A CLOSER LOOK -- Candidates settle down after long campaign
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Jennifer Kho and Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT-MESA -- Some are bitter and some are victorious, but there is
one emotion that all Newport Beach and Costa Mesa city council candidates
say they share -- relief that the election is over.
“I’m definitely glad it’s all done,” said Costa Mesa candidate William
Perkins, who was not elected. “I’m finally going to relax and get some
sleep.”
In Newport Beach, views differed sharply on whether candidates had
friendly or aggressive campaigns.
Much of the postelection unhappiness has come out of District 5, where
Councilman-elect Steve Bromberg beat opponent Patricia M. Beek by 703
votes. Robert Schoonmaker, a third candidate, trailed the others with
13.4% of the votes.
Both Beek and Schoonmaker criticized Bromberg’s campaign strategy
during the final days before the election. Beek said she was disappointed
Bromberg had used a statement by Jean Watt and Evelyn Hart, both former
councilwomen, to support his campaign. While Bromberg’s advertisement did
not state that he had received the women’s endorsement, Beek said it
could lead voters to believe that this was the case.
Bromberg, who described the ad as “incredibly clean,” said Watt and
Hart had made the comment urging him to run for the council seat at a
fund-raiser.
“If it comes across as an implied endorsement, that’s something I
can’t help,” Bromberg said. “People ought to stand by what they say and
do.”
Beek also agreed with Schoonmaker that a mailer sent out by Bromberg
describing him as the Republican candidate for District 5 had overstepped
boundaries.
“Mr. Bromberg is well-aware that these are nonpartisan offices that
we’re seeking,” said Schoonmaker, adding that Bromberg had not received
support from the county’s Republican Party to make the claim. “I have
been a Republican longer than he has. I consider that to be rather
unethical.”
But Bromberg countered that while walking precincts, he’d simply
realized that people cared about party affiliation in Newport Beach.
“I never once said that the Republican Party was endorsing me,” he
said, adding that his opponents’ comments showed the election results had
created “just a lot of sour grapes.”
“Everyone else had an opportunity to do a flier if they wanted,” he
said.
While Beek said she’ll continue to serve on the Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Commission, where she is in the first year of her second term,
she couldn’t say if she’d run again for office.
In the nearer future, she said she might join her sons in Sydney,
Australia, for a sailing trip.
Schoonmaker said he might not wait four years to run again. He said he
may challenge county Supervisor Tom Wilson for his post in 2002.
“If I ran a campaign for that particular seat, it would be in a more
conventional manner than I’ve done this time,” said Schoonmaker, who
spent less than $1,000 on his City Council campaign.
“I wanted to find out if it was possible for a person to obtain office
doing it the way I did it,” he said. “And now I know that this is not
possible in this time and day.”
CLEAN COMPETITION
Newport Beach District 2 candidate Dennis P. Lahey, who lost the race
to Councilman-elect Gary L. Proctor, said that in the weeks leading up to
the election, residents had seen a “very highly ethical campaign.”
He added that he plans to support his opponent when Proctor is sworn
into office.
“He beat me good,” Lahey said. “He’ll do just fine. I’ll do anything
to help him to make it work.”
Lahey, a Greenlight supporter, said he had accomplished his goal by
getting the initiative approved by voters. He doesn’t plan to run again
in four years but does plan to focus on his duties as commander of the
American Legion. He also said he would gladly accept any offers to get
involved in city government.
“I’ll be happy to serve on a commission,” he said. “The harbor, of
course, is my first love.”
Fellow District 2 candidate Steven Rosansky, who trailed both Proctor
and Lahey in the polls, said the campaign taught him that money counts.
Rosansky added that he’d also like to get involved in a city
commission.
“I’ve just begun my public service,” he said. “I haven’t ended it. I
probably jumped the gun anyway running for City Council without paying my
dues. Not that Mr. Proctor has paid his dues, but he had a little more
money than I did.”
Proctor agreed that the campaign had seen no mudslinging. He added
that televising the candidates forums gave residents an opportunity to
hear candidates’ views rather than read about them in mailers.
“It’s a more helpful way to let people understand where people stand
on issues,” he said.
