Costa Mesa councilman losing support
Deirdre Newman
While Councilman Allan Mansoor got elected in 2002 largely because of
voters who put Councilman Chris Steel on the dais in 2000, Mansoor
said Friday he will not support Steel in November.
Steel has not yet announced whether he will run for reelection.
Regardless, Mansoor has thrown his considerable incumbent clout
behind candidate and Planning Commissioner Eric Bever.
“I haven’t seen [Steel] show leadership on the issues that people
bring forward,” Mansoor said. “It’s more reactionary and talk than
any real substance.”
Steel could not be reached for comment Friday.
Mansoor said he favors Bever because he will conduct himself more
professionally on the dais than Steel has.
“I know he will be reliable on sticking to the issues, running a
sensible meeting and focusing on real solutions to improve the
Westside of town, focus on the spirit of the general plan and keep
traffic at a minimum,” Mansoor said. “And he’s gonna focus on
balancing the budget. He’s gonna focus on the responsibilities that
we expect from a council member.”
Westside activist Mike Berry, who supported Steel in 2000, said he
will not be supporting Steel in the fall.
“Every issue I have asked Chris to weigh in on, he voted the other
way,” Berry said.
Mansoor accuses Steel of flip-flopping on a lot of issues, and
Berry said Steel says one thing and then votes a different way on
many issues.
“If he’s going to be voting for something, then he prefaces that
with a long explanation of why he should vote some other way and then
he goes ahead and votes the way he was going to,” Berry said.
Steel is also hard to contact to discuss issues, Mansoor said.
“A lot of people have commented to me that it’s hard to get ahold
of him, and he calls late at night,” Mansoor said. “Eric has a very
responsible approach, and I have tremendous respect for that.”
Mansoor said he will help Bever any way he can during the
campaign. Bever could not be reached for comment.
Bever is one of six residents who has filed an intention to run
form, which does not guarantee they will run for the three open
council seats this fall.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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