Franklin Delano Roth II

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Franklin Delano Roth II
Image of Franklin Delano Roth II
Elections and appointments
Last election

August 6, 2024

Education

Bachelor's

University of Southern Indiana, 1988

Personal
Religion
None
Profession
Retired
Contact

Franklin Delano Roth II (Democratic Party) (also known as Denny) ran for election to the U.S. House to represent Missouri's 8th Congressional District. He lost in the Democratic primary on August 6, 2024.

Roth completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Franklin Delano Roth II was born in Owensboro, Kentucky. Roth's professional experience includes working as a grain farmer, as a truck driver, and in agriculture sales. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Southern Indiana in 1988.[1]

Roth has been affiliated with AOPA, Sons of the American Legion, NAACP, Southern Poverty Law Center, CASA of Jefferson County, and ACLU.[1]

Elections

2024

See also: Missouri's 8th Congressional District election, 2024

Missouri's 8th Congressional District election, 2024 (August 6 Democratic primary)

Missouri's 8th Congressional District election, 2024 (August 6 Republican primary)

General election

General election for U.S. House Missouri District 8

Incumbent Jason Smith defeated Randi McCallian and Jake Dawson in the general election for U.S. House Missouri District 8 on November 5, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jason Smith
Jason Smith (R)
 
76.2
 
271,249
Image of Randi McCallian
Randi McCallian (D) Candidate Connection
 
21.8
 
77,649
Jake Dawson (L)
 
2.0
 
7,166

Total votes: 356,064
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. House Missouri District 8

Randi McCallian defeated Franklin Delano Roth II in the Democratic primary for U.S. House Missouri District 8 on August 6, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Randi McCallian
Randi McCallian Candidate Connection
 
70.4
 
12,571
Image of Franklin Delano Roth II
Franklin Delano Roth II Candidate Connection
 
29.6
 
5,283

Total votes: 17,854
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. House Missouri District 8

Incumbent Jason Smith defeated James Snider and Grant Heithold in the Republican primary for U.S. House Missouri District 8 on August 6, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Jason Smith
Jason Smith
 
82.3
 
98,171
Image of James Snider
James Snider
 
9.2
 
10,987
Image of Grant Heithold
Grant Heithold Candidate Connection
 
8.5
 
10,149

Total votes: 119,307
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Libertarian primary election

Libertarian primary for U.S. House Missouri District 8

Jake Dawson advanced from the Libertarian primary for U.S. House Missouri District 8 on August 6, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Jake Dawson
 
100.0
 
247

Total votes: 247
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Endorsements

Ballotpedia did not identify endorsements for Roth in this election.

Campaign themes

2024

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Franklin Delano Roth II completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Roth's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

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Denny was born and raised in Indiana in a small farming community and graduated with a Bachelor’s degree to teach high school history. Denny spent 26 years farming with his father. After his father’s retirement in 2005, Denny left farming and moved to Jefferson County, Missouri and worked in ag sales and trucking. Denny retired at the end of 2022 from Estes Express Lines as a line haul driver. He lives in rural Hillsboro in Jefferson County with his wife Sandy. Denny has two sons - Clay who lives in Evansville, Indiana and Jared, who he lost to a heroin/fentanyl overdose in 2020.
  • Healthcare. We are the only industrialized nation in the world that doesn't provide healthcare for its citizens. Our for-profit healthcare system has left us with healthcare that is unaffordable to many people. The US is the only country that bankrupts its citizens and forces them to ration life saving medications. We need universal healthcare.
  • Wealth inequality. "Trickle Down" economics has led to a transfer of 50 trillion dollars of wealth from the bottom 90% of society to the top 1%. This money could have been used for infrastructure, research, providing healthcare and expanding social security if it had stayed in the hands of the people who actually pay taxes and make our economy work. We need to go back to a progressive tax system.
  • Reproductive rights. I believe a woman should have the right to make her own decisions about what is best for her concerning her healthcare. I don't think the government or someone's religion should make those decisions for her. We are at the point where women are risking death and we're forcing raped girls to carry a fetus to term, regardless of the health consequences for the child. I think this is wrong.
I am passionate about providing universal healthcare for everyone and getting private insurance out of our healthcare decisions.

