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MONTANA HOUSE DISTRICT 90

State House Representative – the office of state representative serves in the Montana legislature’s lower house. There are 100 representatives who are elected from districts. Representatives are elected to 2-year terms. Representatives propose and vote on proposed laws during the legislative sessions that meet for 90 days in odd-numbered years, and provide oversight of state agencies and study issues through interim committees that meet between sessions. Representatives are limited to four consecutive 2-year terms.

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  • Candidate picture

    CURTIS J COCHRAN
    (Rep)

  • Candidate picture

    JEFF STANEK
    (Rep)

Biographical Information

Q1. Please briefly provide the following information: place (town or county and state) of birth, age as of election day 2026, place (town or county) of permanent residency, occupation/employer, and education. How do these and your other life experiences qualify you to be an effective Legislator?

Q2. What are the most important issues you expect to face if elected to the Montana Legislature, and what are your positions on those issues? How would you prioritize each of the issues you have identified?

Q3. What economic policies will you pursue to help Americans who are concerned about their economic prospects in the coming years, including the cost of medical insurance and care?

Q4. What measures do you support to ensure Montana elections are secure while facilitating the ability of all eligible voters to cast their ballots? What, if anything, should the state government do to reduce the role of money in American elections?

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Campaign Website http://stanekforhd90.com
I was born on the Air Force Academy in Colorado. When my father separated from the military, we moved to Medford, OR. After high school, I served honorably in the Air Force as a cop and was deployed to Afghanistan from 2009-2010. I was an Honor Graduate, Distinguished Graduate, and received many other awards. After separating, I worked in management until 2016. I then used the GI Bill to finish my teaching degree. I graduated summa cum laude from the University of Montana Western. Later, I received my master's degree. I live and teach in St. Regis and I am 37 years old. I have seen the world and real tyranny. I am a student of history, and my life experiences give me incredible insight to be an effective legislator.
The growing size of government and in turn higher taxes is the most pressing issue facing our state and nation. We are 39 trillion dollars in debt, we have a federal government who is filled with career politicians, we have a state that has passed bills to bait and switch property taxes (HB231, SB542) and increase government spending by 13.5% (HB2.) There's widespread fraud, waste and abuse of tax money; and that same government who takes an oath to defend our constitution, openly violates it. Montana needs to band together and hold our federal and state governments accountable, while passing legislation that protects our elections, our sovereignty, our money, our families, our privacy, our resources and our right to be left alone.
We need less government interference in economics. Government should be out of the free market and follow the Constitution. Our government should not partner with private health insurance companies because the merging of government and corporate powers, according to Benito Mussolini, is fascism. The private, free market should be protected and encouraged to offer competitive health insurance options to all socioeconomic classes in Montana. If any laws are to be passed to enhance health care access, it should be to protect individuals who use cost sharing health co-ops (instead of insurance monopolies) from abuses.
I show an ID to drive, open a bank account, board a flight, and buy a beer. It should be the same if you want to vote. Prove that you are a US citizen by showing your ID. That should be a requirement. The role of money in elections could be dealt with by placing a cap on campaign financing. This would help prevent big money from buying elections. It would also force candidates to form a deeper connection to voters.