It feels good to return money
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S.J. CAHN
In seeking to digest the news this week that two candidates in the
crowded Republican primary for the 70th District Assembly seat may
have to return loans in excess of $100,000, I choked on a singular
piece of the puzzle: Both saw no problems. One even took a page out
of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s playbook and announced, “We’re
delighted with the ruling.”
Let’s step back a few paces. Irvine’s Chuck DeVore and Corona del
Mar’s Cristi Cristich both got caught in the wake of a Superior Court
decision directed at Schwarzenegger. The governor, a judge decided in
a preliminary ruling this week, violated campaign finance rules by
taking out a $4.5-million bank loan during his campaign this past
fall. The laws, the judge said, should cap that loan amount at
$100,000.
It turned out that Cristich and DeVore had gone the same route,
with Cristich getting a $250,000 loan and DeVore one for $115,000.
Now it appears they -- and the governor -- will have to repay the
loans, with the money coming right out of their campaign coffers or
pocketbooks.
A big hit, right? Well, I’d think so, but then read what
Schwarzenegger and DeVore had to say:
“This is great, this decision,” Schwarzenegger told a group of
journalists in Sacramento on Tuesday. “It’s fantastic . We never
wanted to raise the money to pay it back ... . It was a great
decision for the judge. Exactly what we intended to do, and that’s
exactly the way the law ought to be.”
Here’s what DeVore told the Daily Pilot, echoing the governor
nicely: “We were hopeful that the judge would restore the letter and
the spirit of Prop. 34 and would restore as a consequence the
$100,000 cap that a candidate can loan their campaign. We’re
delighted with the ruling.”
If your head isn’t spinning, it should be.
One of Cristich’s campaign advisors told the Pilot that there
would be no pain in her campaign: “I suspect that it’s not going to
have any big impact in her case because she’s quite capable of
turning that loan into a donation if she needs to.”
Would that we all were so lucky.
Now, despite what these candidates are saying, it’s pretty
unconvincing to argue that having more than $100,000 effectively
removed from their coffers won’t hurt Cristich and DeVore (and
doesn’t the governor, even, have to hurt a little at the possibility
of paying $4.5 million out of his pocket?). Perhaps both can just tap
into their personal bank accounts. But maybe seeing the account head
south will make at least one rethink the worth of running.
The winner in this ruling would certainly seem to be 70th District
GOP candidate Don Wagner of Irvine, who already appeared to be
surging while running third in the money race. Wagner’s biggest
hurdle at this point is that he is fighting for a pool of
conservative voters that also is the target of DeVore and Newport
Beach resident Marianna Zippi.
And that pool is not big enough to cut into three, especially
given the size of the middle-of-the-road and somewhat conservative
group of voters that is Cristich’s base. If Wagner, DeVore and Zippi
split the conservative vote evenly enough, Cristich wins the
nomination. But if Wagner claims the vast majority of the
conservative vote, the race is close. So any pain to DeVore helps
him.
Here’s at least a hint as to why. In its 2001 survey of Orange
County residents, UC Irvine found this political breakdown: 28%
middle of the road; 28% somewhat conservative, 20% somewhat liberal,
12% very conservative, 9% very liberal and 3% who didn’t know.
According to those numbers, Wagner, DeVore and Zippi’s core base
is only 12% of voters. Cristich, however, would appear to be the
choice -- in the most generic sense, of course -- of at least 28% and
as much as 56%.
Now, the percentages in play, given the conservative nature of the
70th District, are probably closer than the UCI numbers make it. But
can there be much doubt that Cristich has support that she can afford
lose and that Wagner, DeVore and Zippi need every ballot they can
get?
They can’t win losing them to one another.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He may be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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