Leaders enter the election homestretch
Almost as soon as state Sen. John Campbell announced he was running
for the House of Representatives, he was pegged as the leading
candidate, and people have been calling him “Congressman” for more
than a month now.
Former Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer, who was already in the race,
has been fighting for the upper hand ever since. She’s widely
considered the Republican with the second-best shot.
“I know I’m a little behind. That’s fine with me,” Brewer said.
“You want to peak on election day.”
Tuesday, voters in the 48th Congressional District will choose
from 17 candidates -- 10 from the GOP -- to succeed former Rep. Chris
Cox, who left to become chairman of the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
It’s an open primary, so voters can pick any candidate, regardless
of party registration. If more than 50% of Tuesday’s votes go to one
candidate, that person wins outright. Otherwise, top vote-getters
from each party will compete in a Dec. 6 general election.
Similarities among differences
The two top Republicans have backgrounds in politics and business.
Brewer, 68, of Newport Beach, spent 20 years at a plastics company
she and her husband founded. She served as Newport Beach’s
assemblywoman from 1994 to 2000.
Since leaving the Assembly, Brewer has been appointed to a state
tax policy commission, she helped found a mental health services
coalition, and she briefly served on the Orange County Transportation
Authority board.
Campbell, 50, of Irvine, has been an accountant and has spent
about 25 years handling finances and management of car dealerships.
He succeeded Brewer in the Assembly and served two terms before
being elected to the state Senate in 2004. He’s backed by county and
state GOP organizations as well as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Brewer has downplayed Campbell’s massive list of endorsements and
has pitched herself as a candidate with community support, with
volunteers walking precincts and holding meet-and-greets for her.
Campbell’s support, she said, is narrowly based and comes from “the
old guard of Orange County.”
Other candidates have criticized Campbell for, as Brewer put it,
“running like he’s the incumbent” -- not coming to candidate forums
or making public appearances.
But Campbell sloughs off the attack. As a sitting state senator he
was busy in Sacramento until just a few weeks ago, he said.
Besides, he said, voters have had five years to see how he behaves
in office, while most of the other candidates are unknowns.
“These other people don’t have anything else to do, and I do,” he
said.
His record in those last five years is where Brewer has assailed
him. She has said he flip-flopped on illegal immigration, once
benefited from eminent domain but is now a vocal opponent of it, and
day-traded energy stocks while the state was in an energy crisis.
Campbell said he has always opposed illegal immigration and
dismissed the other charges as nonsense.
To strengthen her appeal to moderate voters, Brewer has
highlighted her support of abortion rights and stem cell research,
but she also said voters are concerned about the war in Iraq, illegal
immigration and taxes.
“They want to know that you don’t think the war should go on, they
want to know that you’re going to fight illegal immigration and how
you’re going to do it, and they want to know that you’re not going to
arbitrarily cut taxes,” Brewer said. “Without saying it, they’re
worried about the deficit.”
For Campbell, the biggest issue in the election is national
security.
“The central reason you run for federal office is foreign policy
issues,” he said. “What stem cell research is going on won’t matter a
whit if you get blown up on your way to work.”
Both candidates have seized on the issue of illegal immigration,
which may be getting more attention because Minuteman Project founder
Jim Gilchrist is in the race.
While Brewer has said the U.S. should enforce existing immigration
laws, Campbell has advocated a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border,
and he’s a leading proponent of a 2006 ballot initiative that would
beef up the state police to patrol the California border.
A little speculation
While the two seem to have prepared answers for everything else,
neither candidate will elaborate on the game plan in the event of an
Oct. 4 loss.
Brewer said she’s not interested in going back to Sacramento
because it’s too partisan.
“Congress is right for me,” she said.
And while he’s not positive he’ll sweep the primary, Campbell
doesn’t doubt that he’s going to Congress this year.
“I am going to win this race, so that’s a speculation that I’m not
going to need to make,” he said.
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