Republicans look toward party’s future
Alicia Robinson
Whether they loved him or hated him, most Newport-Mesa Republicans
seemed to welcome an announcement this week from Orange County
Republican Party Chairman Tom Fuentes that he will retire next month
after 20 years at the party’s helm.
“I think it’s good,” said county Treasurer and Tax Collector John
Moorlach, whom Fuentes helped run for office in 1994. “You don’t want
to be in there forever. That isn’t healthy for an organization.”
Fuentes said as party chairman, he encouraged people to join the
party regardless of economic or social status, and not everyone liked
that. Others found him too conservative, he said.
Despite some controversy, he said, “we were very successful in
achieving the election of our Republican nominees, and that’s why we
call ourselves America’s most Republican county.”
Compared to the average tenure for a county Republican Party
chairman in California of two and a half years, Fuentes certainly had
stamina. He said he’d wanted to retire for several years, and now
that he had recruited Scott Baugh as a successor, he was ready.
Baugh, an attorney and a former 67th District assemblyman, has
served on the party’s central committee since January. Committee
members are expected to vote on a new chairman next month, and Baugh
is widely seen as Fuentes’ heir apparent.
Supporters said Fuentes, who announced his departure on Monday
night, had been an effective leader, helping to increase party
membership and devoting himself tirelessly to the party.
“People think that this county is dominated by Republicans just by
accident,” said 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell, who won the
GOP primary this month to replace state Sen. Ross Johnson. “A lot of
what Tom Fuentes did over the last 20 years, he deserves a lot of
credit for that.”
But his leadership didn’t suit some Republicans, who said Fuentes
exerted too much control over who ran for office and disenfranchised
some elements of the party.
“I think the Republican Party itself is broader than Tom’s
ideological comfort zone was,” said Tracy Price, president of the
Lincoln Club, a Republican activist group.
Gil Ferguson, who was 70th District assemblyman from 1984 to 1994,
said that for years, Fuentes and his supporters basically chose who
would run for office and discouraged other people from seeking
election.
“It’s not a place for people who really want to work for the party
or direct the party as long as people like Fuentes run it,” he said.
If Baugh is chosen as Fuentes’ successor, he’ll be in a good
position to do the fence-mending necessary to reunite various
elements of the party, said Republican Assembly candidate Chuck
DeVore, who will seek Campbell’s seat in November. Moorlach said he
expects Fuentes to remain a guiding influence for the party even
after he no longer leads it.
Ferguson said Fuentes’ departure wouldn’t make a significant
change in the party because he had handpicked a successor. However,
Ferguson said, the New Majority, a more moderate organization, would
hold more sway with Fuentes gone.
Some voters want the party to change with the times and become
more socially liberal, Newport Beach Republican Dick Spurzem said.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is a better example of where Orange County
Republicans stand today, he said.
“I’m glad [Fuentes is] out,” Spurzem said. “The Republican Party,
in my opinion, in Orange County has got to get more in the middle of
the road on social issues or else they’re never going to win.”
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