David Dudenhoefer

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David Dudenhoefer
Image of David Dudenhoefer
Elections and appointments
Last election

November 3, 2020

Personal
Birthplace
Detroit, Mich.
Religion
Christian
Profession
Detroit gaming industry
Contact

David Dudenhoefer (Republican Party) (also known as Dude) ran for election to the U.S. House to represent Michigan's 13th Congressional District. He lost in the general election on November 3, 2020.

Dudenhoefer completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2020. Click here to read the survey answers.

Dudenhoefer has served as district chair for the 13th Congressional District Republian Committee.[1]

Biography

Dudenhoefer was born in Detroit, Michigan. His professional experience includes working in the Detroit gaming industry. Dudenhoefer has served as the deputy state coordinator for the Michigan Campaign for Liberty and as the chairman for the Michigan 13th District Republican Committee.[2]

Elections

2020

See also: Michigan's 13th Congressional District election, 2020

Michigan's 13th Congressional District election, 2020 (August 4 Republican primary)

Michigan's 13th Congressional District election, 2020 (August 4 Democratic primary)

General election

General election for U.S. House Michigan District 13

The following candidates ran in the general election for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on November 3, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rashida-Tlaib.PNG
Rashida Tlaib (D) Candidate Connection
 
78.1
 
223,205
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/DudePic.PNG
David Dudenhoefer (R) Candidate Connection
 
18.6
 
53,311
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/SamJohnson2.jpg
Sam Johnson (Working Class Party)
 
1.8
 
5,284
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/dwilc2.JPG
D. Etta Wilcoxon (G) Candidate Connection
 
0.7
 
2,105
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Articia_BomerMI.jpeg
Articia Bomer (U.S. Taxpayers Party of Michigan)
 
0.7
 
1,974
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/DonaldEasonJr.jpg
Donald Eason (Independent) (Write-in)
 
0.0
 
6

Total votes: 285,885
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13

Incumbent Rashida Tlaib defeated Brenda Jones in the Democratic primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on August 4, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rashida-Tlaib.PNG
Rashida Tlaib Candidate Connection
 
66.3
 
71,670
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Brenda_Jones.png
Brenda Jones Candidate Connection
 
33.7
 
36,492

Total votes: 108,162
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13

David Dudenhoefer defeated Linda Sawyer and Alfred Lemmo in the Republican primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on August 4, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/DudePic.PNG
David Dudenhoefer Candidate Connection
 
47.6
 
6,833
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/13139358_10154172660749241_605960920162112607_n.jpg
Linda Sawyer
 
34.5
 
4,955
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/AlfredLemmo1.jpg
Alfred Lemmo Candidate Connection
 
17.9
 
2,574

Total votes: 14,362
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Green convention

Green convention for U.S. House Michigan District 13

D. Etta Wilcoxon advanced from the Green convention for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on June 20, 2020.

Candidate
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/dwilc2.JPG
D. Etta Wilcoxon (G) Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Working Class Party convention

Working Class Party convention for U.S. House Michigan District 13

Sam Johnson advanced from the Working Class Party convention for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on July 26, 2020.

Candidate
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/SamJohnson2.jpg
Sam Johnson (Working Class Party)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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2018 regular election

See also: Michigan's 13th Congressional District election, 2018

Jim Casha, David Dudenhoefer, John Conyers III, Royce Kinniebrew, Kimberly Hill Knott, Douglas Gardner, Danetta Simpson, Brenda Jones, and Jonathan Pommerville ran as write-in candidates.

General election

Rashida Tlaib defeated Sam Johnson and D. Etta Wilcoxon in the general election for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on November 6, 2018.


General election
General election for U.S. House Michigan District 13

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rashida-Tlaib.PNG
Rashida Tlaib (D)
 
84.2
 
165,355
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/SamJohnson2.jpg
Sam Johnson (Working Class Party)
 
11.3
 
22,186
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/dwilc2.JPG
D. Etta Wilcoxon (G)
 
4.1
 
7,980
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.4
 
778

Total votes: 196,299
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Democratic primary

The following candidates ran in the Democratic primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on August 7, 2018.


Democratic primary election
Democratic primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rashida-Tlaib.PNG
Rashida Tlaib
 
31.2
 
27,841
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Brenda_Jones.png
Brenda Jones
 
30.2
 
26,941
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Bill_Wild.PNG
Bill Wild
 
14.1
 
12,613
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Coleman_Young.jpg
Coleman Young II
 
12.5
 
11,172
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Ian_Conyers.jpg
Ian Conyers
 
6.6
 
5,861
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Legislators.Jackson_Shanelle.jpg
Shanelle Jackson
 
5.4
 
4,853

Total votes: 89,281
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Republican primary

No candidates ran in this election.


Republican primary election

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

2018 special election

See also: Michigan's 13th Congressional District special election, 2018
See also: Michigan's 13th Congressional District special election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also: Michigan's 13th Congressional District special election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

This election was held to replace John Conyers Jr. (D). On December 5, 2017, Conyers announced his resignation from office, effective immediately. The announcement came amid sexual harassment allegations and calls for Conyers' resignation from the Democratic leadership.[3] The winner completed the rest of the 2017-2018 term to which Conyers was elected.

