Posts Tagged ‘Claude Parrish’
Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 2, 2018

Ballot designations are the only piece of information that appear directly on the ballot other than a candidate’s name (and sometimes, political party).
Yesterday was OC Political’s coverage about OC’s worst ballot designations. Today, we’ll talk about OC’s best ballot designations.
As noted yesterday, “One of the most important things a candidate does in a California election may well be selecting a ballot designation. That short phrase below a candidate’s name is the very last piece of information that every voter sees before casting their ballots. Additionally in low-profile races, that short phrase could well be the only piece of information that voters see about a candidate before casting their ballots. California’s unique ballot designation system has even received coverage in the national press, such as this 2016 article in The Hill.”
Just a reminder, appearance on this list has nothing to do with whether the candidate is great or terrible, whether the campaign is well-run or poorly-run, whether the campaign is well-funded or underfunded, or whether I personally like the candidate or hate the candidate; it’s simply commentary on their ballot designation.
(Sadly, this post won’t be anywhere near as funny as yesterday’s post on OC’s worst ballot designations.)
Elected officials’ ballot designations are an inherent advantage, so this article excludes the designations of elected officials. Even in the worst years of anti-incumbency, incumbency remains an inherent advantage. Incumbents win 90% of the time typically, and even in anti-incumbent years, we still see 75% of incumbents re-elected.
Also as with the list of worst ballot designations, we will not be including statewide races, partly because Brenda Higgins and Craig Alexander have been beating the dead horse of the Governor’s race this morning on OC Political (and the past month) and partly because we didn’t include statewide races on the worst ballot designation list. We are only covering County seats or State/Federal districts that include OC. Without further ado:
OC’s Ten Best Ballot Designations (for Non-Incumbents/Non-Elected Officials)
- Orange County Undersheriff (Don Barnes in the Sheriff’s race)
It doesn’t get much better than this when you’re running for Sheriff. This is as close to an incumbent ballot designation as it gets.
- Deputy Assessor (Richard B. Ramirez in the Assessor’s race)
This is a great ballot designation when you’re running for Assessor. Unfortunately, for Ramirez, there is someone with a much better ballot designation in the race: Orange County Assessor Claude Parrish. (Parrish’s designation just wasn’t eligible for this list since we are excluding the designations of elected officials.)
- University Dean/Professor (Lisa Sparks in the County Board of Education, Trustee Area 5)
Everyone running for school board wants an education-related ballot designation. However, “University Dean” is one of the most impressive ones available, showing both teaching and leadership experience at the highest levels of education. The only better ones I’ve ever seen are “University President” (David Boyd when he first ran for County Board of Education, Trustee Area 2 in 2010) and iterations of Superintendent.
- Retired Fire Captain (Joe Kerr in the 4th Supervisorial District)
Voters respect firefighters. Fire Captain shows leadership experience. Kerr’s tough battle is two of his opponents are mayors and two are councilmembers; it’s just their designations weren’t eligible for this list since we are excluding the designations of elected officials.
- Victims’ Rights Attorney (Brett Murdock in the District Attorney’s race)
Voters have great sympathy victims and great respect for victims’ rights, and few offices are better-equipped to help victims than the District Attorney. Unfortunately for Murdock, two of his opponents have better ballot designations: Orange County District Attorney and Orange County Supervisor/Attorney. (Their designations just weren’t eligible for this list since we are excluding the designations of elected officials.)
- FBI Advisor/Attorney (Omar Siddiqui in the 48th Congressional District)
This one is intriguing. In yesterday’s worst ballot designations, I wrote “Unless you’re running for Attorney General, Superior Court Judge, or District Attorney, there is no value in using attorney as your ballot designation: think about all the insulting things people say about attorneys. There are some modifiers that make great exceptions…” Well, FBI Advisor/Attorney is a great exception. It makes Siddiqui look almost like a prosecutor, and voters love prosecutors. (Though Siddiqui’s ballot designation is strong, his problem is how much better-funded his four opponents are, including the incumbent.)
- Fraud Investigator/Businessman (Russell Rene Lambert in the 46th Congressional District)
This one is also intriguing. A “Fraud Investigator” has a certain degree of expertise. It lends itself well to a government reformer message. Unfortunately, for Lambert, party registration is very slanted against him in his district for this partisan seat and the fact that there is someone with a much better ballot designation in the race: United States Congressmember Lou Correa. (Correa’s designation just wasn’t eligible for this list since we are excluding the designations of elected officials.)
- Orange County Business Owner (Scott Baugh in the 48th Congressional District and Greg Haskin in the 72nd Assembly District)
This is a different spin on the usually strong ballot designation of Small Business Owner. Adding “Orange County” makes it clear the candidate’s business is in Orange County, so they’re employing people locally. The challenge for Republicans Baugh and Haskin is each of them are facing off against a Republican elected official: Congressman Dana Rohrabacher and Councilman Tyler Diep; plus there are well-funded Democrats for both seats. (Rohrabacher and Diep’s designations just weren’t eligible for this list since we are excluding the designations of elected officials.)
- Entrepreneur/Company President (Josh Lowenthal in the 72nd Assembly District)
There’s some good advice going on in the 72nd Assembly District when two of the candidates make this list and a third was simply ineligible because we are excluding the designations of elected officials. With Company President, FreeConferenceCall.com President Josh Lowenthal has conveyed to voters that he is not only a businessman but a rather successful one, and with the Entrepreneur portion, he’s showing he’s a self-made businessman.
