Assembly district candidates weigh in
Alicia Robinson
All six Republican candidates for the 70th Assembly District seat
presented themselves together for the first time to a crowd of GOP
voters on Thursday.
The Orange County Federation of Republican Women’s luncheon
meeting at the Crown Plaza Resort Hotel featured a forum for
Republican candidates for state and federal offices and one county
supervisor seat.
Each candidate had five minutes to speak to the crowd of about 130
people. The speakers’ order was drawn randomly.
The 70th district candidates are seeking to replace Assemblyman
John Campbell, who is running for the 35th Senate District seat.
First to speak was Marianne Zippi, a Newport Beach business owner.
She opened her talk by bringing up a recent court battle over her
ballot statement, which will appear in sample ballots distributed to
voters in the district.
Scott Moody, a voter in the 70th district, challenged the use of
“good old boys” and other language in Zippi’s ballot statement. On
Dec. 30, Orange County Superior Court Commissioner Eleanor Palk
rejected the challenge based on the date the complaint was filed.
“I fought back and I won,” Zippi said.
The GOP “good old boys” don’t want a woman to run for the office,
she said.
“I am a conservative woman in a conservative district,” she said.
“Voters who want a woman to vote for have that choice now.”
Zippi is endorsed by prominent supporters of immigration reform,
and education is important to her, she said.
Chuck DeVore spoke next. A vice president at aerospace-defense
firm SM&A; in Newport Beach, DeVore also serves in the U.S. Army
National Guard.
He told the audience they should send to Sacramento “a Republican
you can trust, a Republican with a track record, a Republican that’s
always supported other Republicans.”
DeVore mentioned his 20 years of military service, his work for
Rep. Chris Cox from 1988 to 1990, and his five elected terms on the
Orange County Republican Party Central Committee.
If elected, he said, he would work for lower taxes, less
government regulation and workers’ compensation reform.
Cristi Cristich, who runs electronic connector manufacturer
Cristek Interconnects in Anaheim and lives in Corona del Mar, spoke
after DeVore.
After starting her own business at age 23, Cristich said, the
company now makes “parts that are used in Dick Cheney’s pacemaker and
Donald Rumsfeld’s missiles.”
Other candidates have brought up Cristich’s previous endorsement
of former President Bill Clinton -- she later called it a mistake --
so she addressed that, noting that she had supported his impeachment
and did not contribute any money to him.
“I’m a Republican because I believe in personal responsibility,
individual freedom, limited government and free enterprise,” she
said.
She touted her company’s creation of jobs and said she would be
effective at getting more people to vote Republican.
One candidate who hasn’t been very visible until now is Chonchol
D. Gupta, a 20-year-old mechanical engineering student at UC Irvine.
Some GOP members are skeptical of “new Republicans” like himself,
Gupta said.
He decided to run for office when a tuition increase of more than
$1,500 caused some of his friends to leave college, he said.
He suggested reforming immigration and workers compensation and
requiring illegal immigrants who work here to pay taxes.
Voters want “new, innovative candidates who are willing to say no
to special interest money and do what is right for the state of
California,” Gupta said.
Long K. Pham, who works as a consulting engineer in Long Beach,
was next to speak. He said he wants to repay society for the benefits
he’s enjoyed since coming to America from Vietnam as a child.
Government has a need for people with his expertise, he said.
“Our legislators make a lot of big decisions in Sacramento, but
sometimes they don’t have the background to understand it,” he said.
Rounding out the pack was Don Wagner, who serves on the board of
trustees of the South Orange County Community College District.
He cited his work as a trustee, noting the college was on the
state’s fiscal watch list when he joined the board but was
subsequently removed from the list.
“Every budget I’ve passed has been balanced,” Wagner said. “That’s
the kind of fiscal discipline I think we need in our legislators.”
The board also solved its problems with accreditation during his
tenure, he said.
“Of the candidates here, I’m the only one with [elected]
experience,” he said.
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