Zippi’s statement will stand
Alicia Robinson
Comments about the “good old boys” in the ballot statement of 70th
assembly district candidate Marianne Zippi will go out to voters.
The California appellate court on Friday rejected an emergency
petition to change Zippi’s ballot statement before sample ballots are
printed next week.
Attorney Bruce Peotter, representing plaintiff Scott Moody,
challenged Zippi’s ballot statement in December on the grounds that
it violates the state elections law prohibiting candidates from
mentioning their opponents in ballot statements.
Candidates for the state Legislature can purchase space for
250-word statements to be included in sample ballots distributed to
voters before an election.
In earlier interviews Peotter said Zippi’s references to “good old
boys,” “lawyers in politics,” and other comments were obvious
references to several of her Republican opponents in the March 2
primary.
Orange County Superior Court Commissioner Eleanor Palk denied a
motion to delete portions of the statement on Dec. 31, citing the
statute of limitations.
The Orange County Registrar of Voters had opposed the motion
because it wasn’t filed by a Dec. 16 deadline. Peotter said the
deadline should have been Dec. 18 to allow the full 10-day period for
public review of the ballot statement. He filed the motion on Dec.
17.
On Friday, Peotter filed an emergency writ petition so an appeal
would be handled before the deadline to print ballot materials. The
appellate court denied that petition the same day.
“It’s just that they didn’t want to deal with it on an expedited
basis,” Peotter said Tuesday. “We can still pursue the appeal ... but
it won’t affect the actual candidate statement.”
Peotter said there’s a 50% chance his client will pursue the
appeal. If he does, the goal will be a court ruling on the statute of
limitations, which would affect future ballot statement challenges,
Peotter said.
“It doesn’t change the fact that [Zippi] broke the law,” he said
of the appellate court’s denial of the emergency petition. “It’s just
unfortunate that we didn’t challenge it a day earlier so the statute
of limitations wouldn’t have been an issue.”
Zippi has said the ballot statement complies with the law, and she
called the filing an attempt to harass her and hurt her candidacy.
She said Tuesday she was pleased with the court’s decision and
added the situation may have benefited her by increasing her name
recognition.
“It’s taken some time ... but we’ve moved ahead as a result of
it,” she said. “We certainly have more voter recognition than before
we started.”
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