- Technology CEO/Entrepreneur (Rachel Payne in the 48th Congressional District)
See above.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 46th Congressional District, 48th Congressional District, 4th Supervisorial District, Orange County Assessor, Orange County Board of Education, Orange County District Attorney's Office, Orange County Sheriff | Tagged: Brett Murdock, Claude Parrish, Dana Rohrabacher, David Boyd, Don Barnes, Greg Haskin, Joe Kerr, Josh Lowenthal, Lisa Sparks, Lou Correa, Omar Siddiqui, Richard B. Ramirez, Russell Rene Lambert, Scott Baugh, Tyler Diep | 2 Comments »
Posted by Chris Nguyen on May 31, 2018
In prior elections, some of the most popular articles on OC Political in the run-up to elections are the ones identifying the partisan affiliations of candidates on the ballot. So back by popular demand, OC Political presents the political party affiliations of everyone running for everything on the June 5, 2018 Primary Election ballot in Orange County.
(Okay, this list is not everyone running for literally everything; it is everyone running for offices whose party affiliations are not shown on the ballot. If you want to know the party affiliation of candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Senate, House of Representatives, State Legislature, etc., just look on your ballot.)
Superior Court Judge, Office No. 13
- Franklin Dunn – Republican
- Theodore R. “Ted” Howard – Republican
Superintendent of Public Instruction
- Steven Ireland – Democrat
- Lily (Espinoza) Ploski – No Party Preference
- Tony K. Thurmond – Democrat
- Marshall Tuck – Democrat
County Superintendent of Schools
County Board of Education, Area 2
- Mari Barke – Republican
- David L. Boyd – Democrat
- Matt Nguyen – Democrat
County Board of Education, Area 5
- Kimberly Clark – No Party Preference
- Mike Dalati – Democrat
- Dan Draitser – American Independent
- Mary Navarro – Democrat
- Lisa Sparks – Republican
Supervisor, 2nd District
- Michael Mahony – Libertarian
- Brendon Perkins – Democrat
- Michelle Steel – Republican
Supervisor, 4th District
- Cynthia Aguirre – Democrat
- Doug Chaffee – Democrat
- Rose Espinoza – Democrat
- Joe Kerr – Democrat
- Lucille Kring – Republican
- Tim Shaw – Republican
Supervisor, 5th District
- Lisa Bartlett – Republican
Assessor
- Nathaniel Fernandez Epstein – Democrat
- Claude Parrish – Republican
- Richard B. Ramirez – Republican
Auditor-Controller
- Toni Smart – American Independent
- Eric H. Woolery – Republican
Clerk-Recorder
- Hugh Nguyen – Republican
- Steve Rocco – No Party Preference
District Attorney-Public Administrator
- Lenore Albert-Sheridan – Democrat
- Brett Murdock – Democrat
- Tony Rackauckas – Republican
- Todd Spitzer – Republican
Sheriff-Coroner
- Don Barnes – Republican
- David C. Harrington – Republican
- Duke Nguyen – Democrat
Treasurer-Tax Collector
- Shari L. Freidenrich – Republican
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 2nd Supervisorial District, 4th Supervisorial District, 5th Supervisorial District, Orange County, Orange County Assessor, Orange County Auditor-Controller, Orange County Board of Education, Orange County Clerk-Recorder, Orange County District Attorney's Office, Orange County Sheriff, Orange County Treasurer-Tax Collector | Tagged: Al Mijares, Brendon Perkins, Brett Murdock, Claude Parrish, Cynthia Aguirre, Dan Draitser, Dave Harrington, David Boyd, Don Barnes, Doug Chaffee, Duke Nguyen, Eric Woolery, Franklin Dunn, hugh nguyen, Joe Kerr, Kimberly Clark, Lenore Albert-Sheridan, Lily Ploski, Lisa Bartlett, Lisa Sparks, Lucille Kring, Mari Barke, Marshall Tuck, Mary Navarro, Matt Nguyen, Michael Mahony, Michelle Steel, Mike Dalati, Nathaniel Fernandez Epstein, Richard B. Ramirez, Rose Espinoza, Shari Freidenrich, Steve Rocco, Steven Ireland, Ted Howard, Tim Shaw, Todd Spitzer, Toni Smart, Tony Rackauckas, Tony Thurmond | 4 Comments »
Posted by Chris Nguyen on January 12, 2018

Carolyn Cavecche and Denis Bilodeau
With Board of Equalization Chairwoman Diane Harkey (R-Dana Point) ending her BOE re-election bid in order to run for the 49th Congressional District seat after Congressman Darrell Issa (R-Vista) announced his decision not to seek re-election, former and current elected officials across Orange, San Diego, Riverside, and Imperial Counties are contemplating whether to launch bids to replace Harkey in the massive BOE district that covers 1/4 of California’s population.
Multiple sources inform OC Political that Orange County Taxpayers Association President and CEO Carolyn Cavecche (R-Orange) is examining whether she will launch a bid for BOE, the nation’s only elected tax board, since Harkey switched to CD-49. Cavecche previously won a 2001 special election and 2002 regular election to the Orange City Council and then won three elections for Mayor of Orange in 2006, 2008, and 2010, terming out as Mayor in 2012. Cavecche would bring a formidable ballot designation of “Taxpayer Association President,” “Taxpayer Association CEO,” or “Taxpayer Advocate.” Harkey used “Taxpayer Advocate/Assemblywoman” as her ballot designation and defeated former Assemblymembers Van Tran and Shirley Horton. My long-ago former employer, George Runner, won a hotly-contested BOE race in 2010 with a 10% margin of victory, using “Senator/Taxpayer Advocate” as his ballot designation, defeating Acting Equalization Board Member (and former Assemblywoman) Barbara Alby and former Assemblyman Alan Nakanishi.