We need to go back to a progressive tax system to fight wealth inequality.

I support protecting a woman's right to make her own healthcare decisions.

We must take care of our veterans.

We must bring manufacturing back to this country.

We must keep social security funded and increase benefits.

We need to promote union membership to provide better paying jobs with better benefits.

We need to write a farm bill that lends more help to the small farmers.

We need to improve our education system and make it more affordable.

We have to keep our role as the leader of the free world by working with our allies to isolate autocratic regimes like Russia, China, Hungary, and others.
I looked up to my father because he was the most honest, hard-working man I ever met.

As far public figures, I have always admired Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He overcame tremendous odds after becoming paralyzed from polio to bring this country out of a crippling depression and led us through WW II. Unfortunately, the Japanese internment camps will forever be a stain on his legacy. But, we are still benefitting from many of the programs he pushed through, like Social Security, the right for unions to bargain, farm subsidies, FDIC, and many infrastructure construction projects that we still use today.
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal: 1932-1940 by William E. Leuchtenburg

This book is a good study of Franklin Roosevelt during the depression.  The programs he put in place to put this country back to work when 25% of the people were unemployed were new and innovative.  I support his core belief that the government has a duty to help its citizens.  His ideas included the FDIC and alphabet programs that put people back to work like the PWA, the WPA, the CCC, just to name a few.  He created Social Security so seniors didn't have to live in poverty.  He started farm subsidy programs to support the farmers.  He brought electricity to a large portion of southeastern US with the TVA.  I agree he had his faults but despite constant pushback from the wealthy he got people back to work and on their feet.
Honesty should be the underlying principle for all politicians. Be honest with your constituents and don't tell them one thing and do another. How many times do we see politicians in a debate or interview asked a question and they do everything but answer it. Even when asked multiple times they will not answer the question with a truthful answer because they might lose votes. I also think being able to work with people on the other side of the aisle is critical. One party can't have its way all the time, there has to be give and take. We have some members of Congress that just want to blow things up regardless of how many people are hurt in the process and that is, to me, unacceptable.
Core responsibilities are:

to improve the lives of the people in this district. We need to ensure people have good paying jobs, good healthcare and good local hospitals.

to protect and increase social security payments so seniors don't have to live in poverty.

to provide quality education that is affordable.

see that our farmers have the best farm program possible, one that helps the smaller farmers and not just the huge farms. We need to keep our foreign markets open to avoid crashing commodity and livestock prices.

to help our veterans have good jobs when they leave active service, and they and their families are taken care of if they are disabled or killed while on active duty.

find better solutions for the fentanyl crisis. I lost a son to a heroin/fentanyl overdose as have many other families, so this is near to my heart and a top priority for me when I get to Congress.
Someone who worked tirelessly to improve the lives of the people he represented.

Someone who was always available to talk to the people he served.

Someone who was always honest and approachable even if you didn't share his views.
I have many as I'm an avid reader, but here I've pick one from fiction and one from history

Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky. Because it is a mind-bending tale of a young man who commits a murder, then tries to justify it to himself and goes mad with guilt while being pursued by the police.

Adolph Hitler by Brendan Simms. It's one of hundreds of books on Hitler, and I've read many, but this book has an interesting take on a man consumed with hatred of the Jewish population and how he believes all of Germany's ills are caused by the Jews. His and his followers' progression towards the "final solution" to the Jewish problem, is a study of the depths that one can descend into when they are consumed by hate and prejudice. There are many cautionary lessons to be learned from Hitler and how he so easily convinced the Germans that the Jews and other "undesirables" were responsible for all their problems following and including their loss in WW I. The success of his Ministry of Propaganda in turning the German people against their neighbors and allowing Hitler to slowly turn a democracy into a dictatorship provides a lesson for us today.
The One Above All (Marvel Comics)

