No money, tough odds don’t faze Demo challenger
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Alex Coolman
Ted Crisell gets the nicest letters from members of the Democratic
Party.
After the 54-year-old candidate for the 45th Congressional District
won the primary election in March, Gov. Gray Davis sent him a personal
note.
“Put me down as a wholehearted supporter,” Davis wrote. “And feel free
to use my endorsement in any way that will be helpful.”
The only problem, Crisell says, is that nice words don’t pay the bills
of a congressional campaign. He must run an extremely economical campaign
-- using techniques like e-mail publicity -- because Democrats are
gun-shy about actually writing a check to fund a race for the 45th.
“When you have limited resources, you put those resources in targeted
areas where you have an opportunity to elect a Democrat,” explained
Jeanne Costales, chairwoman of the Orange County Democratic Party.
And Crisell’s quest may be such a long shot that he gets no money at
all from local Democrats, she said.
Labor unions, says Crisell, are taking the same approach: big smiles,
firm handshakes, no money.
But the funding practices of these organizations aren’t enough to
discourage the energetic candidate. The same slightly unconventional
spirit that drives him to run as a Democrat in the district dominated by
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach) since 1988 persuades him that
the money, one way or another, will come together.
“I’m just going through friends and individuals” to raise funds,
Crisell said, speaking from his 17th Street campaign office. “It’s a very
grass-roots effort.”
Though registration in the 45th District is solidly Republican,
Crisell thinks there are segments of the constituency who can be won over
to his side. Moderate Republicans, he thinks, might prefer his politics
to those of Rohrabacher, along with women, environmentalists, and
segments of the Latino and Vietnamese populations.
Crisell ought to think again, Rohrabacher says.
“I think that the Republican elements of my district are strongly in
favor of me, the conservative Democrats are in favor of me, and the
majority of the Independents are in favor of me,” he said.
“Most of the other candidates who have run against me in the past have
had precisely the same policy positions as Ted, and by large majorities
they’ve always been defeated.”
Rohrabacher’s seat is considered safe by so many, the congressman
added, that he faces his own kinds of financial challenges.
“If it’s a safe district, they’re less likely to give you money,” he
said. “They feel like you’ve got a lock, so why donate to you?”
And that could be a key to a surprise success, Crisell says. He’s
betting that Republicans are overestimating the level of support for his
opponent, that the 45th has changed over the years in ways that will
favor a Democrat.
“He’s going. He’s going,” Crisell said. “It’s just a matter of time.”
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