Sources have also stated that Orange County Water District Board Member Denis Bilodeau (R-Orange) is pursuing a slate mailer strategy for the BOE race since Harkey switched to CD-49. Bilodeau won two elections to the Orange City Council in 2006 and 2010, terming out of the Council in 2014. He also won five elections to represent Orange, Villa Park, and portions of Tustin on the water board in 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2016. Bilodeau is also Orange County Supervisor Shawn Nelson’s Chief of Staff. Bilodeau is reportedly making slate reservations for BOE, following the strategy that put Businessman/Corporate Controller Claude Parrish into the BOE seat in 1998. Both of his successors, Michelle Steel and Diane Harkey, also used an aggressive slate strategy.
Former Councilman John F. Kelly (R-Tustin) had pulled papers to run against Harkey. He won only 11% of the vote when he ran against her in 2014. A former long-time tobacco shop owner, Kelly does have an odd boost in name ID now, thanks to White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly. Former Tobacco Shop Owner Kelly served one term on the Tustin City Council from 1986-1990, having been elected to office at the age of 24 and defeated for re-election at the age of 28. He also made an ill-fated bid for Congress in 1988 for the seat eventually won by Chris Cox (who was succeeded by John Campbell who was succeeded by Mimi Walters). No word on if Kelly will continue his campaign, now that Harkey is out.
The four most recent people to have held this seat and their current positions are:
Harkey and Steel used the combined ballot designation and slates strategy to win the seat. In 2014, Harkey bought up most of the slates and used a ballot designation of “Taxpayer Advocate/Assemblywoman” to defeat former Assemblymembers Van Tran and Shirley Horton after forcing Senator Mark Wyland out of the race. In 2006, Steel used a ballot designation of “Equalization Boardmember’s Deputy” and bought up most of the slates to defeat Assemblyman Ray Haynes.
With Cavecche holding down the best ballot designation, if Bilodeau does hoover up all the slates, this will be the most closely-contested BOE race since 1998. Lacking a great ballot designation in 1998, Parrish bought up every possible slate to defeat the formidable ballot designation of “Equalization Boardmember’s Deputy” Craig Wilson. Parrish beat Wilson by a tiny margin of 0.7%.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in Board of Equalization, Orange, Orange County Water District | Tagged: Alan Nakanishi, Barbara Alby, Carolyn Cavecche, Chris Cox, Claude Parrish, Craig Wilson, Darrell Issa, Denis Bilodeau, Diane Harkey, Ernest Dronenburg, George Runner, John Campbell, John Kelly, Michelle Steel, Mimi Walters, Ray Haynes, Shawn Nelson, Shirley Horton, Van Tran | 2 Comments »
Posted by Chris Nguyen on January 26, 2016
Orange County Board of Education President Robert M. Hammond is kicking off his re-election on Thursday at 6:00 PM at the Bluewater Grill in Tustin.
Hammond may well be the first person ever whose endorsements include both former Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante (D) and current State Senator John Moorlach (R). Moorlach’s challenger for re-election to the Senate, Assemblyman Don Wagner (R), has also endorsed Hammond.
Besides Lieutenant Governor Bustamante, Hammond’s endorsements also include the majority of Orange County’s State Senate delegation, State Assembly delegation, Board of Supervisors, and Countywide officeholders.

(In the interest of full disclosure, the consulting firm that owns OC Political ran Hammond’s successful 2012 bid for County Board of Education and is running his 2016 re-election bid.)
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in Orange County Board of Education | Tagged: Andrew Do, Bob Huff, Ceci Iglesias, Cecilia "Ceci" Iglesias, Cecilia Iglesias, Claude Parrish, Cruz Bustamante, Don Wagner, Eric Woolery, Gloria Romero, hugh nguyen, Janet Nguyen, Jeff Lalloway, Jeffery Lalloway, John Moorlach, Ken Williams, Linda Lindholm, Ling-Ling Chang, Mark McCurdy, Matt Harper, Matthew Harper, Michelle Steel, Mike Munzing, Phil Yarbrough, Robert Hammond, Robert Ming, Shari Freidenrich, Todd Spitzer, Tony Rackauckas, Travis Allen, Young Kim | 1 Comment »
Posted by Newsletter Reprint on March 9, 2015
This came over the wire to OC Political earlier today from former Assemblyman/former Supervisor Jim Silva (a slightly edited version was published in the Daily Pilot this afternoon)…
With the special election for state Senate District 37 set for March 17, the familiar lament about negative advertising fills the op-ed pages, blogs and social media sites.
He said this, she said that, he said the other thing, with each of the two front-runners denying the particular charges leveled against them.
So with all this noise, who do you believe? Who is best suited to represent the 37th Senate District in Sacramento?
The answer can be found by looking at the endorsements of the elected officials you know and trust. Assemblyman Don Wagner’s endorsements are a who’s who of Orange County conservative leaders: District Attorney Tony Rackauckas and Sheriff Sandra Hutchens both endorse him as the best candidate to keep our community safe.
Four of the five current county supervisors (Lisa Bartlett, Andrew Do, Todd Spitzer and Michelle Steel), and three of the four who served the last term with candidate John Moorlach (State Senators Janet Nguyen and Patricia Bates as well as Spitzer), have endorsed Wagner as the best candidate to work effectively in Sacramento to pass legislation that helps Orange County and California. Orange County Auditor-Controller Eric Woolery, Assessor Claude Parrish and Clerk-Recorder Hugh Nguyen likewise endorse Wagner.
All three of Orange County’s congressional representatives, Reps. Ed Royce, Mimi Walters and Dana Rohrabacher, the vast majority of the Republican caucus in the state Assembly, and many others round out the overwhelming support Wagner enjoys among those who have worked with him and Moorlach.