This supreme entity in the Marvel Universe exists beyond physical limitations and possesses near-omnipotent power. I would end all war, sickness, poverty and greed.
Forget-me-nots by Patrice Rushen. It's one of the songs on my playlist that I work out to and the beat is infectious.
Being too trusting of people. I always expect people to do the right thing and be honest but, unfortunately, that is not always the case.
No. I think as long as a person is well informed and understand how government works, you can do just fine as an elected representative. It is not experience that matters, it is honesty, integrity and character.
Fighting the misinformation that spreads on social media and news media. Media feeds people information that agrees with their preconceived biases. Propaganda disguised as news is making it harder for unbiased news to reach people. It is very profitable for media outlets to play to our biases so they continue to feed us stories they think will keep people divided and angry.
No, it should be at least 4 so they're not in constant campaign mode. Maybe then they would actually do work to help their constituents.
Now that we have unlimited cash flowing to the candidates due to the Citizens United ruling in 2010, I think term limits would be a good thing. I also think the term of a congressman should be extended to four years instead of two, so they are not in constant campaign mode allowing them to focus on serving their constituents instead of campaigning.
No. I have people I have admired but I will be my own person and do what's best for the people of the 8th district.
I had a conversation with a woman whose father was stationed at Camp Lejeune when she was a child. Her father died from cancer from the contaminated water there and she developed breast cancer years later, with no history of breast cancer in her family. She was living in Canada at the time the cancer was discovered and received the treatment and reconstruction surgery she needed at no cost. Since moving back to the states she has encountered one hurdle after another to get the treatment she needs. This is why I support ending for-profit healthcare and having universal healthcare for everyone. Anyone with medical issues has had nightmare encounters with our healthcare system.
Can't think of one. I'm terrible at remembering jokes.
It is absolutely necessary. We have a Congress that can't get anything done. In 2023 they passed 26 bills, the lowest amount in years. Republicans couldn't elect a speaker, then when they did the extremists kicked him out for the crime of not letting the government run out of money. No compromise, my way or the highway. You can't run a government like this.
I would fight to go back to the progressive tax system that was in place before Ronald Reagans' tax breaks of the 1980's and "trickle down" economics that has resulted in 50 trillion dollars of wealth being transferred from the bottom 90% to the top 1%. We need to bring back a tax system that helps the working class and not the billionaires.
It should be used to investigate true criminal activity and not be used to settle political scores.

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.

Campaign website

Roth’s campaign website stated the following:

Economy

My dad always said “when republican politicians talk about cutting taxes you better cover your pockets because they’re not talking about tax cuts for the working man”.
For too long our economy has been rigged to transfer wealth from the working class to the wealthy.

Since “trickle down” economic policies have been in place over the last 40 plus years, worker wages have barely kept up with inflation, while CEO pay has increased as much as 1200%. I will work to get back to a fair tax rate, as well as close loopholes and off-shore bank accounts so we make sure the wealthy and corporations pay their share of taxes.

We need to bring manufacturing back to this country instead of allowing large corporations to outsource our jobs so they can make more profit. If wages were the cause of high prices, why do American car companies charge the same for a car produced in this country as the one made in Mexico?

We need stronger unions with more workers unionized. We need to raise the minimum wage so people don't have to work two or three jobs just to survive. We need to fund the IRS so they can go after the billionaire tax cheats. We need to expand government research and development so we can once again lead the world in innovation, like we did when we built the interstate system and sent man to the moon. These type of investments lead to good paying jobs and more tax revenue.

Healthcare

As Harry Truman said “socialism is their name for anything that helps all the people”. Republican politicians have always fought tooth and nail against anything that helps the working class. They fought social security, labor unions, bank deposit insurance, farm price supports and now they use the same scare tactics with healthcare.

Why are we the only industrialized nation on earth without national healthcare? We are the only nation that bankrupts or kills its citizens because they can’t afford healthcare. To all the people who say "we don't want socialized medicine like in Europe" I would ask "why not?"

Do you ever wonder why, if our system of healthcare is so good, other countries aren't dropping their "socialized medicine" and going to a system like ours. If you talk to people from other countries, and I have, they don't understand why we tolerate the healthcare we have. If every other industrialized country can make it work, why can't we? Why can't we do it even better?

All the scare tactics about not getting in to see a doctor is nonsense! If you have a medical emergency in another country you get care immediately, just like we do. If it's not an emergency, you may have to wait to have a surgery, just like in this country.

We currently pay a 1.45% tax to fund Medicare. That is to fund medical care for the most expensive age group. Why not increase the tax a little and fund healthcare for everyone? Add up your premiums, deductibles, and co-pays, dental and vision and see how much you spend per year. Wouldn't it be better to simply hand the doctor or dentist a card and not have to worry about your insurance not covering everything.

