Where have all the candidates gone?
S.J. CAHN
A quick history lesson this week.
In late October 1992, the Pacific Amphitheatre was rocking and
rolling, but not for any band. Bill Clinton, then just a governor and
the “Comeback Kid,” ventured into Republican territory as he sought
to unseat the first President Bush.
Fast forward to August 1996. Clinton’s challenger four years
later, Sen. Bob Dole, made a similar appearance in his failed attempt
to unseat Clinton.
Then try June 2000. In a relatively clandestine visit, Hillary
Clinton whisked her way onto Lido Isle for a $50,000 fundraiser
before 45 people. The Pilot described the scene:
“A handful of residents paraded around the street, hoping to catch
a glimpse of Clinton and shake her hand. But with Newport Beach
police and Secret Service agents standing guard on either end of Via
Venezia, curious residents didn’t stand a chance.
Officials closed off the street to anyone who didn’t live on it,
declaring it a ‘protective zone.’
Still, some people stood on the street corner for two hours, just
to catch a glimpse of her.
‘Just one click. That’s all I want,’ said Joann Clark, who raced
around with her friend, Connie Modnick.”
With it was a picture of a waving Clinton, shot from the balcony
of a nearby home.
Three months later, candidate George W. Bush swept through town,
too. After a day of campaigning in Orange County, he dined at an
unidentified Harbor Island home.
“Among those expected to turn out are Fuentes, representatives
from the Republican national party, Newport Beach City Council
candidate Steve Bromberg, and representatives for Rep. Christopher
Cox (R-Newport Beach), Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer and state Sen.
Ross Johnson,” the Pilot reported.
Usually, Newport-Mesa is the place to be during presidential
campaigns.
(Heck, in May 2003, special prosecutor Kenneth Starr of
Whitewater/Clinton impeachment fame came though the area and spoke at
a luncheon hosted by the California Republican Lawyers Assn.)
This year, we’ve seen next to nothing. Depending on your leanings,
you might even say we’ve seen less than nothing.
The Democratic vice presidential candidate, Sen. John Edwards, did
appear at the Balboa Bay Club for a $1,000-a-plate lunch. But he
breezed through with only a minutes-long speech. And the wife of
Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry, Teresa Heinz Kerry,
made a stop in Irvine.
But the GOP was more N-O-T in the community this year.
And that, I think, we can attribute to the changed political
landscape. Neither side has made California a big priority because
Kerry is supposed to carry it, handily. Instead, battleground states,
where polls show the vote nearly even, are getting all the face time.
Orange County, Fla., had a better chance of a Kerry or Bush sighting,
in other words.
Interestingly, the lack of candidate appearances seems to have
affected campaign contributions. In past elections, the Newport Beach
ZIP Code 92660 was among the top sources of donations.
This cycle, as of the beginning of October, is not even in the top
50, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics
(www.opensecrets.org).
Coincidence?
NO MESS AT ALL
Tuesday night at the Balboa Bay Club provided the ultimate moment
of when politics should be put aside.
That night, the city hosted a “Mess Night,” what’s become a
traditional, and formal, dinner to honor present and past Marines.
Newport Beach last year adopted Camp Pendleton’s 1st Battalion,
1st Marines, in large part thanks to the efforts of Bromberg. Marines
of 1/1 -- an infantry battalion -- are preparing to leave for
overseas service, for a second time, in December.
The dinner was a sell out, Bromberg, a former Marine, told me
Wednesday, and raised nearly $20,000, including a $5,000 chunk from
Newport Beach City Councilman John Heffernan.
“I was just overwhelmed,” Bromberg said. “I couldn’t be prouder of
the people of this city and how they responded.”
He added that he suspects, with more time to plan and raise money,
the city will be able to hit a six-figure number to help out the 1/1
families.
As I sat there, drinking the rum punch and the port and smoking
cigars -- all part of the tradition, of course, or I’d never been
doing so on a work night -- I read through information on 1/1.
A lot of it looked familiar. They were at Okinawa and Guadalcanal
in World War II. During the Korean War, they fought at the Chosin
Reservoir. They fought in Vietnam.
When I went home, I showed the program to my wife.
It turns out her father had been a member of 1/1 -- a battalion sergeant major, for those for whom that means something -- and a
Marine for 30 years. All those battles I was reading about were
familiar, as was the description “Frozen Chosin” for those who
suffered through that long battle.
It was there my wife’s father was nearly killed. Hit in the face
by shrapnel, he probably would have died had the Corps not had the
creed of never leaving a Marine behind. One of his Purple Hearts sits
in our home. My wife’s middle name, Jo, is in honor of the Marine who
saved her father.
Sgt. Major Billy Allen died at the beginning of the summer.
Tuesday night was a fine opportunity to pay him tribute.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He may be reached at (714)
966-4607 or by e-mail at s.j.cahn@latimes.com.
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