No one to fight against
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It’s no great secret that Orange County in general, and
Newport-Mesa even more so, is GOP country.
The debate is whether that makeup is changing, with Democrats
arguing it is -- especially in north Orange County, where Democratic
Rep. Loretta Sanchez is cited as proof that the Democratic voter base
is growing -- and Republicans pointing to the huge percentage boost
GOP candidates for state and national office continue to get here as
proof it isn’t.
Still, Democratic candidate for the 48th Congressional District
John Graham highlights that change as a central part of his campaign
theme: “Orange County, indeed the entire country, is changing fast,”
he has noted for years on his Web site. “Conservative Republicans
like Christopher Cox have not kept up.”
My own unscientific study of that change, or not, is filtered
through Daily Pilot reporters. It essentially comes down to this: New
reporters, especially those covering Newport Beach, are still shocked
that people they are sure are Democrats almost never are.
Leading environmentalists in Newport-Mesa? Republicans. Blue
collar workers? Republicans. Sources sympathetic to the reporters’
plights? Republicans. And the list goes on.
I don’t expect, until reporters start mentioning all the Democrats
they’re encountering, that folks like Rep. Cox, Assemblyman John
Campbell or even Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, whose district now extends to
much more Democratic Long Beach, really will have much to worry about
during their reelection campaigns.
Democrats here also lack another crucial piece of the election
victory puzzle: a boogeyman. They had one when former Rep. Bob Dornan
was zinging his incredible brand of conservatism. Sanchez was the
lucky beneficiary of the concerted Democratic attack.
But now, when reading through the county Democratic Party’s
literature, it is bereft of almost any mention of local Republicans.
President Bush for months has been soundly and roundly criticized,
but other than encouragement to call elected officials about budget
talks or other pending votes, there seems to be little in the way of
focused opposition.
Without that dramatic target, fund-raising gets much more
difficult. (Next time a political solicitation comes, before you toss
is out, read through it. They typically focus on one figure who
represents all that’s wrong with government -- either Clinton; Bush;
Katherine Harris, who just had a fund-raiser in town; Janet Reno. The
person rarely will have any tie to your area. Gerrie Schipske, who is
running against Rohrabacher, is trying to paint the Congressman in
this light.) Without funds, winning elections gets harder.
And then Orange County stays Republican.
The solution? Maybe the Democrats should court Dornan to run
again.
Talk about influence
On Assemblyman Campbell’s Rough Rider Web site, which we reported
about a few weeks ago, Campbell has his resume posted, for those
interested.
Among his many accomplishments, this one stands out:
“John successfully advocated for community priorities, as well. He
won legislative victories relating to the clean up of the Newport
Upper Bay, coastal zone open space, and Corona Del Mar’s Vision 2004
project.
The Los Angeles Times Daily Pilot placed him in its top ten most
influential community members in 2001.”
No telling where he might end up this year.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He can be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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