Social Security

Republican politicians would like nothing better than to hand over your social security to their buddies on Wall Street. That may sound good when the stock market is good, but when it crashes, as it did in 2008-09 what happens to your benefits? I know people who had to put off retirement because they lost so much money in their 401K. Do we want that with social security? Privatize. Republicans have been against social security since Roosevelt got the legislation passed in the 30’s.

Republican politicians tell us all the time that we have to make cuts or the fund will run out. Two things: 1) pay back all the money Congress has borrowed (legally) from it over the years to make their balance sheet look "better after massive tax cuts for the wealthy". 2) Get rid of the cap on the social security tax. After $160,200 dollars a person no longer pays the SS tax. Why? So, after reaching that income level, people get a 6.2% tax break. The limit has been set high enough that it is out of the reach of most working people, thus another tax break for the wealthy. END THE CAP.

Equal Rights

I support equal rights for all citizens, regardless of their color, religion, ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation. I firmly believe that the true measure of our individual worth isn't found in superficial differences but in our collective efforts to enhance the lives of everyone in our community. We all live on the same rock we call Earth, we all breathe the same air, we all share in the bounty of our land.
Yes, our nation still grapples with racism and discrimination. Ignoring these issues, or being "color blind," does not solve the problem; in fact, it makes it worse. Ignorance allows the situation to continue and further degrade our communities. The sad truth is that racism and discrimination isolate individuals, creates resentment and, in the worst case, leads to antisocial behavior. This division eventually tears apart our communities. On the contrary, I believe that every person should feel valued and included.
But the conversation doesn't stop at recognizing the problem. It's about taking tangible steps toward solutions. As your representative, my commitment extends beyond mere words. I aim to inspire businesses to invest here. I also aim to facilitate grants for small business startups and advocate for enhanced funding for our schools and learning institutions. These actions are about more than economic growth; they're about revitalizing our communities, making them places where education and opportunity flourish, and where people choose to stay and raise their families in an environment of respect and dignity, rather than leaving the area for better opportunities elsewhere.
Imagine our community as a tightly integrated enclave, where businesses thrive not just on the principles of commerce but on the shared values of respect and unity. Where schools are not just buildings, but centers of innovation and creativity, drawing families to stay and grow together. This vision is attainable. Together, we can work toward a future where every person, irrespective of their background, feels valued and empowered to contribute to our community's prosperity.
Let's not just dream of a better community; let's create it. By building an environment of mutual respect and providing opportunities for all, we lay the foundation for a thriving, inclusive society. Remember, our strength lies not only in our differences but also in our ability to unite and work toward common goals. Together, we can build communities that not only respect equality but embody it in every aspect of communal life.
In the words of John Donne, “No man is an island, no man lives alone.”

Gun Control

I am pro second amendment but I think, as with our rights guaranteed in other amendments, there should be limitations.

We have limitations to free speech such as incitement of lawless action.

Since the assault weapons ban expired in 2004, mass shootings have exploded. Did the assault weapons ban really affect anyone’s daily life? Any mass shooting you read or hear about the shooter always uses an AR-15 or similar weapon. Why? Because those guns are designed to kill a lot of people in a short period of time.

After Timothy McVeigh blew up the Alfred P. Murrah building in Oklahoma City the government put strict rules on buying ammonium nitrate, a fertilizer which was a main ingredient in the bomb. Why can’t we put limitations on who can own assault weapons like an AR-15?

The AR-15 is not going away, there are millions in private hands. We have to do a better job of regulating these weapons and make it harder for people with a history of violence or mental issues to get these weapons. Close loopholes like selling firearms at estate sales where no background checks are needed. Anyone purchasing an assault type weapon should go through a rigorous background check, whether new or used and no matter where it is purchased. Also, anyone purchasing these weapons should be required to go through extended training on the use of these weapons. We make truck drivers get a CDL and advanced training to haul hazardous materials. We require pilots to get more training as they advance through more complex aircraft, all to insure safety for the public.

Put yourself in the shoes of the parents in Uvalde, TX who had to have their own children identified with DNA because their faces had been blown off by an AR-15.

