Limping to the Finish
There are few issues that matter more in politics than peace and prosperity. And yet as the economy drags its heels and the nation marches toward possible war with Iraq, there is an oddly disconnected feel to this election season in California.
Perhaps it’s because those issues and their associated anxieties seem so far removed from Sacramento. “There’s no state election that’s going to affect anything having to do with terrorism, international affairs, snipers or anything that people seem to be fixated on,” said political analyst Tony Quinn, a former GOP strategist. “And there’s no sign that people think Sacramento has anything to do with the economy of California.”
The latter view may be overly dismissive. But events and politicians alike have conspired to rob this election of much of its usual enticement.
In redrawing the state’s legislative and congressional boundaries -- part of a once-a-decade process reflecting population shifts -- the Legislature managed to effectively remove serious competition from all but a few contests across the state.
After inserting himself into the other party’s primary through a $10-million advertising blitz against front-runner Richard Riordan, Democratic Gov. Gray Davis drew the opponent he preferred. He is now a solid favorite to win a second term over Republican businessman Bill Simon Jr. -- notwithstanding voters’ deep and abiding distaste for him.
Hanging over it all is the insidious shadow of Sept. 11, which suddenly made the world seem a smaller and more vulnerable place -- and the usual back-and-forth of politics seem irrelevant.
“The big concern for voters is over things they can’t control,” said Jaime Regalado, a political scientist and executive director of the Pat Brown Institute at Cal State Los Angeles. “People are saying, ‘I’m not sure voting is the way to safeguard myself in this new world.’ ”
The jagged tone of the race for governor has hardly offered much reassurance.
As a result, experts are forecasting a record low turnout on election day, Nov. 5, to match the overwhelming stay-at-home rate in the March primary, when only about a quarter of eligible Californians cast ballots.
The apathy is evident to strategists like Gale Kaufman. The Democratic consultant has convened numerous focus groups in the last 18 months -- only to find the people complaining at the prospect of having to discuss politics for a full two hours. “People just don’t seem to care,” Kaufman said.
Of course, millions of Californians will turn out to vote in just nine days, grudgingly or not. Some will act out of patriotism or a sense of civic responsibility. Others will enter the polling booth fired with conviction: for Davis or for Simon, to split apart the city of Los Angeles or to keep the nation’s second-largest city intact.
It may not be war and peace, but there are plenty of important decisions to be made, among them filling eight statewide offices, ruling on seven state ballot initiatives, confirming three California Supreme Court justices and deciding those few competitive legislative and congressional races that present true contests.
Topping the ticket is the race for governor, headlined by two candidates who have spent far more time dwelling on their rival’s shortcomings than offering any affirmative thoughts on, say, dealing with the state’s budget problems, its fraying infrastructure or overcrowded freeways.
Davis has attacked businessman Simon as a right-wing political novice in far over his head -- an assault abetted by the rookie candidate’s frequent campaign stumbles. Simon has assailed Davis as an ineffective and unprincipled money-grubber -- a charge underlined by the incumbent’s hesitant response to the budget and electricity crises, and his ceaseless fund-raising.
Many despairing voters look at the two and see “the classic situation of choosing between the lesser of two evils,” as voter Anthony Fenner, an Oakland Democrat, recently put it, using perhaps the most oft-heard statement of this discontented election cycle. “Maybe it’s the time to vote my heart instead of trying to avoid someone more horrible than the guy I’m voting for,” said the 41-year-old cabinetmaker, who is thinking of backing the Green Party’s Peter Camejo or one of three other minor party candidates “to get them on the map.”
Along with the race for governor, there are seven other statewide contests to be decided. Democratic incumbents are defending three of their seats against Republican challengers and assorted minor party candidates: Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante faces state Sen. Bruce McPherson; Treasurer Phil Angelides is running against Greg Conlon, and Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer faces state Sen. Dick Ackerman.
Three offices are open, vacated by term limits: Republican state Sen. Tom McClintock is vying against Democrat Steve Westly in the race for state controller; Republican Keith Olberg faces Democratic Assemblyman Kevin Shelley in the race for secretary of state, and Republican Gary Mendoza and Democrat John Garamendi are the leading rivals in the insurance commissioner’s race.
