Democrats are out. What about Angel fans?
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I called Mike Scheafer on Tuesday after I read in the Pilot that he
was one of two finalists for the vacancy on the Costa Mesa City
Council. I wanted to ask him if he thought a recommendation from me
might be counterproductive since there are rumors around -- totally
unfounded -- that I once voted for a Democrat.
Turns out that Scheafer and his family are off on a vacation
cruise and out of touch -- strange timing, indeed, when the New York
Yankees are in town.
But I decided to go ahead with this anyway, since time is short
before a decision is made, and I don’t think I can cause any real
harm. It might even help.
Scheafer has taken care of my insurance needs since I moved to
Newport Beach shortly after the Civil War. The length of our business
relationship would certainly suggest how satisfactory it has been for
me. I’ve never talked to Scheafer much about politics, although I’ve
always assumed his Republican credentials to be impeccable. And we
can’t go too wrong with a guy who goes out on a limb to save the
annual Costa Mesa Fish Fry or to build a skateboard park.
But there is one area in which Scheafer and I have talked at great
length in which I find his grasp especially admirable. Since it may
not come up in discussion of his qualifications, I’d like to mention
it here.
Scheafer, without reservation, is the most devout, loyal and
knowledgeable supporter of the California Angels in my acquaintance.
I don’t know how many times I’ve run into Scheafer departing Edison
Field after an Angel game, usually with his family. I can attest that
he seldom leaves early and has a clear and precise working knowledge
of why the Angels won or lost -- all qualities that would serve him
well on the City Council.
My concern about mentioning my relationship with him comes out of
a spate of recent quotes from local Republican leaders suggesting
pretty ominously that any close social or philosophical contact, past
or present, by Republican office-seekers with Democrats can only be
construed as a kind of political leprosy requiring isolation -- even
when the offices being sought are allegedly nonpartisan.
Costa Mesa Councilman Gary Monahan, for example, told the Pilot he
was getting a lot of calls about the party affiliation of City
Council candidates. Planning Commissioner Katrina Foley was shot down
in the council election last November by a phone campaign identifying
her as a registered Democrat. Mayor Chris Steel in a recent letter to
the Pilot stressed the need for a Republican to fill the council
vacancy “to move to a conservative, sensible direction.”
On a broader scale, we have Cristi Cristich, who will be running
in next year’s Republican primary -- tantamount to election -- for
John Campbell’s 70th Assembly District seat.
From all indications, she is highly qualified for the job except
for one fatal flaw: she voted twice for Bill Clinton, attracted, one
suspects, by a balanced budget, environmental sensitivity, booming
prosperity, support for a woman’s right to choose and international
co-operation. She fled the Democrats after the Monica Lewinsky
debacle and is now putting distance between herself and Clinton.
But this history, GOP stalwart Buck Johns said, is a “downtick,”
which may be one of the few understatements in political rhetoric
history. More typical is the reaction of one of her opponents, who
calls the Clinton endorsement “unpardonable.” To repatriate herself,
she supported Clinton’s impeachment and the candidacy of Bill Simon,
but that apparently hasn’t obliterated the red “D” with which she has
been marked.
Over in Newport Beach, the two-party system has long ago morphed
into three, with the Democrats a distant third. The two parties that
count are (1) the conservative Republicans and (2) the
ultra-conservative Republicans. Democrats have tried to come in under
this radar wearing various disguises.
I once knew a Newport Beach Democrat who made it to mayor while
staying firmly in the party closet. Those who surface risk the fate
of attorney Richard Taylor, who was zapped seeking a seat on the
Newport Beach City Council last November by phone calls identifying
him -- among other things -- as a card-carrying Democrat.
This would appear to be a moot issue in the choice the Costa Mesa
City Council must make in the next two weeks between the two
remaining candidates for Karen Robinson’s seat.
If Scheafer is the one chosen, I hope it doesn’t cut into his
baseball time. I can’t think of any place more conducive to a clear
head in dealing with the multiple problems of Costa Mesa than regular
visits to Edison Field during the heat of a pennant race.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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