money that is already going there is helping or hurting students’ education.

Adkins added: “We don’t even have the money to pay the teachers properly so why are we spending money to make new buildings?”

Sex education

Salman, Blanc and Trujillo had similar views on sex education in schools and built on each other’s arguments during the debate.

Trujillo described the important components to sex education: Birth control options and the spread of STDs and STIs.

“Keep all personal, religious and other types of beliefs out of it,” Trujillo said.

Blanc added that sex education needs to be taught at the right time.

“We need to provide students with as much information as possible when it is age appropriate," Blanc said. "That way they make decisions that are appropriate for themselves and their bodies."

Salman added that there is one big area not covered in sex education.

“Right now, Arizona disallows ... students from learning about LGBTQ (issues), so that’s not even becoming part of the conversation,” Salman said.

She said this policy is ignoring the LGBTQ community that makes up 3.9 percent of Arizona’s population.

Proposition 205

Candidates at the debate said they support Proposition 205, which would legalize recreational use of marijuana for those 21 and older.

But Adkins questions some of the wording in Prop. 205.

“I’m not sure if it is the right answer,” Adkins said. “My thing is we should legalize it to the same extent as alcohol.”

Blanc said that the fact that marijuana is illegal takes police away from other crimes.

“Between 2004 and 2014, there were 238,000 arrested for the possession of marijuana, That is time that could be spent actually focusing on real crimes.

On a similar thread, Salman said that legalizing marijuana would help decrease Arizona’s incarceration rate.

“Part of the reason why we have a high incarceration rate is because we have criminalized cannabis,” Salman said.

Salman added that police need to go after the cartels, not the users.

Adkins and Trujillo said legalizing marijuana would benefit the economy.

“Industrialized hemp could be great for the state of Arizona,” Trujillo said. “You can make so much stuff with hemp.”

Blanc and Salman also voiced support for Prop. 205 because a portion of the tax revenue raised from marijuana sales would go toward funding full-time kindergarten.

Second Amendment

None of the candidates said they want to hinder citizens' right to bear arms, but Blanc and Salman called for more regulation.

“Every day we have Americans dying,” Blanc said. “The fact that we have it happening every day is a problem. It’s an epidemic.”

Trujillo wants those who buy guns to go through gun safety training.

Adkins was the only candidate that said that regulation would be bad for the community.

“Regulating guns does not fix the problem,” Adkins said.

If we had more guns we would be safer, Adkins asserted.

Democrat Juan Mendez is running unopposed for the Arizona Senate seat for district 26.

Early ballots for the November election were mailed Oct. 12. You can find your poll by visiting the Maricopa County Recorder Office’s website: http://recorder.maricopa.gov/pollingplace/


 
Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

Cara Nicol Trujill wants to help us legalize marijuana in Arizona

 

 


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