Democratic state Sen. Jack O’Connell and Republican Katherine H. Smith face each other in the contest for state superintendent of public instruction, a nominally nonpartisan position.
Term limits, enacted by voters in 1990, will ensure a number of new faces in the state Legislature as well -- though Democrats are certain to keep their partisan advantage as a result of the party-protection plan adopted when lawmakers redrew state political boundaries last year.
Of the 20 state Senate and 80 Assembly races, analysts say fewer than 10 are seriously competitive.
Two of those hot contests are elections for open Assembly seats in inland San Diego and Imperial and Riverside counties.
The same lack of competition holds true in most of the 53 contests for the House of Representatives.
Only one -- the fight to replace scandal-scarred Rep. Gary Condit in the Central Valley -- is drawing heavy interest outside the district. Democrat Dennis Cardoza of Atwater is favored over Republican Dick Monteith of Modesto, despite lingering resentment on the part of Condit supporters over Cardoza’s decision to challenge his former mentor in the Democratic primary.
Elsewhere, analysts give Republican Beth Rogers an outside shot at ousting Democratic incumbent Lois Capps in Santa Barbara; in the Bay Area, Democrat Elaine Shaw is bucking for an upset over Republican Rep. Richard Pombo of Tracy.
Overall, Democrats are expected to slightly boost their lead in California’s House delegation.
In addition to partisan offices, Californians will decide the fate of seven statewide ballot initiatives, including $15 billion in bond measures to build housing, improve water quality and renovate the state’s public schools, among various projects.
Other ballot measures seek to expand after-school activities (an initiative sponsored by actor Arnold Schwarzenegger); permanently shift some motor vehicle sales taxes from the general fund to transportation projects; and allow Californians to register to vote as late as election day. The deadline for registering this year was last Monday.
Voters also will decide whether to retain three state Supreme Court justices. Facing an up-or-down vote are justices Marvin R. Baxter, Carlos R. Moreno and Kathryn M. Werdegar, appointees -- respectively -- of California’s last three governors, Republicans George Deukmejian and Pete Wilson, and Democrat Davis.
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Biographies of gubernatorial candidates
GOVERNOR
Gray Davis, Democrat
www.gray-davis.com
Incumbent
Age: 59
Family: Married
Career: Chief of staff to Gov. Jerry Brown, 1975-81; state assemblyman, 1983-87; state controller, 1987-95; lieutenant governor, 1995-99; governor, 1999-present.
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Bill Simon Jr., Republican
www.simonforgovernor.com
Age: 51
Family: Married, four children
Career: Assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1983-88; partner in William E. Simon & Sons, a private investment firm, 1988-present.
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Reinhold Gulke, American Independent
www.gulke.com
Age: 55
Family: Married, four children
Occupation: Owns and operates RGE Inc., a fire protection contractor.
Positions: Supports the right of parents to choose how their children are educated; limit legal immigration and end illegal immigration; supports capital punishment; increase water-storage capacity by building new dams; enact a one-time vehicle fee per owner; no other fees or taxes levied on automobiles.
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Peter Miguel Camejo, Green
www.votecamejo.org
Age: 62
Family: Married, two children
Occupation: Chairman, Progressive Asset Management.
Positions: Expand use and sources of renewable energy; enact a “living wage” law; end the death penalty; provide immigrants with a legal driver’s license; provide a quality education for everyone; abolish the three-strikes law; guarantee universal health care to all Californians.
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Gary David Copeland, Libertarian
www.lpwolfpack.net/copeland
Age: 46
Family: Married, three children
Occupation: President, NextCure Corp. and Epicenter Research.
Positions: Supports medical vouchers for low-income families to purchase health care or insurance; end drug prohibition and put a 10% tax on drugs; abolish the state income tax; amend three-strikes law to exclude nonviolent crimes.
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Iris Adam, Natural Law
www.irisadam.com
Age: 49
Family: Married, two children
Occupation: Business analyst at the Henry Samueli School of Engineering at UC Irvine.
