Harman sets sight on state Senate
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Alicia Robinson
Huntington Beach Assemblyman Tom Harman is officially running for the
not-yet-open 35th District state Senate seat now held by John
Campbell.
Harman, 64, already had started a campaign for the Orange County
2nd District supervisor’s seat, but in late June he filed to run for
Campbell’s Senate seat, which for now doesn’t officially open until
2008.
The June 2 nomination of Rep. Chris Cox to head the Securities and
Exchange Commission has led to a game of political musical chairs,
with Campbell for now at the head seat.
Campbell’s decision to run for the Congressional post has thrown
his Senate spot into the mix.
Cox is awaiting confirmation by the Senate, which could happen
this month. The White House on June 30 sent Cox’s nomination to the
Senate, where the banking committee will schedule a hearing after
this week’s recess, banking committee spokesman Andrew Gray said.
Despite Harman’s possible Senate bid, he hasn’t closed the books
on his campaign for supervisor.
The congressional seat and any resulting vacancies would likely be
filled by special elections, but the supervisor’s race is slated for
the 2006 ballot.
“I’m telling people that I’m simply putting that campaign on
hold,” he said.
“I will either win or lose very quickly. If I am unfortunate
enough to lose the Senate race, there will still be time for me to be
in the supervisor’s race.”
It’s natural for Harman to be interested in the Senate seat
because he already represents many of the same constituents in the
Assembly, he said.
If everything happens as predicted -- a rarity in politics -- some
people expect Harman to face off with Orange County GOP chairman and
former Assemblyman Scott Baugh, whose old seat Harman now holds.
The Capitol Morning Report, a Sacramento political newsletter,
recently cited an unnamed source saying Baugh will announce a Senate
run.
“I think anyone who lives in that district and is political should
have an interest in that seat and should evaluate whether they would
be an appropriate candidate for that office,” Baugh said in an
earlier interview. “I do live in that district.”
He added that it would be premature to announce candidacy for a
seat that’s not yet vacant.
The news of Harman’s Senate campaign could be good for Orange
County Treasurer-Tax Collector John Moorlach, who is so far the only
other candidate in the 2nd District supervisor’s race.
Moorlach, 49, has racked up 110 endorsements -- including one from
Cox -- and is piling up political capital now that the county is
facing a pension-related fiscal crisis.
After he prophesied the bankruptcy that hit the county in 1994,
Moorlach was appointed treasurer to clean up the damage.
A recent decision to increase pension payouts has left the county
looking at a deficit of $2.34 billion, possibly more, and people are
again turning to Moorlach for solutions.
He was considering a run for Cox’s House seat but says that’s
unlikely now.
“For me, I want to be part of the leadership solution.”
QUESTION
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