Many hopefuls run for Cox seat
The race for the 48th District Congressional seat vacated by Chris
Cox will include 10 Republicans, four Democrats and three members of
other parties -- all of whom qualified for the ballot by the Monday
deadline.
One write-in candidate with no designated party affiliation still
has to collect enough signatures to qualify.
A primary election is set for Oct. 4, with a general election
following on Dec. 6 for the winners in each party if no candidate
takes more than 50% of the primary vote.
Former Rep. Chris Cox of Newport Beach, who first won the House
seat in 1988, left it open Aug. 3 when he became chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission. With strong Republican voter
registration in the district, the seat looks like a lifetime job to
GOP candidates.
“It’s not surprising, because once you get past four people in the
race, you might as well run, because there’s some chance that you
could do something,” UC Irvine political scientist Mark Petracca
said.
“The good news is that it’s not a coronation, and frankly, whoever
does win, it helps legitimize the outcome.”
But the gaggle of unknowns will have to compete with the name
recognition and fundraising muscle of former Assemblywoman Marilyn
Brewer and current state Sen. John Campbell, both of whom reported
having raised $500,000 as of Friday and have pulled in big-name
endorsements.
Campbell is backed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Brewer last
week got the nod from former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman.
Nearly the same number of candidates are running now as did last
time the seat was open. But having an incumbent officeholder like
Campbell is one thing that sets this race apart from the one in 1988,
when state legislators didn’t have term limits.
Campbell is considered a front-runner. But start with too many
Republicans on the ballot in a low-turnout race and add the candidacy
of Minuteman Project founder Jim Gilchrist, who could run on the far
right, and it could be death by a thousand cuts for Campbell,
Petracca said.
And candidates like John Kelly, who owns a men’s store in Tustin,
may not have the money, but tenacity may mean front-runners have to
work a little harder.
“My campaign is like the Cinderella-man campaign,” Kelly said. “I
never give up. I never throw in the towel.”
The official list of candidates for the 48th Congressional
District seat includes:
* Republicans: business owner Marilyn Brewer of Newport Beach;
businessman and state Sen. John Campbell of Irvine; dentist David R.
Crouch of Corona del Mar; merchant-businessman John Kelly of Tustin;
lawyer-businessman Scott MacCabe of Irvine; businessman-attorney Guy
E. Mailly of Irvine; realtor-businesswoman Marsha A. Morris of
Irvine; businessman Marshall Samuel Sanders of Santa Ana; veteran and
international businessman Edward Suppe of Huntington Beach;
physician-businessman Don Udall of Corona del Mar
* Democrats: teacher Bea Foster of Tustin; university business
professor John Graham of Irvine; marketing consultant Tom Pallow of
Santa Ana; businessman-attorney Steve Young of Newport Beach
* Other parties: realtor-businessman Bruce Cohen of Aliso Viejo,
Libertarian; Minuteman Project founder Jim Gilchrist of Aliso Viejo,
American Independent Party; public school teacher Bea Tiritilli of
Santa Ana, Green Party
Decline-to-state candidate D. Bruce Smith of Seal beach is
designated as a write-in candidate, which gives him until Sept. 20 to
gather the required signatures, but his name won’t appear on the Oct.
4 ballot.
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