Baugh backed for long-occupied chair
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Alicia Robinson
Orange County GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes will step down in April after
two decades heading the party, but local Republicans can expect him
to remain politically active, perhaps even more than he has been.
“As party chairman, one has to be very removed and objective in
the primary process,” Fuentes said. “Not being chairman will allow me
to rally conservatives and work with fellow conservatives to sustain
our presence in the party and encourage conservative nominees.”
Fuentes told party members on Monday that he’ll retire next month.
He recommended attorney Scott Baugh as his successor.
“Scott is an energetic and proven young dynamic social and
conservative leader,” Fuentes said. “He is pro-life; he is
pro-family; he is a devoted churchgoer; he is an accomplished
lawyer.”
Baugh said that if the party central committee elects him
chairman, he’ll try to continue the party’s main work of raising
money, registering new voters and encouraging them to vote.
“My job in a broad sense will be to unite the donor communities
with the activist communities so we can target all our efforts toward
defeating Democrats locally and statewide in the fall,” Baugh said.
Not everyone agrees that Fuentes remained objective and removed
during the buildup to primary elections, however. UC Irvine political
science professor Mark Petracca -- a confessed liberal Democrat --
said moderate Republicans, especially women, didn’t think the party
under Fuentes had been supportive of them.
“The guy ran the party with an iron fist,” Petracca said of
Fuentes. “He hasn’t been able to deal with the conflicts within his
own party very well because it’s all or nothing with him.”
Petracca said it’s unlikely the party will ever retain a chairman
as long again. Fuentes said his predecessor served for eight years,
and the average term of a county Republican party chairman in
California is two and a half years.
Commission to look at county’s ballot snafu
Technology is apparently not always superior to the old-fashioned
method.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors this week agreed to form a
special commission to look at errors in the March 2 primary election,
the first time the county used electronic voting machines. Problems
included voters getting the wrong ballots, casting ballots before
they were ready or being turned away when polling places failed to
open on time.
Supervisors Bill Campbell and Chris Norby will form the committee,
which Campbell said will talk to poll workers, the county registrar
of voters, the voting machine provider and voters to find out how the
process can be improved. Public meetings are planned to solicit
comments from residents, but no dates are set, he said.
“The objective is that we want to make sure that everybody gets
the right ballot and everybody gets to vote the way they want to vote
in the next election, because that didn’t happen this time,” Campbell
said.
Election losers still fishing for votes on the Internet
In the post election wind-down, some defeated candidates seem to
have forgotten to wind things down, leaving their websites online to
beckon unwitting net surfers to vote for them or contribute money.
Former 70th Assembly District Republican candidates Long Pham, Don
Wagner and Marianne Zippi were still taking up cyberspace as of
Wednesday without letting voters know they’d lost their election
bids. In the same race, Chonchol Gupta and Cristi Cristich did update
their sites after the election to thank voters for their support and
wish the best to the victor, Chuck DeVore.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
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