More money, more money
- Share via
One of the House of Representative’s perennially poorest members
doesn’t seem to be pulling in much extra cash lately.
According to the July 15 quarterly campaign finance reports just
released, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher is sitting on $87,500, having raised
$243,600 this election cycle, including $23,100 since April.
In the world of multimillion-dollar campaigns, it might not seem
like much. But the good news for Huntington’s surfing congressman is
that his challenger, nurse Gerrie Schipske, has just $585 in her
coffers, having raised $111,700 this election -- with $1,000
donations each from the committees of Democratic Reps. Loretta
Sanchez and Nancy Pelosi -- while essentially spending it all at the
same time.
Of course Schipske, who barely lost to Rep. Steve Horn in the 2000
election for a district that’s been carved away, has had to spend
money to get her name out in the Orange County parts of Rohrabacher’s
district (which, as part of the census-driven redistricting, now
includes Horn’s center in Long Beach).
That need is clearly evident when comparing her spending to her
opponent’s. While Rohrabacher has followed the incumbent playbook by
spending $168,400 on such expenses as payroll taxes and salaries (his
wife, Rhonda, makes about $2,300 a month), as well as hiring
different consultants, Schipske shows a lot of barebones spending at
office supply stores, design companies (for mailers and other
literature) and printing outfits. She’s put together bumper stickers
and tons of literature (she spent more than $7,000 on postage, alone,
in the past four months) and been -- or had people -- on the phone,
having spent a few hundred dollars since April for “phone bank
lists.”
Essentially, Schipske’s spending shows more specifics on how a
campaign is run than Rohrabacher’s, since he is able to pay other
people to do much of that work for him.
It may be worth noting that since April, she actually has
out-raised Rohrabacher by $4,000. Not much, but it’s something.
In our other congressional race, the picture is slightly less
complete. While Rep. Chris Cox’s report is available, at this point
the report from his Democratic opponent, UC Irvine business professor
John Graham, is still being processed.
But Cox looks to be in good shape financially. He’s got a hair
less than $450,000 on hand, having raised $472,000 this election
while spending $188,000.
He also, judging by the report, doesn’t appear too worried about
the fall election.
While he’s spent $13,600 to run his campaign since April, he’s
passed on a whopping $321,000, mostly as a $250,000 lump sum to the
National Republican Congressional Committee, as well as in $1,000
chunks to other campaigns in California, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa,
North and South Carolina, Florida and New Mexico, among others.
A couple of notable donations: $1,000 to the Orange County
Federation of Republican Women and two $1,000 donations to Talent for
Senate Committee, which is, of course, the high-profile attempt by
Cox’s former colleague, Jim Talent, to unseat Missouri Sen. Jean
Carnahan. Carnahan entered the Senate in the place of her husband,
former Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan, who won the seat two years ago
posthumously.
No stop light here
On Monday, Greenlight supporters are planning to announce at least
part of their slate of candidates for the Newport Beach City Council.
Allan Beek is already aboard as a candidate. If three
Greenlight-minded residents win seats, and Councilman John Heffernan
stays aboard, it would seemingly be a very different City Hall come
the end of the year.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He can be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.