Money went mostly to winners
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Chris Steel came on strong.
In the home stretch of the November City Council race, the new
councilman raised almost $10,000, bringing his total to $25,002, the most
of any candidate.
By Oct. 26, he had raised just $15,559.
Steel ended up winning 10,664 votes -- the most of any candidate.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, who was reelected after receiving the
second-highest number of votes, 10,276, was third in the money race with
$20,292, although she spent only $15,129.
But in comparison to Steel, she raised just $4,000 in the closing days
of the campaign.
“I think [the amount I raised] shows I had a lot of support in the
community from people who were willing to write me checks for my run for
City Council,” she said. “But while I raised that much money, which shows
support, I did not spend it all.”
Cowan spent less money than Planning Commissioner Tom Sutro, for
instance, who raised $20,611 and spent $18,128.
Sutro, however, didn’t have the luck of Cowan and Steel, coming in at
eighth place of the 11 candidates vying for the three council seats.
In the tight race for the last council seat, which Councilwoman Karen
Robinson won over former Councilwoman Heather Somers by just 32 votes, it
is still unclear whether money played a crucial role: Robinson has yet to
turn in her latest campaign financial statements, covering the last two
months last year, to the city clerk.
Robinson had raised $9,228 by Oct. 26. At that point, Somers had
brought in $4,425.
Somers went on to raise a total of $8,857. She spent $6,777.
Dan Worthington, a Costa Mesa Sanitary District board member who ended
up in sixth place, raised and spent $3,500. William Perkins, a retail
salesman at In-N-Out Burger Corp. who received 1,845 votes to come in at
last place, raised $1,390 and spent $1,022.
The other four candidates -- Joel Faris, Rick Rodgers, Ron Channels,
Michael Clifford -- who placed fifth, seventh, ninth and 10th,
respectively, were not required to file final financial statements
because they spent less than $1,000.
During their campaigns, all four said they were not accepting money.
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