Orton’s statement won’t hit homes
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Paul Clinton
State Assembly candidate Bill Orton has lost a battle with the county
clerk to have his statement sent to Democratic voters.
County elections officials informed Orton Tuesday that they would not
publish the statement. Earlier this week, County Registrar Rosalyn Lever
promised Orton she would order a supplemental mailing of his statement
after it was accidentally sent to Republican voters.
The reversal came after Lever’s office learned Orton was not eligible
for a published statement because he had not agreed to abide by voluntary
spending limits put in place by Proposition 34.
The initiative, passed on a 60% margin by voters in November 2000,
allows Assembly candidates who promise to spend less than $400,000 to buy
a ballot statement in the voters pamphlet of 250 words of less for
$2,800.
“If you do not accept the limit, you are not allowed to purchase that
ad,” Chief Deputy Registrar Steve Rodermund said. “Had the mistake been
ours, we were going to do the right thing and get it out to those who
needed to see it. Once we were notified by the Secretary of State, then
by law we could not offer him this and were not obligated to send out the
flier.”
Rodermund, however, did acknowledge that his office should not have
accepted the statement from Orton and published it in the Republican
pamphlet.
“How it got in the ballot, I don’t know,” he said. “We shouldn’t have
done it.”
The snafu was tipped off last month when the Orange County Registrar
of Voters accidentally published Orton’s statement in the voters’
pamphlet sent to Republican voters.
Orton is the sole opponent of Republican incumbent Tom Harman in the
race for the 67th District seat.
The candidate, who graduated from Edison High School, said he has been
troubled by the mishap with his ballot statement.
“It’s a tribulation,” Orton said. “I have to find my personal sense of
calmness. It bothers me.”
Orton said he has considered challenging Prop. 34 in court. He said he
was confused by the candidate intention statement, called a “501 form,”
where he refused the spending limits.
The snafu won’t hurt Orton because he doesn’t have any competition in
March from his own party, said Jim Toledano, the former chairman of the
Democratic Party of Orange County.
“What difference does it make when he’s unopposed,” Toledano said.
“Sure, they should give him his money back.”
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