A CLOSER LOOK -- A bruising battle awaits
S.J. Cahn
NEWPORT BEACH -- Two visions are shaping up of the race to replace
Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach) if he is appointed to the federal
bench.
In one, Cox -- who acknowledged last week that he has talked to the
White House about an appointment to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals --
is confirmed by the Senate within the next few months, forcing a short,
intense race that is over by the fall.
In the other, Cox’s appointment by President Bush is held up by Senate
Democrats, he remains in office until near the end of the year and the
election to replace him is not held until next March’s general election.
Tustin millionaire Mark Johnson is betting on the first version. He
has officially created a campaign committee and put $1 million of his own
money in its coffers in preparation for Cox (R-Newport Beach) possibly
vacating his seat to take a federal judgeship.
“This is time that cannot be lost,” Johnson said this week of his
aggressive approach to winning a seat that isn’t vacant yet.
Cox was scheduled to meet last week with Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.) about the nomination, which is expected to be announced by the
White House this week.
Feinstein and her colleague, Sen. Barbara Boxer, essentially could
hold up or even quash the appointment through the traditional Senate
confirmation process. Boxer has raised concerns about the nomination. A
spokesman for Feinstein said she has not commented on whether she would
support Cox.
Neither Feinstein nor Cox’s office returned calls seeking comment
about their meeting.
Newport Beach ties
Johnson, who’s long been a board member of the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, including stints as chairman and chief executive
officer, also has hired two fund-raisers and has retained Sacramento
political consultants McNally Temple.
“It is going to be a very short, fast and intense campaign,” said the
54-year-old Johnson, a founding member of the moderate Republican group
the New Majority, which includes notable Newport-Mesa heavyweights George
Argyros, Don Bren, Gary Hunt, Roger Kirwan and Henry Samueli.
Johnson is right to hope for a quick race, largely because a fast,
crowded campaign is his best hope for victory, said State Sen. Dick
Ackerman (R-Fullerton).
Ackerman is among a host of other hopefuls interested in Cox’s seat.
Those mulling over a race include Assemblyman Bill Campbell (R-Villa
Park), Supervisor Todd Spitzer, former Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer,
Newport Beach philanthropist John Crean, state Sen. Ross Johnson
(R-Irvine), Newport Beach physician Don Udall and Newport Beach Realtor
Bill Cote.
Santa Ana City Councilman Brett Franklin also told the Pilot that he
is considering a run, while former Rep. Jim Rogan has pulled out as a
possible candidate.
Given all the unknowns, “I think it’s a little premature” to be
setting up committees, Ackerman said. “I think it’s going to happen
later, rather than sooner.”
If the election were held off until next March, the district will have
been realigned according to new Census figures and what it might look
like is anybody’s guess.
A single GOP choice
Also by that point, the list of hopefuls will have been pared down,
with one candidate having the support of the county Republican Party,
Ackerman said.
Eileen Padberg, an Irvine-based political consultant with ties to
Brewer, agreed that the county party, led by Chairman Tom Fuentes, will
choose its own candidate -- a conservative “hard-liner.”
That choice, she added, will be easier now that Rogan -- who could
call up strong political support from the nation’s capitol -- is out of
the running.
But at the same time, she said, Cox’s district does not match that
political stance.
“I think the district is a moderate district,” Padberg said. “It’s
highly educated and pretty diverse.”
That could be an advantage for Johnson, who as a member of the New
Majority has pushed the county party to focus less on divisive issues,
such as abortion, and more on what the group says are the party’s
strengths and attraction to voters: fiscal responsibility and
pro-business policies.
However, Johnson will have to state clear positions on issues beyond
that New Majority mantra if he wants to succeed Cox, Padberg said.
Women’s rights, environmental concerns and education, for instance, are
all issues important to the district.
And certainly he’ll have to address the El Toro airport, which likely
will be a driving force in the election, especially if it is held off
until March when voters also could be voting on the South County-led
proposal for a park at the former Marine base.
Johnson, whose ties to New Majority member and major El Toro proponent
George Argyros could leave him with an uphill climb to get votes from
Irvine and other southern parts of the district, is stressing that the
airport issue is one for the county to work out, not the federal
government.
At the same time, however, he is quick to blast all sides for spending
too much taxpayer money and not resolving the issue in a “statesmanlike”
way.
No ace up their sleeve
One possible wild card in this race is not expected to be an ace: an
endorsement from Cox.
Most of those thinking of running, while of course wanting Cox’s
public anointment, consider him too shrewd to come out for a particular
candidate. It is even unclear whether, as a judge, Cox could legally
offer his endorsement.
In the end, without a cohesive Republican county party putting forth
one candidate and without Cox choosing a successor, only one thing seems
certain: It will be a bruising battle.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.