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Doug Hoffman

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Years of service
  
1970–1976

Spouse
  
Carol Torrance (m. 1973)

Role
  
Businessman

Name
  
Doug Hoffman

Rank
  
Staff Sergeant


Doug Hoffman dataamiritenetquoteauthorimages52d9ce97ca300jpg

Alma mater
  
SUNY, Plattsburgh (B.S.) University of Connecticut (M.B.A.)

Profession
  
C.P.A., tax and financial planning

Website
  
Doug Hoffman for Congress

Education
  
University of Connecticut, State University of New York at Plattsburgh

Political party
  
Republican Party, Conservative Party of New York State

Service/branch
  
New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs, United States Army Reserve

Loggerhead sea turtle necropsy performed by doug hoffman wildlife biologist of cumberland island


Douglas L. "Doug" Hoffman (born 1953) is an American businessman, accountant and former congressional candidate. He was the Conservative Party candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2009 special election for New York's 23rd congressional district. On November 3, 2009, he was defeated by Democratic candidate Bill Owens. Hoffman ran for the same seat in Congress in 2010, but lost the Republican primary and withdrew his candidacy. Hoffman's 2009 campaign received extensive support from the Tea Party movement and gained national attention.

Contents

Doug Hoffman Doug Hoffman CSU College of Business

Wdsu tv interview with doug hoffman and mold issues


Personal life

Doug Hoffman The Leadership Wisdom of Doug Hoffman Wilco

Hoffman grew up in Saranac Lake, New York, the second of four children. He graduated from Saranac Lake High School, attended North Country Community College, then SUNY Canton. In 1973, he received his B.S. in accounting from SUNY Plattsburgh. Following graduation, Hoffman attended the University of Connecticut as a part-time student and earned a Master of Business Administration degree in 1976. He became a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) in 1977.

During the Vietnam war, Hoffman served in the New York National Guard (1970–73) and was a staff sergeant in the United States Army Reserve (1973–76).

Family

Hoffman married Carol Torrance in 1973 and moved to Hartford, Connecticut. In 1977, the couple moved to Lake Placid, New York,. They have three children, Ashleah, Douglas, and Taylor, and four grandchildren. Doug and Carol reside in Saranac Lake, New York.

Business career

Hoffman served as controller for the Lake Placid Olympic Organizing Committee for the 1980 Winter Olympics. He stated that he held costs down and that the resulting deficit ultimately created jobs and infrastructure that 30 years later were still driving area's economy.

Hoffman is currently the managing partner of the Dragon Benware Crowley & Co., P.C. accounting firm, assisting small businesses and individuals with tax and other financial planning. In addition, he oversees the Hoffman Family Enterprises which include the accounting firm, a firm to assist other firms with financial planning, mergers and acquisitions, a used car dealership, and a home builder.

2009 U.S. Congressional campaign

With the Democratic candidate Bill Owens and Republican Dierdre Scozzafava already campaigning for the 23rd congressional district special election of 2009, on August 7, 2009, the Conservative Party of New York opted to nominate Hoffman to run on the Conservative Party ticket.

The race drew significant national attention because of Hoffman's Tea Party affiliation and because of the large amount of support Hoffman received from the national conservative base, despite Hoffman's status as a third-party candidate. During the campaign, Hoffman was interviewed by Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity. Fiscal and social conservative groups backed Hoffman's candidacy, including the Club for Growth, the Susan B. Anthony List, the National Organization for Marriage, Concerned Women for America PAC, Citizens of the Republic, the American Conservative Union, Eagle Forum, and Family Research Council PAC. Many notable Republicans, including former Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin, Republican Governor Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota and former U.S. Senator Fred Thompson, endorsed Hoffman rather than the Republican candidate because they deemed Scozzafava insufficiently conservative and ideologically indistinguishable from the Democrat. To illustrate this point, the Hoffman campaign ran television advertisements depicting Scozzafava and Owens as "two peas in a liberal pod."

After an October 31 poll showed Scozzafava trailing both Hoffman and Owens by 15% and 16% respectively, with her poll numbers collapsing, Scozzafava suspended her campaign on October 31 and endorsed the Democrat Bill Owens.

On Election Day, Bill Owens prevailed over Hoffman by a margin of 48.3% to 46%.

One commentator stated that "Hoffman's third-party candidacy is striking for how much it has galvanized the Republican Party's base." According to Marilyn Musgrave of Susan B. Anthony List, "Republican party leaders in Washington should take the message of the campaign and the election seriously, that the Party base should not be taken for granted."

2010 U.S. Congressional campaign

Hoffman again ran for the House of Representatives in 2010, but was defeated in the Republican primary for New York's 23rd congressional district by Matt Doheny, a businessman and lawyer. On September 23, 2010, Hoffman announced that he would continue his campaign for the congressional seat as the Conservative Party candidate. However, on October 5, 2010, Hoffman announced that he was dropping out of the race altogether, although his name remained on the ballot. Bill Owens (D) won re-election by less than 4,000 votes, while Hoffman received 9,592 votes on the Conservative Party line. Hoffman has been referred to as a "spoiler" in the 2010 race.

Hoffman's campaign staff was criticized by Upstate New York Tea Party Chairman Mark Barie, who contended that Hoffman's senior campaign advisor "ran this campaign from his office in Arizona, and he was clearly ignorant of what was happening on the ground here in the North Country."

2012

Although he has not ruled out running a third time for Congress, Hoffman plans to run for the Republican and Conservative nominations for the New York State Assembly to replace the retiring Teresa Sayward. Hoffman will be competing with Dan Stec, the mayor of Queensbury, for the party nominations. Hoffman ultimately declined to seek the Assembly seat.

Hoffman allied with Carl Paladino, another upstate New York activist allied with the Tea Party, to endorse several primary challengers in the 2012 elections. Both of Paladino's and Hoffman's joint endorsements, Michael Kicinski (running against incumbent Congressman Richard L. Hanna) and Karen Bisso (running against incumbent Assemblywoman Janet Duprey, one of Scozzafava's biggest backers in the 2009 race) lost their primary elections; Bisso remains in her race on the Conservative Party line.

Political positions

During Hoffman's campaign for U.S. Representative, he expressed the following beliefs and positions.

Hoffman supports:

  • "Don’t ask, don’t tell" as policy on gays and lesbians serving in the military
  • Second Amendment
  • War against terrorism
  • Tort reform
  • Flat tax He believes that current tax provisions encourage corruption.
  • Hoffman opposes:

  • Abortion
  • Same-sex marriage
  • Deficit spending
  • American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
  • Public option for health care reform
  • Employee Free Choice Act
  • Emissions trading legislation
  • References

    Doug Hoffman Wikipedia