Positions: Increase use of renewable energy sources; support prevention-based health care; enhance the safety testing and labeling of genetically engineered foods; offer tax credits to businesses that provide their employees with child care; decriminalize nonviolent drug offenses.
LIEUTENANT
GOVERNOR
Cruz Bustamante, Democrat
www.cruz2002.com
Incumbent
Age: 49
Family: Married, three children
Positions: Make colleges and universities more affordable; promote Cal Grants for college-bound students; expand access to Healthy Families medical insurance program for working poor; require that gasoline sales tax revenues be used solely for transportation projects.
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Bruce McPherson, Republican
www.mcpherson4lg.com
Age: 58
Family: Married, one child
Occupation: State senator
Positions: Make colleges and universities more affordable; extend class size reduction to more grades; expand technical education opportunities; support gun control, abortion rights, environmental protection.
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Jim King, American Independent
www.vote4king.com
Occupation: Real estate agent
Donna J. Warren, Green
www.donnawarren.com
Occupation: Certified financial manager
Pat Wright, Libertarian
www.wright4ltgov.org
Occupation: Ferret legalization coordinator
Kalee Przybylak, Natural Law
www.natural-law.org
Occupation: Public relations director
Paul Jerry Hannosh, Reform
www.paulhannosh.com
Occupation: Educator/businessman
SECRETARY OF STATE
Keith Olberg, Republican
www.olberg2002.com
Age: 41
Family: Declined to state
Occupation: Businessman
Positions: Eliminate incorporation fees for small businesses; replace outdated voting equipment; require voters to show photo ID at polling places; find ways to increase voter participation; expand polling hours and locations.
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Kevin Shelley, Democrat
www.shelley2002.com
Age: 46
Family: Married, one child
Occupation: State assemblyman
Positions: Eliminate all punch-card ballots; allow voter registration through election day; support campaign finance reform; increase penalties for voter fraud; improve environmental safety law for classrooms.
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Edward C. Noonan, American Independent
www.afamily.net/secstate
Occupation: Businessman
Larry Shoup, Green
www.voteshoup.org
Occupation: Author/historian
Gail K. Lightfoot, Libertarian
www.ca.lp.org
Occupation: Retired registered nurse
Louise Marie Allison, Natural Law
www.natural-law.org
Occupation: Teacher/administrator
Valli Sharpe-Geisler, Reform
www.siliconv.com
Occupation: Educator/technology coordinator
CONTROLLER
Tom McClintock, Republican
www.tommcclintock.com
Age: 46
Family: Married, two children
Occupation: State senator
Positions: Conduct regular performance audits of the state’s bureaucracies; oppose expansion of offshore oil drilling; ensure across-the-board competitive bidding; pension funds should focus on rate of return, not social goals.
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Steve Westly, Democrat
www.westly2002.com
Age: 46
Family: Married, two children
Occupation: Businessman/educator
Positions: Oppose offshore oil drilling; promote the development of alternative energy; increase investment in transportation, education and affordable housing; use state pension funds to impose corporate responsibility.
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Ernest F. Vance, American Independent
Occupation: Retired administrator
Laura Wells, Green
www.laurawells.org
Occupation: Financial systems consultant
J. Carlos Aguirre, Natural Law
www.natural-law.org
Occupation: Entrepreneur/businessman
TREASURER
Phil Angelides, Democrat
Incumbent
Age: 49
Family: Married, three children
Positions: Continue to finance construction and repair of public schools; crack down on corporations that engage in unethical business practices; support initiatives that use state investment capital in partnership with private sector.
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Greg Conlon, Republican
www.gregconlonforstatetreasurer.com
Age: 69
Family: Widower, two children
Occupation: Businessman/certified public accountant
Positions: Streamline government and cut government waste to improve state’s credit rating; consolidate all energy oversight into California Public Utilities Commission; get state out of energy business; renegotiate all electricity contracts and consider selling them to third-party public utilities or private corporations.
