Democrats pick their man
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Congressional candidate Steve Young secured the endorsement of state
Democratic Party officials Wednesday, but he’ll still have to vie
with three other Democrats on Oct. 4 to replace former Rep. Chris
Cox. Of the 39 people who voted Wednesday, 30 selected Young for the
endorsement.
Young, 51, a Newport Beach attorney, prevailed over retired
teacher Bea Foster, 67, of North Tustin; UC Irvine business professor
John Graham, 58, of Irvine; and marketing consultant Tom Pallow, 41,
of Tustin.
“We have been counted as irrelevant in the press,” Young said.
“I’m planning on winning this race.”
How much the endorsement means is up in the air. The conventional
wisdom is that a Democrat stands little chance of winning even an
open seat in the 48th Congressional District. Cox, a Republican, held
the seat easily since first winning it in 1988.
With that in mind, some Democratic voters have said they’ll
consider supporting Republican Marilyn Brewer, who paints herself as
fiscally conservative but socially moderate, supporting abortion
rights and stem cell research, for example.
Republican drops out
The last time a gaggle of candidates was seeking a congressional
seat representing Newport Beach, the race thinned a bit as some chose
to drop out. It happened in 1988, and it may be happening again.
Republican John Kelly, one of 10 from the GOP vying to replace
Cox, announced Wednesday that Marshall Samuel Sanders -- also a
Republican -- has quit the race and is now endorsing him.
Kelly, who owns a men’s store in Tustin, also ran for the seat
back in 1988, along with then-unknown Chuck DeVore, who’s now a state
assemblyman. In the earlier race, DeVore decided to drop out and back
Cox.
Sanders’ departure would leave nine Republicans in the race, but
one would-be candidate has decided to run a write-in campaign. After
failing to gather enough signatures to get on the ballot, Republican
Delecia Holt is continuing to campaign as a write-in candidate.
A press release from Holt’s campaign this week said she’s holding
forums with voters to discuss immigration and how to strengthen child
protection laws and job creation.
Candidates sans professions
Two candidates for the 48th Congressional District seat --
American Independent Party candidate Jim Gilchrist and Republican
Edward Suppe -- won’t have professions listed after their names on
the Oct. 4 primary election ballot.
Both candidates asked for designations that the Secretary of State
said didn’t comply with state law, and neither candidate submitted a
new designation that met requirements by a Monday deadline, Secretary
of State spokeswoman Nghia Nguyen said.
Suppe, who has served in the Coast Guard, wanted to be listed as a
veteran. Gilchrist wanted some mention of the Minuteman Project,
which he founded, on the ballot by his name. An attorney for
Gilchrist on Tuesday filed a court challenge to the Secretary of
State’s decision, Gilchrist campaign manager Howie Morgan said.
The court action prevented the Orange County Registrar of Voters
from having the candidate lists in the sample ballots printed, Chief
Deputy Registrar Neal Kelley said Wednesday. A hearing in the
Sacramento Superior Court has been set for Friday, he said.
Registrar on the sideline
Meanwhile, Neal Kelley has been heading the registrar’s office
since the actual Orange County Registrar of Voters, Steve Rodermund,
was placed on administrative leave Aug. 24 for undisclosed reasons.
County spokeswoman Diane Thomas-Plunk said county officials don’t
discuss personnel matters, but that Rodermund’s leave was unrelated
to the special congressional election being scheduled on Rosh
Hashanah.
At a Wednesday news conference, during which Kelley apologized to
the Jewish community, Orange County Supervisor Bill Campbell
reiterated that point, saying, “It did not have anything to do with
this Oct. 4 election date.”
Elsewhere in the election race
And while endorsements are flying thick and fast in the
congressional race, a lone endorsement popped up in another quarter
late last week. The Greenlight committee -- the Newport Beach
slow-growth residents’ group -- announced Friday that it supports the
ballot proposal proffered by another local group, Newporters for
Responsible Government.
Demanding a public vote on whether to spend about $46 million on a
new civic center for Newport Beach, Newporters for Responsible
Government recently proposed a ballot measure that would require
voter approval for any project that necessitates borrowing more than
$3 million or takes more than two years to repay.
The current city charter dictates a public vote only on projects
that will be paid for by selling bonds. City officials have proposed
using certificates of participation to cover the civic center
project.
* ALICIA ROBINSON may be reached at (714) 966-4626.
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