Rohrabacher takes race by wide margin
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Alicia Robinson
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher settled an old score at the polls Tuesday,
defeating former Rep. Robert K. Dornan by a wide margin in the
Republican race for the 46th Congressional District seat.
Final results from the Orange County Registrar of Voters showed
Rohrabacher with 83% of the GOP vote, while Dornan only captured
16.8%.
“I think this was a victory for Republicans who believe their
party should be a positive rather than negative force in our
society,” Rohrabacher said from his Washington, D.C., office late
Tuesday night. “The Republican voters simply said, ‘We want somebody
who takes a tough stance on issues but is nice rather than a mean
hatemonger.’”
In the three-way Democratic primary for Rohrabacher’s seat, Jim
Brandt bested opponents Tan D. Nguyen and Paul C. Wilkins.
Brandt garnered 49.9% of Democratic votes, followed by Nguyen with
32.8%, while Wilkins trailed with 17.3%.
“I’m feeling really confident about it, so I’m already putting
together a schedule for the general election,” Brandt said Tuesday
night.
Brandt, 53, is a former Marine Corps pilot who has worked in the
computer software business since 1978. He lives in Carson. Nguyen,
28, is a financial advisor and former restaurant owner who lives in
San Marcos. Wilkins, 45, is a Long Beach rowing coach and
businessman.
Rohrabacher and Brandt will vie with Green Party candidate and
microbiologist Tom Lash as well as Libertarian microelectronics
product manager Keith Gann on the November ballot.
Rohrabacher, 56, is a former journalist and White House
speechwriter under Ronald Reagan. He has come out strongly against
illegal immigration and in favor of promoting America’s space
exploration.
With a past that includes 20 years in Congress and careers as an
actor and radio talk show host, Dornan, 70, has been a controversial
figure known for his staunch conservatism and his colorful -- and
sometimes off-color -- remarks. In early December, Dornan made good
on a 1991 threat to run against Rohrabacher, a fellow Republican and
a House member since 1988.
Dornan’s son and campaign manager, Mark Dornan, said his father
had done what he’d set out to do.
“This campaign was never about winning, it was about [the] message
and it was about shocking Rohrabacher out of his cozy friendships
with radical Muslim groups,” Mark Dornan said.
Mark Dornan said Tuesday that his father will remain a thorn in
Rohrabacher’s side to urge him to return that money.
“Anyone who knows Bob Dornan knows that he is not going to let
this go until justice is done,” Mark Dornan said, but he was
noncommittal as to whether his father will run for congress again.
“Never count Bob Dornan out,” Mark Dornan said.
Bob Dornan did not return calls for comment.
For Rohrabacher, the biggest downside of this campaign was having
to raise and spend money.
“In the past I’ve always been very frugal and spent little money,
but I was up against a man with a history of slash-and-burn campaigns
and a history of negative attacks and I had to raise money to defend
myself.”
While Dornan has a history of raising big money from small
donations -- in 1997-98 elections he raised $3.7 million -- but as of
two weeks ago the bulk of his funding had come from his own pocket.
By contrast, Rohrabacher generally raised between $300,000 and
$400,000 per election, but a recent campaign finance report showed he
raised more than $495,000 this time.
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