Somers deserves seat due to past campaign...
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Somers deserves seat due to past campaign actions
Based on the principles of equity, fairness, and moral
responsibility and the fact that she was an incumbent who received
9,192 votes in the year 2000 election (i.e. only 32 votes less than
Karen Robinson), the Costa Mesa City Council should appoint Heather
Somers to fill the vacant seat created by Karen Robinson’s voluntary
resignation.
Notwithstanding the culpable conduct of others (including
Candidate Chris Steel), the simple and undisputed fact is that the
Costa Mesa City Clerk’s office should have declared one of the 20
nominating signatures on Steel’s nominating paper to be an obvious
forgery ... and thereafter excluded his name from the year 2000 Costa
Mesa City Council election ballot. Had Steel been properly excluded
from the ballot (and under any reasonable set of assumptions and
applicable legal principles concerning election dynamics), Somers
almost certainly would have been elected to office in the first
place.
Whether the failure of the City Clerk’s Office to detect this
obviously forged nominating signature was the result of negligence or
deliberate misconduct is now an apparently irrelevant question that I
believe has not ever been adequately investigated in the past. What
is not irrelevant is the continuing effect that this mistake had on
the outcome of the year 2000 election (i.e. if Steel had not been on
the ballot, he obviously could not have won the election and
displaced Heather Somers from a seat on the Costa Mesa City Council
for the past 2 1/2years).
When the obviously forged signature was first brought to the
city’s attention, it spent several thousand dollars to obtain a legal
opinion advising that nothing could be done to remedy the situation.
However, now that Mayor Karen Robinson has voluntarily resigned from
the Costa Mesa City Council, the city has a golden opportunity to
eliminate any future impact of the city’s past mistake by appointing
Somers to what would have been her rightful seat on the City Council.
In my opinion, it is not a question of whether the current council
members like or dislike Somers or her politics or prefer the politics
of one of the other 24 interested persons. Rather, the question is
whether or not the Costa Mesa City Council is going to step up to the
plate and do the “right thing” and exercise its legal authority and
moral responsibility to correct a wrong committed by their own
employee. In my opinion, the impact that my proposed appointment of
Heather Somers will, might, or could have on the future actions taken
or not taken by the Costa Mesa City Council should not even be a
consideration in the current appointment process.
Further, given his well documented personal responsibility for
allowing a forged signature on his year 2000 nomination paper, it is
my opinion that there is only one candidate who Steel should support
for the contemplated appointment. And that person is Somers.
In making the foregoing arguments, I do not dispute the legal
right of the Costa Mesa City Council to appoint any of the 24 other
interested persons. I am simply suggesting that the City of Costa
Mesa is morally bound to correct an obvious and inexcusable error
made by one of its employees by appointing Somers.
MICHAEL W. SZKARADEK
Costa Mesa
EDITOR’S NOTE: Michael Szkaradek has pursued a legal challenge to
Councilman Chris Steel’s 2000 election, citing an allegedly forged
signature.
The right is not always right
Thank God for candidates like 70th Assembly District hopeful
Cristi Cristich, who committed the “sin” of supporting Bill Clinton
in 1996. Despairing that the GOP was going to acknowledge and include
the party’s moderates any time soon, and given the alternative, I
voted for him, too, as did many of my Orange County Republican
friends and family. So I don’t consider Cristich’s action a
“downtick,” as GOP fundraiser Buck Johns is quoted as saying in the
Daily Pilot. Rather, Cristich sounds like a candidate who is willing
to engage the ambiguities and complexities of the issues we face in
2003. Maybe, just maybe, she offers a fresh alternative to the same
old unimaginative thinking that has dominated the local party for too
long -- people, for example, who express shock that one can be a
Christian and vote Democratic, that one can hate abortion and support
choice.
My pastor has a sign on her office wall which reads, “Christ died
to take away your sins, not your mind.” Think about it as you follow
the character assassination that Cristich is likely to endure during
the campaign at the hands of the “Christian” right.
JEAN HASTINGS ARDELL
Corona del Mar
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