The reason for this overwhelming support is simple: Wagner has a well-earned reputation for taking a common-sense approach to the problems that face Orange County and the state and, while maintaining his conservative principles, working across the aisle to get legislation passed and signed by the governor.
That is why Wagner has been recognized as the legislator of the year by the Orange County Republican Party and the Orange County Business Council and has received the Collaborative Lawmaker Award from the Association of California Cities.
Orange County needs a principled and effective leader in the state Senate, and Wagner is that candidate.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 2nd Supervisorial District, 37th Senate District, Republican Central Committee | Tagged: Andrew Do, Claude Parrish, Dana Rohrabacher, Don Wagner, Ed Royce, Eric Woolery, hugh nguyen, Janet Nguyen, Jim Silva, John Moorlach, Lisa Bartlett, Michelle Steel, Mimi Walters, Orange County Business Council, Pat Bates, Sandra Hutchens, Todd Spitzer, Tony Rackauckas | 4 Comments »
Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on June 5, 2014
Chris Nguyen posted a humongous grid of endorsements that broke down all the major organizations and what candidates they endorsed for non-partisan offices in Orange County. You can take a look at his humongous grid of endorsements here. As a follow-up I have done the math on how the endorsed candidates fared in the Tuesday election and have given credit to an organization for endorsing a candidate that either won outright or advanced to the November election.

Here is a guide to the abbreviations: OC GOP = Republican Party of Orange County, DPOC = Democratic Party of Orange County, CRA = California Republican Assembly, HJTA = Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, CWLA = California Women’s Leadership Association, OC Tax = Orange County Taxpayers Association, OCBC = Orange County Business Council, and CTA = California Teachers Association.
Anybody that got 75% and higher can be considered an organization with a valuable endorsement but the big winners from this election cycle were the California Women’s Leadership Association (Orange County Chapter) and the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association both of which managed to endorse no losers.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 2nd Supervisorial District, 4th Supervisorial District, 5th Supervisorial District, Anaheim, Buena Park School District, Democrat Central Committee, Irvine Unified School District, Orange County, Orange County Assessor, Orange County Auditor-Controller, Orange County Board of Education, Orange County Clerk-Recorder, Orange County Public Administrator, Orange County Treasurer-Tax Collector, Republican Central Committee | Tagged: Al Mijares, Allan Mansoor, Atlas PAC, Bob Vu, California Republican Assembly, California Teachers Association, California Women's Leadership Association, Carmen Luege, Carolyn Inmon, Claude Parrish, David Boyd, Democratic Party of Orange County, Derek Johnson, Elizabeth Parker, Eric Woolery, Evolve, Family Action PAC, Frank Davies, Frank Ury, Fred Fascenelli, Gary Pritchard, Greg Diamond, Helen Hayden, Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, hugh nguyen, Ira Glasky, James Benuzzi, Jeff Ferguson, Jim Moreno, Joanne Motoike, Joe Carchio, Joe Williams, John Willard, Jorge Lopez, KC Jones, Kevin Haskins, Lincoln Club, Linda Lindholm, Lisa Bartlett, Measure A, Measure B, Measure C, Measure D, Measure E, Michelle Steel, Mike Dalati, Monica Maddox, Orange County Business Council, Orange County Labor Federation, Orange County Register, Orange County Taxpayers Association, Planned Parenthood, Republican Party of Orange County, Robert Ming, Rudy Gaona, Sandra Hutchens, Shari Freidenrich, Shawn Nelson, Steve Rocco, Thomas Martin, Tom Pollitt, Tony Rackauckas, Wayne Philips, Webster Guillory, Women in Leadership | 2 Comments »
Posted by Chris Nguyen on June 4, 2014

OC Board of Education Group Photo at the Custom Campaigns June 3 Election Night Party at BJ’s in Irvine:
Auditor-Controller-Elect/Orange City Treasurer/Former OCBE Trustee Eric Woolery, OCBE Trustee Robert Hammond, Laguna Niguel Mayor/OCBE Trustee-Elect Linda Lindholm, and OCBE Trustee Ken Williams.
Woolery achieved a historic margin of victory in his race for Auditor-Controller (story #6) while Lindholm knocked off Orange County’s longest-serving-in-a-single-office incumbent (story #5).
As expected, it was a busy night in yesterday’s primary election. Here’s a rundown of the top 10 stories:
- AD-74: Keith Curry and Matt Harper Advance, Emanuel Patrascu Last – Emami called it, mostly. Thanks to Karina Onofre spoiling the Democratic vote for Anila Ali, we have an all-Republican battle for AD-74 to replace Assemblyman Allan Mansoor. Shockingly, Emanuel Patrascu who had the second most money in AD-74 came in fifth while Harper who spent next to nothing (and what he did spend focused on slate mailers) came in a comfortable second. This comes down to a Newport vs. Huntington battle in the November runoff, as Newport Beach Councilman Curry fights it out with Huntington Beach Mayor Harper for the Assembly seat. How much in Republican resources will be drained by the AD-74 race in November, as Republicans seek to capture SD-34 and AD-65 from the Democrats?
.
- AD-73: Bill Brough Wins GOP Nomination, Anna Bryson Last – In this safe Republican seat, Bill Brough’s low-budget operation demonstrated that precinct walking does work for winning open seats. With Democrat Wendy Gabriella advancing to the runoff with Brough, he is the prohibitive favorite to be the next Assemblymember from the 73rd District and the district’s first Assemblyman in 16 years after Assemblywomen Patricia Bates, Mimi Walters, and Diane Harkey. Depending on completion of vote counts for absentees and provisionals, Anna Bryson’s IE-laden campaign may have cost well over $100 per vote. (To put the massive IE spending for Bryson in perspective, here’s how much spending would have been needed for several other candidates in other races to match that rate: Michelle Steel would have needed $2.4 million, Linda Lindholm $3.1 million, and Eric Woolery $11.0 million.) This race clearly demonstrated: money can’t buy everything.
