Tight race expected to draw voters
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Voters energized by the tightest presidential race in
recent memory will have a lot more to think about today than simply
choosing between George W. Bush and Al Gore.
Eleven Costa Mesa City Council candidates -- including two incumbents
-- are vying for votes, along with state candidates and a number of
county measures and state propositions.
Eileen Padberg, of Eileen Padberg Consulting, said 11 is a big number
of city council candidates, but City Councilman Joe Erickson said the
number is “pretty normal in Costa Mesa.”
Erickson stressed that it is just as important for Costa Mesa
residents to vote in an election with a lot of candidates as in one with
only a few. He remembers one election in which he and another candidate
each won, but were separated by only one vote, he said.
“Every vote makes a difference,” Erickson said. “That one vote would
have made all the difference if we were in third and fourth place. Voting
is a right people have fought and died for and it’s important that
residents vote every time, regardless of the number of candidates
running.”
The crowded City Council field includes Ronald J. Channels, Michael D.
Clifford, Libby Cowan, Joel Faris, William Perkins, Karen L. Robinson,
Rick Rodgers, Heather K. Somers, Chris Steel, Thomas L. Sutro and Dan
Worthington.
Voters also will have to decide on Measure O, which would raise the
city’s hotel tax from 6% to 8%. The extra funds would be used for the
purchase and development of new parks. A two-thirds majority is needed
for approval.
The Orange County Registrar of Voters has not estimated the expected
voter turnout in Orange County, but Padberg said she expects the tight
presidential race to “energize the Democratic and Republican bases” and
bring in more voters than usual.
“The City Council races will have little to do with voter turnout,”
she said. “More people will be voting in this election than in most
because of the close presidential election, and so there will be more
people voting for the City Council.”
Tom Fuentes, chairman of the Republican Party of Orange County, and
Jeanne Costales, chairwoman of the Democratic Party of Orange County,
each said their parties have been invigorated by the presidential race.
Fuentes said the GOP has the “most motivated and energized volunteer
ranks we have seen since Ronald Reagan,” with more than 7,500 volunteers
signed up for this voting cycle.
The current election is especially important because it could mark a
“major watershed shift” in American foreign and domestic policy, Fuentes
said.
“I think we will see a very strong voter turnout here,” he said. “The
troops are motivated and the people are energized. Orange County has long
been a philosophically grounded, conservative community and George W.
Bush’s value-centered message has resonated strongly with this county.”
Costales said the county has seen a surge in Democratic registration,
with more than 425,000 registered Democrats.
Orange County has more registered Republicans than Democrats -- about
1.5 to 1 -- but the county is not as strongly Republican as it once was,
she said.
“Orange County is the third-largest Democratic block in the state and
we need to vote to make sure George W. Bush doesn’t get California,” she
said, adding that Orange County Democrats could play a huge role in state
and national elections, even if they lose the county vote. “This race
involves all of the Democratic Party’s bread-and-butter issues -- Social
Security, Medicare, education, and leveling the playing field.”
FYI
For details about county elections, call (714) 567-7600 or visit the
Orange County Registrar’s Web site ato7 www.oc.ca.gov/electionsf7 .
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