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Nathan E. Johnson, American Independent
Occupation: Transit operator
Jeanne-Marie Rosenmeier, Green
www.jeanne2002.com
Occupation: Certified public accountant
Marian Smithson, Libertarian
Occupation: West Covina city treasurer
Sylvia Valentine, Natural Law
www.natural-law.org
Occupation: Corporate office administrator
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Dick Ackerman, Republican
www.ackermanforag.com
Age: 59
Family: Married, three children
Occupation: State senator
Positions: Establish a child protection unit in the attorney general’s office; adopt a statewide zero-tolerance policy for gangs, guns and drugs in school; support the right of public school principals to expel students who disrupt class.
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Bill Lockyer, Democrat
www.lockyer2002.com
Incumbent
Age: 51
Family: Divorced, one child
Positions: Press enforcement of consumer protection, environmental and civil rights laws; combat identity theft; provide victims of violent crimes with information about support services; improve reporting of arrest and disposition information to the Department of Justice.
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Diane Beall Templin, American Independent
Occupation: Attorney/businesswoman
Glen Freeman Mowrer, Green
www.vote.cagreens.org
Occupation: Attorney
Ed Kuwatch, Libertarian
www.dui-california.com
/attorneygeneral.htm
Occupation: Criminal defense attorney
INSURANCE
COMMISSIONER
John Garamendi, Democrat
www.garamendi.org
Age: 57
Family: Married, six children
Occupation: Rancher
Positions: Work to rescue workers’ compensation system from collapse; improve consumer protection; fight insurance fraud; work to lower auto insurance rates.
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Gary Mendoza, Republican
www.garymendoza.com
Age: 47
Family: Married, two children
Occupation: Businessman
Positions: Establish a system that notifies DMV when auto insurance has elapsed; streamline processing of workers’ compensation claims; use Internet to improve delivery of consumer information.
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David Sheidlower, Green
www.votesheidlower.org
Occupation: Financial services executive
Dale F. Ogden, Libertarian
www.dalefogden.org
Occupation: Insurance consultant/actuary
Raul Calderon Jr., Natural Law
www.natural-law.org
Occupation: Health researcher/educator
SUPERINTENDENT OF
PUBLIC INSTRUCTION
(Nonpartisan Office)
Jack O’Connell
www.oconnell2002.org
Age: 51
Family: Married, one child
Occupation: State senator
Positions: Reduce class size in every grade; conduct performance audits of schools; oppose vouchers; increase per-student spending.
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Katherine H. Smith
Age: 61
Family: Married, two children
Occupation: Trustee, Anaheim Union High School District
Positions: Restore trade and technology courses; give all districts same amount of money per student; promote statewide adoption of school uniforms.
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Graphics reporting by Maloy Moore
The candidates’ stances on key issues
BILL SIMON
Gun control: Calls for a moratorium on new gun legislation; supports enforcement of current laws to keep criminals from getting guns.
GRAY DAVIS
Gun control: Signed several gun control measures, including bills that limit military-style semiautomatic weapons, require trigger locks and limit gun purchases to one a month.
BILL SIMON
Education: Wants to increase the number of charter schools and ensure funding for them; believes school districts should be limited to no more than 60,000 students; supports home schooling; wants to increase local and parental control of schools.
GRAY DAVIS
Education: Established accountability system that ranks schools according to test scores; increased funding for teacher recruitment and training; expanded Cal Grant loan program; opposes school vouchers.
BILL SIMON
Transportation: Calls for construction of new highways; promises to develop a comprehensive plan that includes projects, timetables and methods of payment; believes private money should be invested in transportation projects.
GRAY DAVIS
Transportation: In 2000, signed a $5.3-billion, six-year spending plan that nearly doubled the state’s transportation budget. Has provided money for light rail to Pasadena, East Los Angeles and the Westside; 105 miles of carpool lanes in Los Angeles and Orange counties; reconstruction of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.
BILL SIMON
Health care: Calls for tax incentives for physicians who serve the poor; tax credits for individuals who purchase their own health care and vouchers for the indigent and working poor; would allow patients to buy catastrophic-only insurance.