.
- AD-55: Ling-Ling Chang Captures Top Spot – In a brutal slugfest between Diamond Bar Councilwoman Ling-Ling Chang and Walnut Valley Unified School District Trustee Phillip Chen with Diamond Bar Councilman Steve Tye threatening to play spoiler, well-funded Chang managed to overcome very-well-funded Chen’s financial advantage to capture the top spot with 28% of the vote, pushing Chen into third place with 23% of the vote and Tye with 22% of the vote. Democrat Gregg Fritchle came in second with 28% of the vote. In this safe Republican district, Chang is the prohibitive favorite to be the next Assemblymember from the 55th District, replacing Curt Hagman.
.
- SD-34: Janet Nguyen Captures Majority of Votes Cast; Republicans Take Almost 2/3 of Votes Cast – It was a foregone conclusion that Orange County Supervisor Janet Nguyen would be the Republican nominee against the Democrats’ nominee, former Assemblyman Jose Solorio, in the hotly-contested SD-34. What is shocking is that despite the presence of Republican former Orange County Board of Education Trustee Long Pham on the ballot, Nguyen still managed to capture 52% of the vote to Solorio’s 34% in the two-county SD-34 race. Pham captured 14%. With Republicans capturing nearly 2/3 of the vote, and Nguyen herself capturing 52%, this builds significant momentum for Nguyen heading into the November race, with Republicans turning to Nguyen to break the Democrats’ supermajority in the State Senate and Democrats turning to Solorio to preserve the Democrats’ Senate supermajority. (For the record, I am not related to Janet Nguyen. The last name Nguyen is held by 36% of Vietnamese people.)
.
- Orange County Board of Education: Linda Lindholm Unseats 32-Year Incumbent Giant Slayer Liz Parker – For the last few years, there was a joke in education circles that the way to win an Assembly seat was to lose an Orange County Board of Education race to Liz Parker. Chuck DeVore lost to Parker in 1990 and won an Assembly seat in 2004. Don Wagner lost to Parker in 1998 and won an Assembly seat in 2010. However, Parker is done. After nearly a 1/3 of a century in office, Liz Parker has been unseated by Laguna Niguel Mayor Linda Lindholm. No elected official in Orange County has held the same office longer than Liz Parker. (Indeed, Parker graduated from college the same month she was elected to the Orange County Board of Education.)
.
- Auditor-Controller: Eric Woolery’s Unprecedented Majority – In a five-way race with no incumbent for Auditor-Controller, Orange City Treasurer Eric Woolery won nearly 57% of the vote, nearly 40% better than the second-place candidate, Deputy Auditor-Controller Frank Davies, who won 17% of the vote. In a race with three or more candidates with no incumbent, there has not been a candidate who has won by such a large margin in at least 30 years and, quite possibly, ever. Indeed, there was only one candidate in those incumbent-free, 3+ candidate races who even averted a runoff: David Sundstrom, who received 50.3% of the vote for Auditor-Controller in 1998. (Anaheim Mayor Tom Daly won 41% of the vote in a five-way race for Clerk-Recorder in 2002 before winning the runoff. Assistant Public Administrator Vicki Landrus won 41% of the vote and College Trustee John Williams won 36% of the vote in a four-way race for Public Administrator in 2002; Williams won the runoff. OC Internal Auditor David Sundstrom won 50.3% of the vote in a three-way race for Auditor-Controller in 1998. OC Assistant Assessor Webster Guillory won 26% of the vote in a seven-way race for Assessor in 1998 before winning the runoff.)
.
- Irvine Unified School District: Ira Glasky Renders Special Election Moot, Beats Agran-Backed Candidate – After IUSD Trustee Gavin Huntley-Fenner resigned due to business and family obligations, the IUSD Board appointed Ira Glasky to fill the seat in November 2013. Utilizing an obscure section of the Education Code, a petition drive gathered the necessary 1,643 signatures (1.5% of registered voters at the 2012 school board election) to invalidate Glasky’s appointment and force a special election. The special election cost IUSD schools hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars. Three candidates filed to run: Glasky, Larry Agran-backed Carolyn Inmon, and Bob Vu. Glasky won 42% of the vote to Inmon’s 37% and Vu’s 22%. IUSD was forced to spend hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars on a special election that had the same end result as if the special election had never happened.
.
- Assessor: Webster Guillory vs. Claude Parrish Runoff – In 2010, Webster Guillory won 53% of the vote to Claude Parrish’s 47%, but Parrish ran as “Businessman/Tax Consultant” in 2010. Parrish is “Taxpayer Advocate/Businessman” this year. Last night, Guillory won 47% to Parrish’s 43%, with Jorge Lopez getting 10%. Parrish’s stronger ballot designation narrowed the margin between Guillory and Parrish. In Guillory’s favor is the fact that November voters are more favorable to incumbents than June voters. In Parrish’s favor is the fact that he has a stronger ballot designation in 2014 than he did in 2010. Also in Parrish’s favor is the investigation around whether or not Guillory’s nomination papers were signed by his subordinates at the office on County time; if this garners more publicity it helps Parrish; if it fizzles, it’s moot.
.
