Two victories and weeks and months of waiting
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Lolita Harper
NEWPORT-MESA -- Three Newport-Mesa judgeship candidates were groggy,
tired and even hoarse Wednesday after late, election-night celebrations.
But a little fatigue is a small price to pay for the thrill of victory,
they say.
Newport Heights resident Vickie Ann Bridgman triumphed Tuesday,
gaining 46.2% of the votes for Superior Court Judge Office No. 22.
Bridgman, whose son was killed in a tragic automobile accident on
Irvine Avenue in May 1997, works in the district attorney’s office. She
will run again in November against Kelly Mac Eachern, the second-highest
vote-getter with 36.1% of the vote.
Costa Mesa residents Karen Robinson and Gay Sandoval are equally as
pleased with the results of the write-in campaign to unseat besieged
Judge Ronald C. Kline, who is under house arrest pertaining to child
molestation and child pornography charges.
Robinson -- a Costa Mesa councilwoman -- and Sandoval -- a former
Daily Pilot columnist -- waged independent campaigns for the seat on the
bench but contributed to a team effort to inform Orange County voters
about the legal trouble Kline faces.
The people responded, casting 67% of the votes for one of 11 write-in
candidates. The Orange County registrar of voters expects to release the
individual tallies March 26.
“It’s absolutely amazing that a quarter of a million people went out
there and bothered to write in someone else’s name. It’s unprecedented,”
said Cindy Brenneman, Robinson’s campaign manager. “He was outvoted 2 to
1.”
Robinson said she was proud of the Orange County electorate for
informing themselves about an often neglected race. She also tipped her
hat to her opponents -- or teammates, depending on how one looks at it --
saying it took a group effort to get the word out.
Sandoval was the first to challenge Kline, who was slated to run
unchallenged and subsequently would not even have his name on the ballot.
In other words, he had his reelection in the bag.
Political pundits said it was impossible, but the Davids in this
campaign proceeded to sling rocks at Goliath, ultimately toppling the
giant.
Sandoval, a Costa Mesa resident who prosecuted child molesters and
others while she was a deputy district attorney, lobbied to get Kline’s
name on the ballot and then gathered the required signatures to allow for
write-in candidates. Once that door was opened, Robinson and 10 others
quickly waged their own write-in campaigns.
It appears the two top vote-getters will compete in a runoff in
November, unless one write-in candidate gained more than 50% of the
overall vote.
Kline could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
Candidates like Robinson and Sandoval will just have to cross their
fingers and play the waiting game until the final write-in votes are
tallied.
“I’m not staying awake until then,” said Sandoval, who joked about her
lack of sleep during late-night election result monitoring. “I’m going
back to my other life. At this point, whatever happens, happens.”
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
FINAL SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE RESULTS
OFFICE NO. 22
Vickie Ann Bridgman 46.2%
Kelly Mac Eachern 36.1%
OFFICE NO. 21
Write-in candidate(s) 67.0%
Ronald C. Kline 33.0%
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