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OC Voter Turnout Best-Case Scenario: 26.5%

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 12, 2012

With last night’s OC GOP Flag Day Festivities, I didn’t really have time to draft a post last night, so I’ll just provide a short, sad update.

Voter turnout in Orange County in June’s election was at best 26.5%, and at worst 25.6%.

The Registrar of Voters reports that 412,225 voters’ ballots have been counted thus far from Tuesday’s election, with 1,612,415 voters registered for that election, indicating 25.6% of voters turned out.  There are 14,724 uncounted ballots (though some of those will be invalidated [14,030 of those are provisionals]).  Adding those ballots in brings OC up to 426,949 ballots, or 26.5% voter turnout.

That turnout is pathetic and depressing for democracy.

I guess the silver lining in this is that my vote counted for a larger share of the vote since so few people voted, as did yours, readers, as I imagine virtually everyone who reads this blog voted.  (I mean: who visits a political blog who doesn’t vote?)

It could be worse, though: LA County’s 4,450,035 voters produced between 18.5% and 20.8% voter turnout.

Posted in Orange County | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

AD-72: What Will Edgar & Allen Do in Their All-Republican November Matchup?

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 11, 2012

This week, I’ll be doing a series analyzing OC’s multi-candidate Assembly races that have now narrowed down to two. Our opener is the surprise in AD-72.

Conventional wisdom held that if any OC district was going to feature an intraparty battle in November (courtesy of Prop 14), it was going to be the Republicans in AD-74 between Allan Mansoor and Leslie Daigle or the Democrats in AD-69 between Tom Daly and either Julio Perez or Michele Martinez.

Lo and behold, AD-72 came out of nowhere with an all-Republican November matchup between Los Alamitos Mayor Troy Edgar and Huntington Beach Businessman Travis Allen.

Troy Edgar & Travis Allen

AD-72 Matchup: Mayor Troy Edgar (R-Los Alamitos) vs. Businessman Travis Allen (R-Huntington Beach)

Conventional wisdom held that the Republican vote would split three ways between Edgar, Allen, and OC Board of Education Member Long Pham, while Joe Dovinh would hold most of the Democrats, with a small number of votes going to Democrat Albert Ayala.

Most people (myself included) predicted an Edgar vs. Dovinh matchup in November, a few predicted Allen vs. Dovinh, even fewer predicted Pham vs. Dovinh, but did anyone predict Edgar vs. Allen?

How did this happen?  Edgar was weaker than expected allowing Allen and Pham to eat up more Republican votes while Ayala was stronger than expected eating up much of Dovinh’s votes from Democrats.

This race was incredibly evenly divided.  First place was quite low at 28.2% and last place rose up to 13.6%.  Second, third, and fourth place were 0.5% apart.

Troy Edgar 17,594 28.2%
Travis Allen 12,300 19.7%
Joe Dovinh 12,055 19.3%
Long Pham 11,959 19.2%
Albert Ayala 8,492 13.6%

(Some readers may be wondering if Dovinh or Pham could still catch Allen with the remaining uncounted ballots.   There just aren’t enough out there. 62,400 out of the 409,824 ballots counted in Orange County so far cast votes in AD-72, which equals 15.2% of the votes.  There are 17,125 uncounted ballots remaining in Orange County, which leaves approximately 2,603 votes remaining in AD-72.  To make up the current 245-vote deficit, Dovinh would need to be ahead of Allen by 9.4%.  Dovinh never led Allen by more than 5.2%.  To make up his current 341-vote deficit, Pham would need to be ahead of Allen by 13.1% and also be 3.7% ahead of Dovinh.  Pham never led Allen by more than 5.5%.  Now, of that 17,125 uncounted ballots, there are 15,642 provisionals, which do tend to favor Democrats; presumably, 2,378 of those provisionals cast votes in the AD-72 race, but provisionals have a higher invalidity rate than other ballots.  Note also that Albert Ayala is still there sucking up a good chunk of votes that would otherwise go to Dovinh.)

The Edgar and Allen camps now face an interesting quandary: tack left, tack right, or try to do both.  During the primary, Edgar and Allen both tried to run right, each proclaiming he was the real conservative and the other was closet liberal.

Both Edgar and Allen have interesting partisan histories.  Edgar was a registered Democrat until switching his registration to Republican the same week that he filed to run for office for the first time when he did so in his successful bid for Los Alamitos City Council.  Allen has donated large sums of money to Democrats, as reported by Jon Fleischman over at FlashReport.

If they run right, Edgar and Allen can each undercut each other’s bases and grab Pham’s supporters.   If they run left, they can pick up Dovinh and Ayala’s supporters.  Will Edgar and Allen both run right?  Will they both run left?  Will one run right while the other runs left?  Will they attempt to be all things to all people, running right in mail to Republicans, running left in mail to Democrats, and proclaiming their independent/bipartisan/maverick qualities in mail to No Party Preference voters?

