Senate candidate wants in on debate
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Alicia Robinson
U.S. Senate Libertarian candidate and Orange County Superior Court
Judge Jim Gray is trying to use the courts to do what his showing in
the polls can’t: get him into a high-profile debate.
Gray, who lives in Newport Beach, applied Monday for a temporary
restraining order to block the League of Women Voters of California
from holding an Aug. 10 debate between incumbent Democratic Sen.
Barbara Boxer and her Republican challenger Bill Jones. Gray charges
the league is violating federal election laws by excluding him from
the debate.
“They are a tax-exempt, public interest, nonpartisan outfit under
federal law, and that means they’re required to act in the public
interest,” Gray said.
A league representative said the criteria to be included in its
debate are clear and objective, and Gray simply didn’t meet them.
Gray disagrees. The league said he could join the debate if a poll
showed he was likely to draw at least 10% of the vote in November,
Gray said. He commissioned a poll that reported between 8% and 18% of
respondents to questions on political issues were likely to vote for
him, and 68% of respondents said Gray should be involved in debates
with the major party candidates, he said.
When he presented the league with his poll, Gray was told it
wouldn’t qualify him because it wasn’t neutral, he said.
“That’s true, but the polls that are not paid for by the
candidates ... they don’t list my name, so that’s an impossible
condition,” Gray said.
He said he doesn’t want to cancel the debate; he just wants to be
allowed to participate.
“Our criteria is 10% in an independent poll of likely voters by
organizations such as the L.A. Times or the Field Poll ... and the
courts have held that as long as you have clear, objective criteria,
that’s how debates are structured,” said Xandra Kayden, a consultant
to the League of Women Voters of California and a senior fellow at
the School of Public Policy and Social Research at UCLA. “You have to
set some limits and our responsibility is to voters to hear
candidates who are likely to be elected.”
A spokesman for Jones’ campaign said that the election essentially
involves just two candidates.
“We plan on attending,” said Sean Walsh, a spokesman for Jones’
campaign. “We also believe that the standard the league used was a
fair standard. At this juncture there are two candidates that will
really have a viable chance of being elected. One is Bill Jones. The
other is Barbara Boxer.”
Gray does meet the league’s other criteria, which are being a
legally qualified candidate, making a public announcement of
candidacy and demonstrating that a formal campaign is being waged.
Gray’s filing of a court challenge is more of an attempt to get
media coverage than a legitimate legal complaint, Kayden said.
“I’m sympathetic to the judge, but that doesn’t mean we’re going
to change our criteria,” she said, adding that the league offers all
candidates exposure on its website, https://www.smartvoter.org.
Something Gray and Kayden agree on is the importance of debates in
political races today. The Aug. 10 debate is set to be televised live
on NBC.
“This is the most critical part of the campaign because it will
lend credibility to a candidate that appears and marginalize
candidates that do not,” Gray said.
Also excluded from the debate are American Independent Party
candidate Don J. Grundmann and Peace and Freedom Party candidate
Marsha Feinland.
Gray’s application was scheduled to be heard this morning in Los
Angeles Superior Court.
* 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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