THE RACE FOR THE 45th CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
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Alex Coolman
Striding down the length of the Huntington Beach Pier, Ted Crisell is
pressing flesh at top speed.
“Are you folks voters?” Crisell asks a group of senior citizens,
handing them a couple campaign fliers. “I’m running for Congress!”
This morning, Crisell is animated and infectious. He meets a woman who
tells him she’s voted for him, and the result is a hug of pure political
joy. If there was ever a day when it seemed like a Democrat could take
the 45th Congressional District, this is it.
The 45th is, of course, the district that’s been dominated for years
by Dana Rohrabacher. And at times in recent weeks, Crisell has sounded
discouraged by the tough odds he faces as a Democrat running against a
Republican incumbent in a conservative district.
But Crisell continues to run an aggressive campaign. He continues to
court moderate Republicans and women with his positions on abortion
rights and gun control, and he continues to bash Rohrabacher at every
opportunity.
“I’m going to shopping centers, I’m going door to door,” Crisell said.
“If we win, it’s a total grass-roots effort.”
The Democrat’s essential argument has been that voters would choose
him over his opponents -- both Rohrabacher and Libertarian Don Hull -- if
they understand his position on the issues.
Who has the most integrity? Crisell says he does, and he rips into
Rohrabacher for his association with figures like Huntington Beach Mayor
Dave Garafolo.
“I think the man is unethical, dishonest and definitely guilty of some
wrongdoing,” he says of Garafolo.
On the environment, schools, senior citizen issues and campaign
finance reform, Crisell says he has Rohrabacher beat. Crisell would push
for a greater government role on each of these issues, but he articulates
his positions in a way that tries to avoid sounding threatening to the
more conservative swing voters.
“I’m not for abortion,” he’ll say. “Nobody is for abortion. I’m just
for a woman’s right to choose.”
It’s a tricky business, courting the center, particularly for a man
who has the tendency -- whether it’s a virtue or a vice depends on your
point of view -- to say what’s actually on his mind.
And so the odds remain great against him. But with his feet clumping
along the planks of the pier, he repeats the sentence that is like a
mantra for his campaign. And he seems to believe what he’s saying:
“Miracles do happen.”
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