- Supe-5: Robert Ming vs. Lisa Bartlett Runoff – The narrative in this race always had business interests spending on IEs for Mission Viejo Councilman Frank Ury to put him into the runoff for the Fifth District Supervisor’s race. The conventional wisdom was wrong, as Laguna Niguel Councilman Robert Ming and Dana Point Mayor Lisa Bartlett each achieved 29% of the vote (Ming ahead of Bartlett by 0.4%), with Ury in third at 24% and Deputy District Attorney Joe Williams last at 18%.
.
- Supe-2: Steel Beats Mansoor 2-1 as Both Make Runoff – Conventional wisdom held that the Second District Supervisor’s race would result in a runoff between Board of Equalization Member Michelle Steel and Assemblyman Allan Mansoor. What wasn’t expected was just how close to 50% Steel would get or how large her margin over Mansoor would be. Surpassing most expectations, Steel pulled off 47% of the vote to Mansoor’s 24%, with Coast Community College District Trustee Jim Moreno at 22% and Huntington Beach Councilman Joe Carchio at 8%.
These honorable mentions were things that happened as expected but may have interesting footnotes:
Honorable Mention #1 – CD-45: Raths Falls Short, Jockeying Begins for SD-37 and Even AD-68 – Republican Retired Marine Colonel Greg Raths fell 4% short of overtaking Democrat Educator/Businessman Drew Leavens to advance to the general election with Republican Senator Mimi Walters. Did Walters’s hit piece (calling Raths a “Bill Clinton Republican” for his assignment to the Clinton White House while serving in the Marine Corps) move the needle 4%? Jockeying for the special election for Walters’s SD-37 seat and even Assemblyman Don Wagner’s AD-68 seat has already begun since Walters is expected to crush Leavens in CD-45 in November.
Honorable Mention #2 – Shawn Nelson: OC’s Biggest Supervisorial Landslide Ever? With 84% of the vote, Supervisor Shawn Nelson’s reelection bid may well be the most lopsided victory ever achieved by an Orange County supervisor (excluding races where a Supervisor was unopposed or a Supervisor’s only opponent was a write-in candidate).
Honorable Mention #3 – Measure A: OC’s Biggest Landslide Ever? – With 88% of voters in casting ballots in favor of Measure A, the measure may well have achieved the highest percentage ever for a ballot measure in Orange County.
In the interest of full disclosure, clients of Custom Campaigns (the consulting firm that owns OC Political) include four IUSD Trustees (story #7: Ira Glasky, Paul Bokota, Lauren Brooks, and Michael Parham), three OCBE Trustees (story #5: Linda Lindholm, Robert Hammond, and Ken Williams), Eric Woolery (story #6), and Robert Ming (story #9). Separate and apart from the consulting firm that owns OC Political, this blogger also did the staff work for Measure A (honorable mention #3).
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 2nd Supervisorial District, 34th Senate District, 55th Assembly District, 5th Supervisorial District, 73rd Assembly District, 74th Assembly District, Orange County Auditor-Controller, Orange County Board of Education | Tagged: Allan Mansoor, Anila Ali, Anna Bryson, Bill Brough, Bob Vu, Carolyn Inmon, Chuck DeVore, Claude Parrish, David Sundstrom, Don Wagner, Drew Leavens, Elizabeth Dorn Parker, Elizabeth Parker, Emanuel Patrascu, Eric Woolery, Frank Davies, Frank Ury, Greg Raths, Gregg Fritchle, Ira Glasky, Janet Nguyen, Jesse Petrilla, Jim Moreno, Joe Carchio, Joe Williams, John Williams, Jose Solorio, Karina Onofre, Keith Curry, Ken Williams, Larry Agran, Lauren Brooks, Linda Lindholm, Ling-Ling Chang, Lisa Bartlett, Long Pham, Matt Harper, Measure A, Measure D, Michael Parham, Michelle Steel, Mimi Walters, Paul Bokota, Paul Glaab, Phillip Chen, Robert Hammond, Robert Ming, Shawn Nelson, Steve Tye, Tom Daly, Vicki Landrus, Webster Guillory, Wendy Gabriella | 5 Comments »
Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on June 2, 2014
The OC Register endorsed in a majority of races on the ballot including a new endorsement that was released this morning for Marshall Tuck a candidate for State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Here is a list of endorsed candidates:
State Superintendent of Public Instruction- Marshall Tuck
O.C. Supervisor, District 2- Michelle Steel
O.C. Supervisor, District 4- Shawn Nelson
O.C. Supervisor, District 5- Robert Ming & Frank Ury (You can only vote for 1)
O.C. Assessor- Claude Parrish
O.C. Clerk-Recorder- Hugh Nguyen
O.C. District Attorney- Tony Rackauckas
Superior Court Judge, Office 20- Helen Hayden
Superior Court Judge, Office 27- Joanne Motoike
Superior Court Judge, Office 35- Carmen Luege
O.C. Board of Education, Trustee Area 2- Tom Pollitt
O.C. Board of Education, Trustee Area 5- Linda Lindholm
Irvine Unified School District Board- Ira Glasky
O.C. Measure A- Yes
Buena Park Measure B- No
Anaheim Measure C- Yes
Anaheim Measure D- No
Anaheim Measure E- Yes
Prop. 41- No
Prop. 42- Yes
To see more details about each of the endorsements click on this link to go to the OC Register website by clicking here. I agree with a majority of the endorsements that they made with a few small differences. It will be interesting to see how each of these candidates fares on Tuesday night.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 2nd Supervisorial District, 4th Supervisorial District, 5th Supervisorial District, Anaheim, Buena Park School District, California, Irvine Unified School District, Orange County, Orange County Assessor, Orange County Board of Education, Orange County Board of Supervisors, Orange County Clerk-Recorder, Orange County District Attorney's Office | Tagged: Carmen Luege, Claude Parrish, Frank Ury, Helen Hayden, hugh nguyen, Ira Glasky, Joanne Motoike, Linda Lindholm, Marshall Tuck, Michelle Steel, Robert Ming, Shawn Nelson, Tom Pollitt, Tony Rackauckas | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Chris Nguyen on May 30, 2014
One of our most popular posts from the November 2012 General Election was “Humongous Grid of Endorsements,” so we’re back this election with the Giant Grid of Endorsements for the June 2014 Primary Election.