GRAY DAVIS
Health care: Streamlined the process for enrolling children of the working poor in Healthy Families insurance program; postponed expanding Healthy Families to include parents; created Department of Managed Health Care, which resolves disputes between HMOs and patients; gave patients the right to sue their HMOs.
BILL SIMON
Environment: Would build more dams and water storage facilities; prohibit new offshore oil drilling and retire all undeveloped leases; promises to promote alternative energy sources and conservation; criticizes the bill limiting so-called greenhouse emissions as “social engineering.”
GRAY DAVIS
Environment: Signed bill requiring auto makers to reduce emissions linked to global warming; ordered phase-out of gasoline additive MTBE, but later delayed it; helped broker state-federal acquisition of Headwaters redwood forest; was accused by environmentalists of stacking the Board of Forestry with timber industry supporters; signed legislation requiring utilities to use more renewable energy such as wind, solar power.
BILL SIMON
Criminal justice: Supports death penalty and three-strikes law; wants to ensure that crime labs have the latest technology.
GRAY DAVIS
Criminal justice: Has denied parole to almost all convicted murderers; supports the use of “reasonable force” to collect DNA from inmates to assist in crime solving; supports the death penalty and three-strikes law.
BILL SIMON
Energy: Wants to move California out of the energy business; would renegotiate long-term contracts to lower the unit cost; supports development of alternative energy sources.
GRAY DAVIS
Energy: Negotiated dozens of long-term power contracts, some of which have been renegotiated; streamlined the process for power plant construction; signed legislation that created a California power authority, which has the power to finance and build new power plants.
BILL SIMON
Budget and taxes: Wants to close the state budget deficit by cutting spending, shrinking the size of government and finding one-time revenue sources; no new taxes; wants to cut the state capital gains tax.
GRAY DAVIS
Budget and taxes: State spending grew by more than 30% in his first term; the state budget went from a surplus to a $24-billion deficit; won’t rule out tax increases to balance the budget; opposes reduction in state capital gains tax.
BILL SIMON
Gay rights: Supported Proposition 22, a successful 2000 ballot measure that defined marriage as a union between a man and a woman; opposed bills that granted inheritance, hospital visitation and other legal rights to domestic partners.
GRAY DAVIS
Gay rights: Signed several laws expanding gay rights, including bills that granted inheritance, hospital visitation and other legal rights to domestic partners. . Opposed Proposition 22, a successful 2000 ballot measure that defined marriage as a union between a man and a woman.
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A quick history of state’s 17 governors
In the last century, California has been served by 17 governors. Here are a few facts and figures about the men and about how today’s candidates fit in:
Party affiliation
12 Republicans
4 Democrats
1 Progressive
California natives (6)
George Pardee
Born in San Francisco (1902-06)
Hiram Johnson
Sacramento (1910-17)
James Rolph
San Francisco (1930-34)
Earl Warren
Los Angeles (1942-53)
Pat Brown
San Francisco (1958-66)
Jerry Brown
San Francisco (1974-82)
(Gray Davis was born in New York, Bill Simon Jr. in New Jersey)
Democrats not named Brown (2)
Culbert Olson (1938-42)
Gray Davis (1998-present)
Never held elected office before election (2)
Ronald Reagan (1966-74)
Hiram Johnson (1910-17)
(Simon is making his first run for public office)
Presidential candidates (3)
Jerry Brown (1976, 1980, 1992)
Ronald Reagan (1980)
Pete Wilson (1996)
Moved on to national office (3)
Ronald Reagan
President
Hiram Johnson
U.S. Senate
Earl Warren
Chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
Two-term governors (6)
Hiram Johnson, 1910-17
(resigned to assume U.S. Senate seat)
Pat Brown, 1958-66
Ronald Reagan, 1966-74
Jerry Brown, 1974-82
George Deukmejian,
1982-90
Pete Wilson, 1990-98
(Gray Davis is seeking his second term)
Three-term governor
Earl Warren, 1942-53
(resigned to become chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court)
Average age
54 (Davis, 59; Simon, 51)
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