Bulldog campaigning seems to suit congressional...
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Bulldog campaigning seems to suit congressional candidate Gerrie
Schipske, who hasn’t shied away from controversy when taking to task
her Republican opponent on everything from the war on terrorism to
prescription benefits for seniors.
In a series of e-mail releases to voters and media outlets during
her run for the newly aligned 46th District seat, Schipske, a Long
Beach nurse, attorney and college teacher, has kept up a steady drum
beat of criticism of incumbent Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher.
She has taken the aggressive stance, she said, because the new
district has been pieced together from four existing ones and
includes new cities with residents she says aren’t aware of
Rohrabacher’s track record.
“There are a number of voters who aren’t aware of his history,”
Schipske said. “For people who haven’t had to vote for him, they’re
not aware of it.”
State lawmakers assembled puzzle-piece quadrants from the 36th,
38th and 46th districts and Rohrabacher’s 45th District to create a
congressional zone that includes Costa Mesa, parts of coastal Orange
County, Long Beach and Palos Verdes.
Schipske first criticized Rohrabacher’s voting record on oil
drilling along the coastline; then it was prescription drugs for
seniors. She has taken aim at his trips to Afghanistan and his
acceptance of campaign contributions from “pro-Arab groups.”
In August, Schipske called Rohrabacher a “rogue congressman” and
accused him of “conducting secret and illegal negotiations with the
Taliban.” Rohrabacher acknowledged the meeting, in April 2001, but
said he attended it to chastise the group for its oppressive
policies.
Rohrabacher has denied or refuted many of the other charges as
well.
Prior to this race, Schipske orchestrated a handful of tightly run
campaigns for congressional seats. In 2000, she nearly upset Rep.
Steve Horn, losing by less than 1% in a largely Long Beach district.
In 1996, Schipske lost an Assembly race to Steve Kuykendall by
less than 1,000 votes.
One race Schipske did win was the 1992 race for a seat on the Long
Beach Community College District’s board of trustees.
On many issues, Schipske is cut from a traditional Democratic
cloth. She supports medical care for all, regardless of immigration
status, increased federal spending on healthcare and opposition to
laws restricting reproductive rights or benefits based on race or
sexual orientation.
Oddly enough, she was at one point a Republican. Schipske was born
in Long Beach, but grew up in Buena Park in a Republican family. She
even joined Nixon’s 1972 re-election campaign. However, when she
began work as a nurse in the neo-natal unit of the UC Irvine Medical
Center in 1980, she began to change her political views. She
abandoned a Republican Party that she said had become too oriented
toward restricting women’s rights.
“I felt the Republican Party had absolutely left women,” Schipske
said. “I had difficulties defending it.”
In the late 1980s and early ‘90s, Schipske served as the president
of the Long Beach chapter of the National Organization for Women.
She still practices labor law, representing a handful of clients
at the bargaining table.
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