Newport Beach judge takes race
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Alicia Robinson
Orange County Superior Court Judge Jim Gray won’t return to the bench
just yet, after defeating fellow Libertarian Gail K. Lightfoot
Tuesday for the chance to challenge Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer in
November.
Final tallies from Tuesday’s election from the Orange County
Registrar of Voters showed Gray gathering 70.5% of the Libertarian
vote and Lightfoot taking 29.5%. The battle was the second-ever
contested primary in the California Libertarian Party’s 30-year
history, but that didn’t draw the kind of voter interest or media
attention Lightfoot had hoped for, she said.
Gray said the election’s outcome was surprising because he’s only
been a Libertarian for about a year and a half while Lightfoot has
some name recognition with the party.
“It was unusual in that I’m the new kid on the block,” he said.
“I’m a lifelong Republican. My opponent is a trouper in the
Libertarian Party.”
Challenging Boxer in November will be Gray, Republican Bill Jones,
Peace and Freedom Party candidate Marsha Feinland and American
Independent Party candidate Don J. Grundmann.
Gray, 59, of Newport Beach was appointed a superior court judge in
1989 by former Gov. George Deukmejian and previously served as a
municipal judge, assistant U.S. attorney and lieutenant in the U.S.
Naval Reserve Judge Advocate General Corps. A longtime Republican,
Gray switched to the Libertarian party because of his objections to
the federal government’s war on drugs and his goal of reducing the
size of government.
He’ll focus on those issues as well as civil liberties and federal
spending as the November election approaches, he said.
“I am enthusiastic toward looking at the general election to
discuss real issues instead of artificial ones like who worked
longest in the military and that sort of thing,” Gray said.
“We’ve always been concerned about something we call the
tax-and-spend Democrats, but now I am more concerned with the
don’t-tax-and-spend-anyway Republicans.”
Before she retired, Lightfoot, 66, of Arroyo Grande worked for
nearly 40 years as a nurse, logging time in intensive care units and
emergency rooms and working in public health. She has been a member
of the Libertarian Party since it formed in 1971, she has been the
state chairwoman of the party twice, and she produces and hosts a
Libertarian program on public access cable in San Luis Obispo County.
She has run for high-profile offices before, seeking the Secretary
of State’s office in 1998 and 2002 and running against incumbent
Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein in 2000. In the wake of Gray’s
victory, Lightfoot said Wednesday she’s not sure if she’ll run again.
“It would depend entirely on whether or not I have the support to
run,” she said, adding that the backing of party leaders and funding
would be key to a future campaign.
For Gray’s part, he thinks he has a chance to win this fall if he
can convince voters a third party vote isn’t wasted because it send a
message to legislators in the two major parties.
“If they change their policies, I will have won the election,” he
said.
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