Criticism shows man behind the curtain
Geoff West
I found M.H. Millard’s letter to the editor Thursday (“Council
candidates can’t possibly represent everyone”) to be illuminating.
His criticism of Planning Commission Chairman Bruce Garlich’s plan to
represent “all constituencies” if elected to the City Council tells
us a lot about Millard and the candidates he will support for City
Council this fall.
In this city, the voters elect council members “at-large,” which
means that we can, indeed, expect each of them to represent every
single resident of this city equally and fairly and to consider
issues before them based on how they will impact the city as a whole.
Millard’s letter clearly shows his viewpoint, and is a perfect
example of why a narrowly-focused majority on the council -- with
allegiance to one small segment of this community -- is a dangerous
path to follow. In a small group of Westside residents, already
uncomfortable with changes they see in their neighborhoods, he has
found a fertile field.
I suspect Millard’s letter is only the first of what may be a
series of criticisms of candidates he fears this fall. The first
candidate he helped get elected through clever manipulation of the
voting process four years ago, Chris Steel, has proven to be an
abysmal failure. Not only has he not been successful in implementing
Millard’s agenda, but he’s been completely incompetent as a
councilman throughout his nearly four-year tenure. It’s hard to
imagine the voters of this city returning him to the dais in
November, but stranger things have happened.
With Westside activist and budget watchdog Mike Berry apparently
having second thoughts about running, that leaves Millard with only
Planning Commissioner Eric Bever and Steel to carry his banner this
time around. If those two men were both elected they would
constitute, along with Councilman Allan Mansoor, the “Westside”
majority Millard wants in place to implement his grand plan for the
expulsion of Latino immigrants in our midst. He apparently thinks
this can be accomplished by closing the Job Center and the Orange
Coast College Swap Meet, evicting the Westside charities and
re-zoning the Westside bluffs from industrial uses to residential and
thereby eliminating many jobs presently held by Latino immigrants.
Steel, Bever and Mansoor may deny a relationship with Millard, but
they have echoed his agenda in the past. Their actions speak much
louder than their words of denial.
I can understand why Millard fears Garlich as a councilman. I’ve
watched Garlich during his tenure on the Planning Commission. He has
proven to be an intelligent, reasonable and solid leader. His
background as a manager in the aerospace industry for more than three
decades has prepared him for the leadership challenges this city
faces. His volunteer activities show me that he cares about our city
as a whole and is willing to put in the hours to make positive
changes. His entry into the race for a council seat certainly raises
the bar for others.
In a commentary earlier this year, I mentioned behind-the-scenes
manipulation and hidden agendas and speculated that there might be an
opportunity to draw back the curtain to expose the wizard behind it.
Well, I’d like to thank M.H. Millard for performing that task for me.
With the publication of his letter to the editor he has stepped from
behind that curtain and exposed himself, so to speak, for all to see.
I hope the readers of this newspaper now have a clear view of M.H.
Millard. I, for one, am not willing to turn over my city to a group
orchestrated by him without a fight.
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