Endorsements by the pair
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
It looks like two of the six Republican candidates for the heavily
contended 70th Assembly District seat are going to have to share --
an endorsement, that is. Don Wagner announced last week he has
garnered an endorsement from University of California Regent Ward
Connerly, who already has endorsed Wagner opponent Marianne Zippi.
Balboa Peninsula resident Zippi announced her Connerly endorsement
in October. Reached this week, she said, “I had no idea that Ward was
endorsing more than one [candidate].”
As the main proponent of Proposition 54, Connerly was in the news
more often when Zippi’s endorsement was announced, she said. With
Proposition 54 a dead issue, she said, “I think it’s probably not
going to help Wagner all that much now.”
But Zippi is touting her newest endorsements, most notably from
1950s and 1960s entertainer Pat Boone, who has become the spokesman
for the 60 Plus Assn., a senior citizens’ advocacy group.
Also this week, Zippi announced that she is endorsed by the Los
Angeles Police Protective League and Santa Ana Police Chief Paul
Walters.
Zippi and Wagner are running against Cristi Cristich, Chuck
DeVore, Chonchol D. Gupta and Long K. Pham in the March 2 Republican
primary. All are hoping to replace Assemblyman John Campbell, who is
seeking the 35th District Senate seat.
New Majority makes its picks
Cristich and 68th Assembly District candidate Van Tran, also a
Republican, have received endorsements from the New Majority, a group
of moderate Republicans trying to shift party politics toward fiscal
issues and away from “litmus test” issues such as abortion and school
prayer.
Chris St. Hillaire, a political consultant who works with the New
Majority, said both Cristich and Tran represent opportunities to
broaden the base of the Republican party.
Can San Francisco help in Newport-Mesa?
Green Party candidates will get a boost from the near-success of
San Francisco mayoral candidate and Board of Supervisors President
Matt Gonzalez, said Tom Lash, a Green candidate for the 46th
Congressional District seat now held by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher.
A statement sent by Lash last week said other Green office seekers
will benefit from the high-profile race between Gonzalez, a Green
candidate, and Supervisor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who won with 52%
of the vote.
“People, including many Democrats, are waking up to the Green
Party message that it is the progressive party of peace and real
change for this country,” Lash said in the statement.
Unfortunately for Lash, there will be slim pickings in Orange
County, where there are more than 1.3 million registered voters, but
only 8,017 are Green Party members. Even gaining votes from the
county’s 420,000 or so Democrats wouldn’t put Greens ahead of
Republicans, who boast more than 666,000 registered voters here.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.