I did abbreviate for some groups, so OC GOP = Republican Party of Orange County, DPOC = Democratic Party of Orange County, CRA = California Republican Assembly, HJTA = Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, CWLA = California Women’s Leadership Association, OC Tax = Orange County Taxpayers Association, OCBC = Orange County Business Council, and CTA = California Teachers Association.
If you’re particularly interested in a group, click their name to view their endorsements on their web site. You can learn more about the group there, such as HJTA being the state’s leading taxpayer advocate group or Women in Leadership being a single-issue group with the sole goal of electing “pro-choice women candidates to local, regional and state-wide office who support keeping abortion legal.” (In light of their mission, does anyone else find it odd that Women in Leadership’s two endorsements on this grid are both for school board?)
Candidates in each race are listed in alphabetical order by last name, except incumbents got listed first in their respective races. Party affiliations are listed except for judicial candidates Thomas Martin and Wayne Philips, as I could not tell their affiliation from the voter database (common names combined with obscure judicial races make figuring out their affiliations challenging).
Whether you love a group and want to vote with their endorsements or hate a group and want to vote against their endorsements, here are the endorsements for county offices and school board, along with local ballot measures:
|
OC GOP |
DPOC |
OC Register |
Lincoln Club |
Atlas PAC |
CRA |
Family Action PAC |
HJTA |
CWLA |
OC Tax |
OCBC |
CTA |
OC Labor Federation |
Evolve |
Women in Leadership |
Planned Parenthood |
Supervisor, 2nd District |
Joe Carchio (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Allan Mansoor (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jim Moreno (D) |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
X |
|
X |
Michelle Steel (R) |
|
|
X |
|
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Supervisor, 4th District |
Shawn Nelson (R – incumbent) |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rudy Gaona (D) |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
Supervisor, 5th District |
Lisa Bartlett (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Robert Ming (R) |
|
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Frank Ury (R) |
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
Joe Williams (NPP) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Assessor |
Webster Guillory (NPP – incumbent) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jorge Lopez (D) |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
Claude Parrish (R) |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Auditor-Controller |
James Benuzzi (D) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mike Dalati (D) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
Frank Davies (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
John Willard (NPP) |
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eric Woolery (R) |
X |
|
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Clerk-Recorder |
Hugh Nguyen (R – incumbent) |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Monica Maddox (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gary Pritchard (D) |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
Steve Rocco (NPP) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
District Attorney-Public Administrator |
Tony Rackauckas (R – incumbent) |
X |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Greg Diamond (D) |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sheriff-Coroner |
Sandra Hutchens (R – incumbent) |
X |
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Superintendent of Schools |
Al Mijares (R – incumbent) |
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
Treasurer-Tax Collector |
Shari Freidenrich (R – incumbent) |
X |
|
|
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Judge, Office #14 |
Fred Fascenelli (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kevin Haskins (R) |
X |
|
|
X |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
KC Jones (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
Thomas Martin |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Judge, Office #20 |
Derek Johnson (D – incumbent) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Helen Hayden (R) |
X |
|
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Judge, Office #27 |
Joanne Motoike (D – incumbent) |
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
Wayne Philips |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Judge, Office #35 |
Jeff Ferguson (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Carmen Luege (R) |
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
County Board of Education, Trustee Area 2 |
David Boyd (R – incumbent) |
|
|
* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
X |
Tom Pollitt (R) |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
County Board of Education, Trustee Area 5 |
Elizabeth Parker (R – incumbent) |
|
|
* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
X |
X |
Linda Lindholm (R) |
X |
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Irvine Unified School District (Special Election for Six-Month Term) |
Ira Glasky (R – incumbent) |
|
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
Carolyn Inmon (D) |
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
Bob Vu (R) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Measure A (Orange County) |
Yes |
X |
|
X |
X |
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
No |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Measure B (Buena Park School District) |
Yes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
No |
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Measure C (Anaheim) |
Yes |
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
No |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Measure D (Anaheim) |
Yes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
No |
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Measure E (Anaheim) |
Yes |
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
No |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*The Democratic Party of Orange County did not endorse David Boyd or Elizabeth Parker, instead the DPOC issued anti-endorsements against Tom Pollitt and Linda Lindholm.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in 2nd Supervisorial District, 4th Supervisorial District, 5th Supervisorial District, Anaheim, Buena Park School District, Democrat Central Committee, Irvine Unified School District, Orange County, Orange County Assessor, Orange County Auditor-Controller, Orange County Board of Education, Orange County Clerk-Recorder, Orange County Public Administrator, Orange County Treasurer-Tax Collector, Republican Central Committee | Tagged: Al Mijares, Allan Mansoor, Atlas PAC, Bob Vu, California Republican Assembly, California Teachers Association, California Women's Leadership Association, Carmen Luege, Carolyn Inmon, Claude Parrish, David Boyd, Democratic Party of Orange County, Derek Johnson, Elizabeth Parker, Eric Woolery, Evolve, Family Action PAC, Frank Davies, Frank Ury, Fred Fascenelli, Gary Pritchard, Greg Diamond, Helen Hayden, Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, hugh nguyen, Ira Glasky, James Benuzzi, Jeff Ferguson, Jim Moreno, Joanne Motoike, Joe Carchio, Joe Williams, John Willard, Jorge Lopez, KC Jones, Kevin Haskins, Lincoln Club, Linda Lindholm, Lisa Bartlett, Measure A, Measure B, Measure C, Measure D, Measure E, Michelle Steel, Mike Dalati, Monica Maddox, Orange County Business Council, Orange County Labor Federation, Orange County Register, Orange County Taxpayers Association, Planned Parenthood, Republican Party of Orange County, Robert Ming, Rudy Gaona, Sandra Hutchens, Shari Freidenrich, Shawn Nelson, Steve Rocco, Thomas Martin, Tom Pollitt, Tony Rackauckas, Wayne Philips, Webster Guillory, Women in Leadership | 2 Comments »
Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on May 27, 2014
It’s to the point where I am simply getting the trademark Chris Nguyen scowl every time I write one of my handicapping posts. Now we shall take a look at the Orange County Assessor race:
The following candidates are running for OC Assessor:
- Claude Parrish – Taxpayer Advocate/Businessman
- Webster Guillory – Orange County Assessor
- Jorge O. Lopez – Consultant/Appraiser/Businessman
Voter registration heavily favors Republicans in Orange County as a whole, Republicans have 42% of registered voters, Democrats have 31% of registered voters, and No Party Preference voters count for 22% of the electorate. Even though party affiliations matter very little in these races because they do not appear on the ballot we will fill in readers on what they are; Claude Parrish is a Republican, Jorge Lopez is a Democrat, and Webster Guillory is an NPP voter.
