A Short Campaign That's Long on Assistance
The hardest sprinting in the Feb. 6 supervisorial race is being done by independent campaign groups, which can aid -- and hurt -- the candidates.
By Christian Berthelsen, Times Staff Writer
Candidates hoping to fill the vacant seat on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors are beginning their final dash
as the last week of the campaign approaches.
But some of the hardest sprinting in this truncated Feb. 6
special election has been done by campaign committees that
are not allowed to have contact with the candidates.
Public employee unions, the county Democratic and
Republican parties, and groups of somewhat murky origins
have played a prominent role in advocating for ? and
against ? candidates. Known as independent expenditure
committees, these organizations can campaign for candidates
but can not communicate with them.
Independent campaigns have taken on a more important role
in recent years as more stringent state campaign finance
laws have capped donations to candidates. But rarely have
they taken such a high-profile role as in Orange County's
1st Supervisorial District race. The most anyone can give
to a candidate in this race is $1,500.
"The [committees] are running the bulk of the campaign that
voters are seeing," said Robert M. Stern, president of the
Center for Governmental Studies, a political reform
organization. "It's fairly unusual."
Independent expenditure committees help candidates by
supporting them financially, but they can also hurt
candidates if their work is off-message. They can also
frustrate voters who wonder who is behind them.
The race to fill the seat vacated in November by Lou
Correa, a Democrat who was elected to the state Senate, has
been anything but average. The district includes Santa Ana,
Westminster and Garden Grove, an area where Democrats have
made inroads in recent years. Republicans have about
one-quarter of a percentage point edge in registered
voters.
With a campaign of just six weeks, candidates have had
little time to assemble a campaign staff, raise
contributions, hold debates or meet many residents in the
district. Much of the campaigning has been done through the
mailbox, as district voters have received stacks of
campaign mailers. A candidate forum sponsored by the League
of Women Voters is scheduled for Wednesday.
Campaign finance filings last week show the difficulty of
funding a competitive race in such a short time. Democrat
Tom Umberg, a former assemblyman widely regarded as the
front-runner, raised $143,000 in recent weeks. The
next-best fundraiser in that period was Santa Ana City
Councilman Carlos Bustamante, who received half as
much.
Garden Grove City Councilwoman Janet Nguyen is mainly
relying on more than $200,000 she raised in previous runs
for office. Trung Nguyen, a Garden Grove school board
member, has relied on $100,000 he lent himself.
Umberg has been the biggest beneficiary of the independent
campaign committees. A campaign run by the deputies union,
the Assn. of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs, has sent out at
least eight mailers on his behalf ? more than the Umberg
campaign itself ? portraying him as "the choice" of law
enforcement. Other county employee unions and the local
Democratic Party have also sent out mailers supporting
him.
"Groups are trying to make their mark with this race, and
Umberg is benefiting from it," said George Urch, Umberg's
campaign manager. "They all want to show they're a force to
be reckoned with, and they're using our race to make a
statement."
It is easy to see why. The deputies union is locked in
bitter negotiations with the Board of Supervisors over its
labor contract, and badly needs an ally. And the local
Democratic Party wants to prove it can keep the beachhead
it established in Republican-dominated Orange County; the
supervisorial district is similar to the area represented
by Democratic Rep. Loretta Sanchez.
The assistance to Umberg's campaign does not sit well with
campaign-finance watchdogs, who question if his campaign is
letting outside organizations do the hard work and what
favors they will expect if he is elected. Shirley Grindle,
who wrote the county's campaign finance law, called the
situation "grossly inappropriate."
She said this was the first time she had seen an
independent committee campaign more than the candidate. "If
Umberg wants office so bad, he ought to get out there and
work for it the way the rest of the candidates do," she
said. "If he gets elected, it's thanks to somebody else's
effort, not his own."
But if Umberg's campaign has gotten help from independent
committees, he has also been the biggest target of
others.
The local Republican Party sent out mailers criticizing
him, one noting his vote in the Assembly in support of
same-sex marriage and another calling him "too liberal for
Orange County."
The Orange County Veterans & Military Families spent
$8,500 on two anti-Umberg mailers. One quoted his wife,
Robin, calling him a "compulsive liar," the comment made in
an e-mail quoted in a newspaper article about Umberg's
extramarital affair. Little is known about the
organization: Phone calls go to an answering machine for a
campaign services company; a reporter's calls were not
returned.
Trung Nguyen has also benefited from an independent
expenditure committee: Viet PAC sent out a mailer that
touted him as a ("respected leader") and denigrated
candidate Janet Nguyen ("wannabe politician").
The Orange County Public Safety committee spent $17,000 for
mailers in support of Bustamante, who has emerged as the
leading contender among the Republican candidates. The
piece said Bustamante is "working to make our homes and
families safer."
The mailer did not say which law enforcement officials or
unions were part of the committee; Umberg has received
endorsements from 34 public safety groups. The Public
Safety organization shares the same telephone number as the
veterans organization.
Former Santa Ana City Councilman Brett Franklin, another
candidate, has not benefited from independent expenditures
and calls all the spending "overkill." He said he prefers
going door to door and shaking hands.
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christian.berthelsen@latimes.com
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