In District 7, where Greenlight supporter and Councilman-elect John
Heffernan, Greenlight opponent and former City Manager Bob Wynn and
incumbent Tom Thomson had drawn the battle lines in public debates,
little animosity came into the open after Tuesday’s election.
Heffernan previously had credited his experience as a Hoag Hospital
member, as well as his appearances at debates, for his election success,
and said he’d spend the next weeks getting to know people in the
different city departments to prepare for the job. Heffernan and Thomson
could not be reached for comment Friday.
After the election, Wynn said Heffernan’s support of Greenlight had
probably gotten him the necessary votes. On Friday, he said he would
postpone a decision on whether to run again until 2004.
A SURPRISING VOTE IN COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa voters reacted to the campaign by selecting a surprising
mix of council members last week, with Chris Steel -- who had been
defeated in nine previous elections -- getting the most votes,
Councilwoman Libby Cowan coming in a strong second, and Karen Robinson --
the first racial minority on the council -- apparently narrowly
displacing incumbent Councilwoman Heather Somers. Absentee ballots are
still being counted, so the voting results are not yet official.
City leaders say they are now trying to decipher the message residents
sent with their votes.
Steel, a controversial City Hall critic who said the city should not
continue to “educate, recreate, medicate, domesticate and compensate
noncitizens,” campaigned on his ideas of requiring citizenship screening
for city-permitted services, strengthening code enforcement, setting up
council districts, stopping the possible expansion of John Wayne Airport
and closing the city’s job center.
His election shows that residents are dissatisfied and want a change,
said unsuccessful candidate Ronald Channels; Janice Davidson, chairwoman
of Citizens to Improve Costa Mesa; and Mayor Gary Monahan.
Cowan said she has struggled to figure out what kind of change the
voters want, because they elected both Steel and Robinson, who have many
differing opinions.
“I’m very surprised that Costa Mesa, which I see as a very
compassionate, welcoming and comfortable city for all, would elect a
Chris Steel,” she said. “I think it’s three things: name recognition,
good placement on the ballot and the small number of people who are his
kind of radical, right-wing conservatives who coalesced around him and
gave him the votes he needed.”
Cowan said Robinson’s apparent election matched her expectations more
closely, because she said Robinson seems to represent “a sentiment in the
community to protect the small-town feeling in a rapidly growing,
urbanizing community.”
A big part of Robinson’s platform was to “prevent urbanization,”
including opposing the C.J. Segerstrom & Sons plan to construct an Ikea
store in the city unless it is revised.
Paul Freeman, spokesman for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons, said he hopes
Robinson will be open-minded.
“She’s proven herself to be an effective advocate for her point of
view, and I respect her,” he said. “I think the project will have real
benefits for the city, and I don’t think it will be really impactful, so
I hope she will look at it analytically now that she’s in a position of
responsibility.”
VOTERS FOLLOW A GOOD ECONOMY
Planning Commissioner Tom Sutro, who came in eighth despite having
raised the third-most money for his campaign, said he thinks the economy
was a point in favor of Robinson and against himself.
“With the economy so good, people are concerned about traffic and new
developments that could be built in the area, but property owners have
rights and developers have the right to build,” he said. “I think their
vote for [Robinson] was really what people thought of as a vote for lower
densities and less traffic. I am on the Planning Commission and have
approved a number of projects that have taken place. People see that as
increasing traffic and voted against it.”
Most Costa Mesa candidates said they have not decided if they will run
again in two years.
Candidates Perkins and Channels, who said he wants to get the
unsuccessful candidates together to attend meetings and lobby the City
Council on behalf of their individual pet issues, said they are planning
to run again. Candidate Joel Faris, who did not win his council bid, said
he will not try again.
Faris said he enjoyed campaigning and is happy with the votes he
received, but he has decided to participate in other community
activities.
“I really feel I have plenty to do without a council seat,” he said.
“I think God has a place for each of us, and my place is elsewhere for
now. I’m planning on being active in the community big time. But if I can
get fifth place with a less-than-$500 campaign and after living here for
three years, that just shows what personal one-to-one conversations can
get you. I think people saw the issues and voted on them, and we should
give voters more credit than we sometimes do. It proves people can win
without money, and money doesn’t guarantee anything.”
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