Also, it is important to explain that this race is just like a race for Orange County Supervisor where the top two vote getters will advance to November, unless the top vote getter finishes with over 50% of the vote.
Claude Parrish
Claude Parrish is the predecessor to Michelle Steel on the State Board of Equalization and he has huge name ID. He ran for this office four years ago and came fairly close to upsetting Webster Guillory and I would argue that Parrish has a stronger ballot designation this time around.
Let’s take a look at his electoral history.
Results from 2010 (Primary Election):
Assessor |
Completed Precincts: 2084 of 2084 |
|
Vote Count |
Percentage |
* WEBSTER J. GUILLORY |
203,814 |
53.4% |
CLAUDE PARRISH |
177,909 |
46.6% |
Results from 2002 (Republican Primary):
Board of Equalization
3rd District REP |
Completed Precincts: 2094 of 2094 |
|
Vote Count |
Percentage |
Claude Parrish |
151,092 |
64.7% |
Steve Petruzzo |
66,705 |
28.5% |
Emad Bakeer |
15,885 |
6.8% |
As you can see Parrish has some strong name ID over the past ten years. I will also point out that Parrish is the king of slates having bought up almost every major slate mailer that exists.
Parrish has loaned his campaign $100,000 and donated an additional $170,000 and appears willing to spend whatever is necessary to win this race. He has a almost all of the slate mailers, has the most campaign signs, and has run an excellent campaign so far.
With a low turnout election projected it bodes very well for a challenger who is running a strong campaign because the voters are more informed and will likely take the time to read about the race and the OC Register endorsement of Parrish a very valuable one.
Based on the factors above, I like his chances.
Webster Guillory
Webster Guillory is the incumbent and his been in this office for a very long time.
Guillory has very high name ID due to being on the ballot multiple times for a very long time. However, Guillory has not had to campaign for a very long time and does not appear willing to campaign very much this time. Let’s take a look at his electoral history:
Results from 2010 (June Primary):
Assessor |
Completed Precincts: 2084 of 2084 |
|
Vote Count |
Percentage |
* WEBSTER J. GUILLORY |
203,814 |
53.4% |
CLAUDE PARRISH |
177,909 |
46.6% |
Results from 2006 (June Primary):
Assessor |
Completed Precincts: 2076 of 2076 |
|
Vote Count |
Percentage |
WEBSTER GUILLORY |
191511 |
58.9% |
MIKE LEBEAU |
68935 |
21.2% |
LARRY BALES |
64728 |
19.9% |
Results from 2002 (June Primary):
Assessor
|
Completed Precincts: 2094 of 2094 |
|
Vote Count |
Percentage |
Webster J. Guillory |
256,214 |
65.8% |
Larry L. Bales |
133,299 |
34.2% |
As you can see from the election results, Guillory has a track record of getting elected to this seat, but I notice that he is trending downwards in terms of the percentage of the vote that he is receiving. With turnout at a ridiculously slow pace so far this climate may not be the best for an incumbent due to a more conservative electorate likely to turnout.
Guillory has done little campaigning outside of the ballot statement and has not even filled out the paperwork that shows he is planning to spend more than $1,000. With the lack of mail and other campaign materials he appears to be relying on just his name ID to try and advance to the November run-off. With three candidates in the race it would appear that Guillory has an excellent chance to advance but not win outright due to the anti-incumbent vote being split.
Guillory has received a little bit of press due to opponent Jorge Lopez complaining about how he gathered a majority of his signatures from county employees that work within his office.
Jorge O. Lopez
Jorge O. Lopez is on the ballot but he has done no real campaigning for the seat through voter contact. Unfortunately, he did not even get a ballot statement thus making it almost impossible for voters to figure out who he is and where he stands on the issues.
Lopez will likely play the role of spoiler though because his candidacy will likely gain enough votes to send this race to a November run-off thus making it more likely that Guillory can hold onto the seat.
Prediction Time
Based on all of the above factors and analysis, I predict the winner will be
Claude Parrish & Webster Guillory- Advancing to November
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in Orange County Assessor | Tagged: Claude Parrish, Jorge O. Lopez, Webster Guillory | 1 Comment »