In the primary, both men were willing to dip into their personal funds to finance their campaigns.  Edgar dropped $100,000 while Allen dropped $95,500.  (By the way, Pham dropped $100,000 while Dovinh only dropped $1,000.)  Many people will note that candidates often loan their campaigns money to make their warchests look bigger than they actually are.  Well, not in AD-72!  The largest remaining warchest is less than $25,000.  Edgar, Allen, and Pham all spent the bulk of the money they dumped in their campaigns.  To recoup that money, they’re going to have to raise it.

Edgar and Allen will need to spend the summer raising more money or else be willing to dip into their personal fortunes again.  Either way, this should be an interesting November in AD-72, as Democrats laugh at Republican money being spent against Republicans.

(For our more literature-oriented readers, I will note in the race between Troy Edgar and Travis Allen, Marilynn Poe has endorsed her Council colleague, Edgar.)

Posted in 72nd Assembly District | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

Only Two Men Recalled Two Times

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 8, 2012

Twice-Recalled Mayor James W. Holley III of Portsmouth, Virginia, and Twice-Recalled Councilman Don Bankhead of Fullerton, California

The Double Recall Club: Mayor James W. Holley III of Portsmouth, Virginia (1984-1987, 2008-2010) and Councilman Don Bankhead of Fullerton, California (1988-1994, 1994-2012)

On Tuesday, Fullerton voters recalled Councilmen Don Bankhead, Dick Jones, and Pat McKinley by a 65%-35% margin.

For Bankhead, however, this was not his first recall.  First elected to the Fullerton City Council in 1988, Bankhead was recalled in June 1994 over a utility tax and vacated his seat upon the election of his successor in October of that year (back then, recall elections and replacement elections were held on separate dates, as opposed to today’s model where the recall replacement candidates appear on the same ballot as the recall itself).

Then, Bankhead won election to the Council for a new term in November 1994, just five months after he was initially recalled and just weeks after he vacated office.

So Bankhead’s city council career is 1988-1994 (recalled) and 1994-2012 (recalled).

Many have wondered if Bankhead’s the first politician ever recalled twice from office.

As it turns out, Bankhead is only the second elected official in American history to be recalled twice, and he only missed being first by two years.

The first elected official in American history to be recalled twice is former Mayor James W. Holley III of Portsmouth, Virginia.  (Portsmouth has a population of 95,000 and is in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area adjacent to Norfolk Naval Shipyard.)

Holley was first elected to the Portsmouth City Council in 1968, serving until 1984 when he was elected Mayor (they have a directly-elected mayor, like Anaheim, Garden Grove, Irvine, Orange, Santa Ana, and Westminster, but unlike Fullerton, which has the mayor’s post rotate among the councilmembers).

Holley was Mayor from 1984 until he was recalled in 1987 due to his involvement in an expense account scandal and his bizarre involvement in sending obscenity-filled hate mail to other Portsmouth leaders.

In 2008, Portsmouth voters returned Holley to the Mayor’s post, but a recall petition was launched in 2009 due to allegations from his mayoral assistant that Holley used her to run personal errands on city time, including shopping for his family and cancelling his subscription to Playboy.

Funded largely by Portsmouth resident Robert Marcus, the recall appeared on the July 2010 ballot, when voters removed Holley by a 2-1 margin.

Wisconsin State Senator Jim Holperin appears to be the sole member of a club that Holley and Bankhead would much rather have joined.  Holperin was subjected to recall elections twice but managed to defeat the recalls both times, once in 1990 and once in 2011.

The exclusive double recall club now consists of Portsmouth Mayor James W. Holley III and Fullerton Councilman James D. “Don” Bankhead.

(Here’s my standard Fullerton recall disclosure [although it’s much less relevant now that the Fullerton recall election is over]: In the interest of full disclosure, I should note my day job is working in the Fullerton office of Assemblyman Chris Norby, who served on the Fullerton City Council from 1984-2002, but he was not a target of the 1994 recall.  One of my co-workers in the office is Fullerton City Councilman Bruce Whitaker, who was elected in 2010 and is not a target of the 2012 recall, but he was one of the organizers of the 1994 recall.)

Posted in Fullerton, National | Tagged: , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Prop 14 in Action: Intraparty Battles in November

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 6, 2012

It used to be that the top vote-getter from each party in the June primary election advanced to the November general election.  Well, Proposition 14 changed all that, requiring the top two candidates from the June primary to advance to November regardless of party, regardless of whether someone gained more than 50% of the vote, and regardless of whether there were only two candidates in June.

