A campaign of spending
Here’s a choice for you: Would you rather have a brand-new car or a
seat on the City Council? Both could cost you about $35,000.
That staggering sum is the ballpark figure for what the top
spenders in last fall’s campaign, Mayor Toni Iseman and Councilwoman
Elizabeth Pearson, shelled out for the chance to be loved by some and
hated by many others.
Pearson topped the list, raising and spending a shade above that
$35,000. Iseman was close behind with $33,700 in spending.
The list goes on: Village Laguna spent $33,100, much of it on a
poll. Melissa Adams, who just missed a seat in the ultra-tight race,
spent $24,400 and raised about $25,400.
Councilman Steve Dicterow was the thriftiest of the bunch. He
spent $13,000, while raising $17,000.
To put the numbers in perspective, three of the four candidates
spent close to or more than $1 per person in the city.
By comparison, a presidential candidate would have to spend $290
million to pluck down a buck per person (President Bush spent about
$185 million in 2000). In next year’s California Senate race, Sen.
Barbara Boxer and her yet-to-be determined Republican challenger
would have to spend about $35 million each.
All that money raises at least two questions.
The first: Is it worth it? Only those who have served in City Hall
can say.
The second, and the more important one: Does it keep people from
running?
That answer also is elusive. Certainly the four candidates who ran
last fall all did well. But were there others who would have run --
and maybe would have made fine city leaders -- if $13,000 were not
the starting point for winning the race?
Controlling such spending has, of course, been a central topic of
political debate across the country for years. Judging by the slow
and painful process to get to the semblance of campaign finance
reform in the “McCain-Feingold” measure that passed a year ago,
Laguna Beach is not going to suddenly alter the way things are.
But perhaps slowly, and surely, it should. In a city of such
relatively few people (and even fewer voters), perhaps there are ways
to limit spending or set up funds to allow more voices into the
campaign. It is certainly a small enough place that it could act as a
laboratory for a cutting-edge system. Perhaps city leaders should
seek out such a project.
Or, Laguna Canyon Road could always be blocked off to allow for
the roll-out of the latest concept car from Detroit.
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