Running against the odds
- Share via
Douglas Zimmerman
What makes someone run a losing political race? That’s a question,
actually, that most of the candidates now campaigning for national
office have to be asking themselves.
Statistics show that the vast majority of incumbents for House and
Senate seats -- in the neighborhood of 95% or more -- win reelection.
For every sure thing, there are one, two or more candidates who will
wake up on Nov. 3 on the downside of political fortune.
In districts such as the 46th, which includes Huntington Beach,
the odds can seem even longer because they are “safe” seats -- ones
that almost by default will go to one of the country’s two main
parties.
In the 46th Congressional District, which Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
has represented since the late 1980s, Republicans have that strangle
hold on the office. Forty-eight percent of voters are registered with
the GOP.
Take, for example, the 2002 race. In it, Rohrabacher trounced a
fairly aggressive Democratic challenger, Gerrie Schipske. Rohrabacher
received 76,332 votes to Schipske’s 38,854.
Or take, as a primer, the March 2 primary. Rohrabacher received
68,969 votes. His Democratic challenger, Jim Brandt, notched 21,317.
But even that nearly 50,000 margin doesn’t make a true long shot.
During the same March 2 primary, Green Party candidate Tom Lash
received just 580 votes.
But that hasn’t stopped Lash’s run. Frustrated with his choices in
2002, Lash decided he needed to give voters more choices -- even if
most wouldn’t take them.
Running on a bare-bones budget, Lash largely has run the campaign
himself, working out of his Huntington Beach home.
Along with his supporters, he has organized fundraisers, biked
across the district and gone on campaign trips as far as Catalina,
riding around the island with Green Party members on a golf cart to
meet as many voters as possible.
During the past months, Independent photographer Douglas Zimmerman
followed Lash as he continued his long, uphill fight to find out what
drives such a campaign.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.