Think about that. I think making these weapons harder for people with mental issues or a history of violence would be a small price to pay to cut down on the number of people killed with these weapons.

Pro-Choice

I am pro-choice. I think women should have autonomy over their own bodies without government interference. I do not believe we should allow one person’s religious views to dictate what someone else can do concerning their own health.

Where does it end? What makes rule by Christian law any different from Sharia law other than one is Christian and the other is Muslim?

What happens when another religion starts making laws based on a different religion that you do not agree with. For example, how would you feel if you or a family member had to go to the emergency room and needed a blood transfusion to save your life, but, sorry, a new law was passed based on religious objections and you could not get the transfusion.

I am 100% for freedom of religion but no one religion should dictate how other people should live.

Agriculture

Agriculture is the backbone of this nation and always has been. We need good relations with other countries to allow a free flow of goods, including agricultural products to these countries.

We have grain surpluses, why not give grain to poor countries to lower our grain inventories. We give money and weapons to other countries, why not food? When the farm economy is good our rural communities thrive. We need to worry more about our farmers than our billionaires.

We need to change the way we figure our farm subsidies to help our smaller farmers rather than the huge corporate farms. In 2019 the top 1% of farms received 25% of the total payout. This averaged a little over $757,000 per farm. The bottom 90% of farms averaged $21,500. This has to change.

We need to look at making crop insurance a division of the USDA and get private insurance out of it all together. One third of all crop insurance subsidies go to the insurance companies. And, if the losses they cover reach the premiums they collected, the government steps in and covers the cost, so they lose no money. If the government has to cover the cost anyway, get private insurance out of it completely, just like we need to do with healthcare.

Pro Union

I am proud to say I have been endorsed by the UAW - Region 4.

During the years we were farming, my father was a union concrete finisher then later was a union worker for ALCOA -- until the day he was fired for leading a walk-out over six coworkers who had been wrongly terminated.

Franklin Roosevelt, my dad's namesake, gave unions the right to bargain which, in turn, allowed workers to bargain for better wages, working conditions, pensions and shorter work weeks.

Republican politicians have fought unions ever since to either weaken them or get rid of them entirely. The Taft-Hartley Act and Right-to-Work laws have been enacted by republicans to weaken unions. The unions are responsible for the rise of the middle class in this country, and as union membership has declined, so has the middle class.

In Missouri voters rejected right to work, yet the republican politicians are still trying to make Missouri a right to work state which would weaken the unions and lead to lower wages and fewer benefits. I propose a law to ban right to work nationwide because if you receive union benefits, you should have to pay for the representation.

Republican politicians are against unions because their corporate masters and Donald Trump don't like unions. Donald Trump has stated that union people make too much money, and he has always fought to keep unions out of his casinos and other businesses.

Unions appear to be making a comeback. Starbucks and Amazon workers are unionizing, the United Auto Workers had a successful strike resulting in higher wages and increased benefits. Their successful strike also led to a substantial increase in wages for non-union autoworkers at Toyota and Hyundai. Healthcare workers have successfully bargained for better wages and benefits. Progress is being made. However, we need to strengthen the laws that protect workers' right to bargain.

I will be a good friend to labor and will support laws protecting workers right to unionize without being fired or terrorized by companies.

More Effective Drug Policies

On June 5, 2020 I lost my oldest son Jared, who I raised as a single dad, to a fentanyl overdose. Nothing is more near and dear to me than the drug issue.

There are a lot of parents out there who have faced this heartbreaking experience. The feeling of helplessness as you watch them spiral down, forsaking family and friends who try to help them, creates indescribable pain.

How do we end the drug problem? If I had all the answers I wouldn't have buried my son.

I will work tirelessly to ensure better government oversight of treatment facilities. Anyone can hang a sign and say they're a treatment facility. We need better standards and management of these facilities.

I will work to make Narcan vending machines available throughout the 8th district. Many will say you are promoting drug use and I will say people are going to take the drugs anyway. Maybe we can save a few lives while we find a solution to this scourge on society. If I can help prevent one person from going through what I did it will be worth it.

As with immigration, we need to work more closely with Mexico to get rid of the drug cartels, more inspections of trucks and trains at the border and more patrols by the Coast Guard to catch drugs coming in by sea.

