OC Republican Party names new leader
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Alicia Robinson
The torch was officially passed to a new chairman of the Orange
County Republican Party Monday.
After a reception to honor outgoing Orange County GOP Chairman Tom
Fuentes, the county Republican Central Committee elected attorney and
former Assemblyman Scott Baugh as the new party chairman.
Baugh, 41, served in the Assembly from 1995 to 2000 and has been
in the county party’s central committee since January.
“I love politics through and through and it’s an opportunity to
engage in a challenge that I thoroughly enjoy,” Baugh said.
After heading the Orange County GOP for 20 years, Fuentes
announced last month that he would yield the chairman’s seat. A
sometimes controversial figure, Fuentes is considered a tireless
promoter of the party and a strong leader by his supporters, while
critics see him as a Republican kingmaker whose far-right
conservatism excluded some party members.
Baugh will actively take the party’s reins later this week.
“This Thursday I’ll announce a transition committee of folks that
are going to bring forward every idea under the sun for integration
into our political plan,” Baugh said.
The committee should help him adjust to his new role, and his
biggest job will be to revitalize Republican voter registration and
turnout in time for the November election, Baugh said.
Party membership peaked in the 1980s when it surpassed 50% of the
county’s registered voters, but it has since dropped to 48.6%, he
said.
“Our goal is to move it back over 50% again,” he said.
The party under Baugh is expected to be more welcoming to all
points in the Republican spectrum. Observers on Monday night agreed
that Baugh will be a unifying force in Orange County Republican
politics.
“Scott Baugh is a very dynamic, all-inclusive and forward-thinking
party leader who will take advantage of all the assets that the party
membership has to offer,” said Van Tran, the Republican candidate for
the 68th Assembly District seat that Ken Maddox will leave at the end
of the year because of term limits.
Orange County will be instrumental in getting out the Republican
vote to try to win California for President Bush, and Baugh’s
leadership will help with that, said Lee Frodsham of Lake Forest.
“I think that it’s very positive that we will possibly be able to
have a better coalition between the various parts of the Republican
Party in Orange County,” she said.
Baugh said the November election will be the first benchmark to
measure how he’s doing, but to some extent it will depend on what
happens at the national level.
“It’s going to be close and a lot of it is out of party politics’
hands, and that’s the economy and the war,” said Michael Simons,
president of the Huntington Beach Union High School District.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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