Ueberroth campaign has Newport Beach touch
Mike Swanson and Paul Clinton
Let the games begin.
Peter Ueberroth, leading organizer of the 1984 Olympics, former
baseball commissioner and an Orange County resident, is among 135
candidates seeking to replace Gov. Gray Davis if Californians vote
for a recall Oct. 7.
Ueberroth, a registered Republican, will run for governor as an
independent candidate with a bipartisan campaign team. He is using a
Newport Beach address as a campaign headquarters. He lives in Laguna
Beach.
He said he’s committed to serve only the remaining three years of
Davis’ term “to stop California’s compounding economic death spiral
while it is still possible, reverse it, and put California back on
track.” He won’t run in 2006, he said.
“California’s problems need to be fixed and they need to be fixed
now,” Ueberroth said in a statement released Aug. 8. “But I have
learned from experience that there are no solutions that are not
bipartisan.”
Ueberroth has been widely embraced as a serious candidate for the
state’s top elected post, Newport-Mesa political experts agree.
“I think anyone with $40 million is a serious candidate,” said
Costa Mesa-based GOP pollster Adam Probolsky. “He’s decidedly
moderate, when you have more than enough moderates and liberals in
the race.”
Ueberroth faces long odds against Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has
drawn on his star appeal in the week since announcing his candidacy.
President George W. Bush, Reps. Dana Rohrabacher and Chris Cox,
billionaire financier Warren Buffet and others have endorsed him.
“Peter has incredible credentials,” said GOP fund-raiser Buck
Johns. “Unfortunately, has is facing a candidate [in Arnold
Schwarzenegger] who has sucked the oxygen out of this race.”
Ueberroth, 65, received widespread praise for organizing the 1984
Olympics in Los Angeles, which turned a $215-million profit through
corporate sponsorships and media contracts during an event many
feared would fail.
Ueberroth then started his term as commissioner of Major League
Baseball in October of 1984. He stepped down when his first term
ended in 1989. He was harder on baseball’s drug users during his
tenure than any other commissioner in its history, regularly
suspending and fining players who failed drug tests on the grounds
that they were acting as poor role models. In 1985, he reinstated
Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays, who had been banned from baseball for
allegedly working for an Atlantic City casino.
A poll released early this week showed Ueberroth among the top
five candidates in the recall race, but his 8% backing trailed
front-runner Arnold Schwarzenegger by 23%.
* MIKE SWANSON is a reporter for Times Community News. He can be
reached at 494-4321 or [email protected]. PAUL CLINTON covers
the environment, business and politics. He may be reached at (949)
764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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