At the end of the day they have to want to do it themselves. That said, we need to treat addicts as human beings and not as criminals to be locked away. They need help.

Campaign Finance Reform

Money is the root of the problem in politics today.

The Citizens United ruling by the Supreme Court allowing corporations to spend as much money as they want on political campaigns was a travesty to our political system.

We now have politicians who sell out to the highest bidder. We need to cap what corporations can contribute to a campaign. We cannot continue to allow pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies, oil companies, wall street banks, high tech companies and many others to hijack our political system to benefit themselves at the expense of the people.

And make no mistake, they spread the wealth and buy politicians on both sides of the aisle.

I will work hard to try to get the dark money and unlimited corporate money out of our political system so the politicians work for us and not some corporate interest that donated millions to their campaign.

Education

Until Senate Bill 19, Missouri ranked dead last out of 50 states in starting teacher pay. Dead last. This is a good start but it is not enough.

If low pay isn't enough, parents are attacking teachers over subject matter, politicians attack teachers accusing them of "indoctrinating" our kids. Is it any wonder experienced teachers are leaving the profession, and we don't have enough young people wanting to teach? Who would want to suffer the abuse and lack of respect for the pitiful salary of a teacher?

Just a few education "issues":

  • Republican politicians are banning books they have never even read. We even have a Republican candidate for governor, Bill Eigel, putting out a video of him burning books with a flame thrower. Really? Nazis burned books too. Censoring books undermines one of the primary functions of education: teaching students how to think for themselves.
  • Republican politicians want taxpayers to support private schools, which is basically religious schools and elite private schools for the wealthy. Taxpayer money should only go to public schools.
  • We are drowning our college graduates in debt. We provide free schooling for the first 12 years, why not for another four? Many countries around the world offer free college, why can't we?
  • Forty percent of Missouri citizens are college graduates, but only twenty one percent in the 8th district.

For some reason republican politicians want to paint college as a bad thing. Click on any republican politician bio and see how many have a college education - most do.

If you don't think college will benefit you, go to a vocational school or train with one of the unions.

Unfortunately, republican politicians hate unions and are trying to destroy them and they don't want to make vocational schools affordable or free either.

Military & Veterans

My dad was a veteran who spent 17 months in Japan just after the Korean war ended. The war ended while he was in basic training. I just missed the Vietnam war but I had friends who served.

With China's global expansion, and the Russians trying to reestablish the old Soviet Union, our military needs stay the best in the world. That said, we need to be more strategic on the programs we fund and not just hand a blank check to the Pentagon. The F-35 program has been a disaster from the start with cost overruns and endless problems with the planes. In this day and age I think money would be better spent on missile programs and defensive shields.

We also need to back our allies, like Ukraine, and keep NATO strong and united.

Many politicians love to trot out veterans when they are running for office but don't want to fund programs to help them. Many veterans suffer from PTSD and debilitating injuries and are ignored after their service. How many homeless veterans do we have? It's a tragedy that people who have served end up on the streets because we ignore them after their service.

Many politicians would rather give tax breaks to billionaires than adequately fund veterans care. Until this country has universal health care not one veteran should pay a dime for medical care. If he/she is injured in the line of duty and it affects their ability to work, they should be paid a pension and their families should receive free healthcare and their children should go to college for free. The same with soldiers who are killed in the line of duty. It's the least we can do for the people who have sacrificed for the defense of this country.

I will work to keep our military strong but make sure we are spending money wisely and not just throwing it away. I will also work tirelessly to make sure our veterans receive the care and financial help they have earned. [2]

—Franklin Delano Roth II’s campaign website (2024)[3]

Campaign finance summary


Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.


Franklin Delano Roth II campaign contribution history
YearOfficeStatusContributionsExpenditures
2024* U.S. House Missouri District 8Lost primary$34,810 $34,760
Grand total$34,810 $34,760
Sources: OpenSecretsFederal Elections Commission ***This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
* Data from this year may not be complete

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on December 27, 2023
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  3. Franklin Delano Roth II’s campaign website, “Positions,” accessed July 23, 2024


Senators
Representatives
District 1
District 2
District 3
Bob Onder (R)
District 4
District 5
District 6
District 7
District 8
Republican Party (8)
Democratic Party (2)