David Dudenhoefer, Royce Kinniebrew, Clyde Darnell Lynch, Danetta Simpson, and Jonathan Pommerville ran as write-in candidates in the general election. David Dudenhoefer ran as a write-in candidate in the Republican primary, but he did not receive enough votes to advance to the general election.[4]

General election

Special general election for U.S. House Michigan District 13

Brenda Jones defeated Marc Joseph Sosnowski and D. Etta Wilcoxon in the special general election for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Brenda_Jones.png
Brenda Jones (D)
 
86.8
 
169,330
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Marc_Joseph_Sosnowski1.jpg
Marc Joseph Sosnowski (U.S. Taxpayers Party)
 
8.9
 
17,302
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/dwilc2.JPG
D. Etta Wilcoxon (G)
 
4.3
 
8,319
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.0
 
42

Total votes: 194,993
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Democratic primary election

Special Democratic primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13

Brenda Jones defeated Rashida Tlaib, Bill Wild, and Ian Conyers in the special Democratic primary for U.S. House Michigan District 13 on August 7, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Brenda_Jones.png
Brenda Jones
 
37.7
 
32,769
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rashida-Tlaib.PNG
Rashida Tlaib
 
35.8
 
31,121
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Bill_Wild.PNG
Bill Wild
 
15.2
 
13,174
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Ian_Conyers.jpg
Ian Conyers
 
11.2
 
9,749

Total votes: 86,813
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates


Campaign themes

2020

Video for Ballotpedia

Video submitted to Ballotpedia
May 28, 2020

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

David Dudenhoefer completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2020. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Dudenhoefer's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all


Detroit Free Press   Featured local question

I begin from the position that taxation is theft, and then work backward to find the solution. Balance the budget seems like not much more than an election-year talking point anymore. We are each expected to balance our budgets in our households. Can you imagine if we ran our homes that way congress runs its? We would be thrown in jail. First, let's understand that congress works off of a different style of budgeting than most of America. We run off of what is called a "zero-budget"- we start at zero, factor in our income minus expenses, and then budget ourselves. Congress utilizes a bizarre concept known as "base-line budgeting" -- they begin each fiscal year with the amount they spent the last cycle and then increase based on a number of factors. Under that formula, there is never a "balance". I would say more so that just "cutting taxes", we must cut spending which is a hidden tax. Restrict congress to its proper function and let the citizens keep more. If anything the tax structure is upside down---more should go locally, less to the state and the least to the Federal.

Detroit Free Press   Featured local question

My ideology is just simple common sense. Liberty is rooted in natural law which comes from faith. We should all accept that we are all unique in our own way with differing ideas, hopes, fears, and dreams. We should treat people as individuals both in terms of law and in the economy. We should place the liberty of the individual above the privileges of the social groups we each belong to. I believe in an equal application of the law, not pandering to groups. Live our lives and make our own choices so long as we are not impeding upon our neighbor to do the same and vice-versa. The best delivery of services comes from the private sector, not the government. So many of our problems are a result of past over-reaching government policies--with a philosophically sound government, an honest monetary system, and our liberty preserved there is nothing we cannot achieve.

Detroit Free Press   Featured local question

Health care is another election cycle talking point which has been hashed and rehashed since I have been knee-high to a cricket. It seems every generation is discussing the topic.
Health care has become more of a Wall Street experience than a doctor/patient relationship. We tried 40 years of government involvement and no one is happy, no the doctors or patients. So we are at a crossroads of more socialized medicine or a more free-approach. First, let's talk about the personal responsibility of our own bodies. Our diets, food choices, farming practices, and the amount of "boxed food" we consume-- Is it any wonder we are unhealthy collectively as a nation. Slowing life down a bit to enjoy family time at the dinner table over wholesome food would go a long way to solving some of our health issues which would lessen the burden on our health care system.
Next, I would look at more result-based systems that have been implemented in pockets, as opposed to "enrollment-based" systems. More innovative-tech platforms, collaborative systems between services that focus on the end result as opposed to endless and repetitive testing which drains the system and produces little results.

A family of four for example could enter into coverage which just covers major medical as opposed to the financially abusive coverage of everything under the sun--the whole concept of medical insurance has been destroyed through greed. Getting government out of the insurance business would help reduce costs, more competition, and a clearer menu of coverage would help. Health savings accounts, more freedom of choice with doctors, adoption of wholistic approaches,
Additionally, easier entryway into medicine including allowing nurses to do the things doctors must do by law. Nurses are oftentimes more in tune with patient care since they spend more time with patients. We could cut 3-4 hundred billion is wasteful overseas spending and redirect those funds to tide people over who have become dependent on government-delivery of service while we encourage future generations to move into more free-market based systems.

Detroit Free Press   Featured local question

I would approach it the same way I have as a legislative activist. Tone down the partisan rhetoric, present facts, present options, listen more, and talk less. Not everything is black and white, your way, my way or the highway. When we are wise we can find common ground between progressives and libertarians, liberals, and conservatives. The key is to understand and re-embrace the proper role of government. An equal application of the law through the defense of individual liberty and profess personal responsibility. It sounds very foundational, but we have to get back to a strong footing if we are to build anything meaningful.

Detroit Free Press   Featured local question

First, I would fight for a roll-call vote so that citizens may see how their legislator voted and hold them to account. That said, we will, unfortunately, have to take a bite of a very rotten sandwich in the months to come as the reality of the level of debt our legislators irresponsibly laid on all of our backs. The type of partisan wish-list spending was shameful. So, we can either find areas to cut and redirect towards paying down the new debt such as to cut the hundreds of billions in military spending (not to be confused with defense spending) and reduce our presence in some 900 bases (named and unnamed outposts) in over 130 countries, or we will be forced to cut domestically and of course increase taxes like we have never seen before---the level of fiscal pain we will all feel as a result of $4-6 trillion in 4 packages during a 2-3 month period is unthinkable.

Legislators must live within their means just as taxpayers are expected to. We have to cut out wasteful partisan pet-project spending.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

Note: Dudenhoefer submitted the above survey responses to Ballotpedia on June 15, 2020.


See also


External links

Footnotes


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