Like it or not, Prop 14 has caused a number of intraparty battles in November.  Specifically, 28 out of 153 races (18.3%) will be intraparty battles in November.  Here’s a rundown, based on last night’s results:

8 out of 53 Congressional races (15.1%), with two Democrats in 6 of the races and two Republicans in 2 of the races

  • CD-8: Two Republicans (Paul Cook and Gregg Imus)
  • CD-15: Two Democrats (incumbent Pete Stark and Eric Swalwell)
  • CD-30: Two incumbent Democrats! (Brad Sherman and Howard Berman)
  • CD-31: Two Republicans (incumbent Gary Miller and Bob Dutton)
  • CD-35: Two Democrats (incumbent Joe Baca and Gloria Negrete McLeod)
  • CD-40: Two Democrats (incumbent Lucille Roybal-Allard and David Sanchez)
  • CD-43: Two Democrats (incumbent Maxine Waters and Bob Flores)
  • CD-44: Two incumbent Democrats! (Janice Hahn and Laura Richardson)

2 out of 20 State Senate races (10%), with two Democrats in both races (it’s 20 Senate seats because Senate terms are staggered so only half the seats are on the ballot in any given general election)

  • SD-13: Two Democrats (Jerry Hill and Sally Lieber)
  • SD-15: Two Democrats (Jim Beall and Joe Coto)

18 out of 80 State Assembly races (22.5%), with two Democrats in 12 of the races and two Republicans in 6 of the races

  • AD-1: Two Republicans (Brian Dahle and Rick Bosetti)
  • AD-2: Two Democrats (incumbent Wesley Chesbro and Tom Lynch)
  • AD-5: Two Republicans (Rico Oller and Frank Bigelow)
  • AD-10: Two Democrats (incumbent Michael Allen and Marc Levine)
  • AD-18: Two Democrats (Rob Bonta and Abel Guillen)
  • AD-19: Two Democrats (Phil Ting and Michael Breyer)
  • AD-20: Two Democrats (Bill Quirk and Jennifer Ong)
  • AD-23: Two Republicans (Jim Patterson and Bob Whalen)
  • AD-39: Two Democrats (Raul Bocanegra and Richard Alaron)
  • AD-46: Two Democrats (Adam Nazarian and Brian Johnson)
  • AD-47: Two Democrats (Joe Baca, Jr. and Cheryl Brown)
  • AD-50: Two Democrats (incumbent Betsy Butler and Richard Bloom)
  • AD-51: Two Democrats (Jimmy Gomez and Luis Lopez)
  • AD-59: Two Democrats (Reggie Jones-Sawyer and Rodney Robinson)
  • AD-62: Two Democrats (incumbent Steven Bradford and Mervin Evans)
  • AD-67: Two Republicans (Phil Paule and Melissa Melendez)
  • AD-72: Two Republicans (Troy Edgar and Travis Allen)
  • AD-76: Two Republicans (Rocky Chavez and Sherry Hodges)

Posted in 72nd Assembly District, California | 5 Comments »

OCBE 1: Hammond Takes Lead Over Nguyen

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 5, 2012

With 121 out of 249 precincts reporting, Robert Hammond leads Ken Nguyen by 0.9% after trailing in absentees.

Posted in Orange County Board of Education | Tagged: , | 4 Comments »

Where to Find Election Results

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 5, 2012

Check out the OC Registrar of Voters for election results.

Remember that CD-38, CD-39, CD-47, CD-49, SD-29, and AD-55 are all multi-county races.

Check out the Secretary of State for those results.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

AD-74 Initial Reaction: Mansoor Dominates Daigle; Munger Jumped in Too Late for Daigle

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 5, 2012

Allan Mansoor, Leslie Daigle, Robert Rush

Assemblyman Allan Mansoor (R-Costa Mesa), Councilwoman Leslie Daigle (R-Newport Beach), and Businessman Robert Rush (D-Newport Beach)

With a 20% lead for Assemblyman Allan Mansoor over Councilwoman Leslie Daigle in the absentee votes, this will likely prove insurmountable for Daigle to overcome in late absentees and poll votes.  Charles Munger’s largesse was simply too late in the game to save Daigle to overcome Mansoor’s massive absentee lead.

Latest numbers
Mansoor: 42.8%
Rush: 34.4%
Daigle: 22.9%

Posted in 74th Assembly District | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Measure A Going Down in Flames: 62.6%-37.4%

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 5, 2012

Posted in Orange County, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

AD-69: Daly 42.8%, Moreno 21.7%, Martinez 17.8%, Perez 15.7%, Barragan 2.1%

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 5, 2012

Posted in 69th Assembly District | Leave a Comment »

AD-72: Edgar 27.8%, Pham 21.4%, Dovinh 21.1%, Allen 15.9%, Ayala 13.8%

Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 5, 2012

Posted in 72nd Assembly District | Leave a Comment »