DeVore reigns in every polled city
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Alicia Robinson
Republican Chuck DeVore, presumptive heir to the 70th district
Assembly seat John Campbell will leave when he moves to the state
Senate next year, announced this week that he netted the most votes
in the March 2 primary in each of the district’s nine cities. DeVore
won the six-way Republican contest with 46.3% of all votes cast.
“I think we were pleased [and] delighted that we received a
district-wide mandate,” DeVore said of the election results. He noted
that his margin of victory was 5.3% in Newport Beach, where three of
his opponents live.
He attributed his widespread wins to his conservative background
as a Reagan White House appointee, former staffer for Rep. Chris Cox
and an Army reservist and national guardsman.
While the heavily Republican 70th district leaves DeVore little to
do to gather votes in November, he is planning several major
fundraisers including one in Sacramento and two in Orange County.
“There’s a tremendous amount that we have to do to raise money
because it’s expected that the person from this district will do
everything they can to support Republicans in other districts and
around the state,” he said.
Cox bill helps military recruiters on campus
The House on Wednesday passed a bill written by Rep. Chris Cox
that would stop federal dollars from homeland or national security
agencies from going to colleges and universities that bar ROTC
offices from campus or discriminate against military recruiters.
Many schools -- including Cox’s alma mater, Harvard -- closed ROTC
offices to protest the Vietnam War, and some schools today don’t give
military recruiters the kind of access to students that other
employers enjoy, Cox said.
“Since Sept. 11, the country has rediscovered the importance of
our troops,” Cox said. “It’s time to put this Vietnam-era anachronism
behind us.”
Under the bill, schools that keep ROTC and military recruiters
away would not be eligible for funding from the Defense, Justice and
Homeland Security departments, the CIA and other security agencies.
The bill must be approved by the Senate to become law.
Human error blamed for computer glitches
The Orange County Board of Supervisors and Registrar of Voters
certified the March 2 primary election results Tuesday, despite
messes that resulted in 2,000 voters getting the wrong ballots.
It was the first time the county used new electronic voting
machines, but Registrar of Voters spokesman Brett Rowley said it was
human error that caused the glitches.
“We didn’t have a problem with the system,” he said. “We had an
issue with training and we are taking steps to correct those.”
He noted that 99.7% of the 567,204 votes cast were done
accurately.
Because of the problems at polling places, the supervisors in
March formed a special committee to collect input from the public and
poll workers and then report on how the election process can be
improved. Focus groups with poll workers and public meetings on the
March 2 election are scheduled later this month.
Republican Navy veteran honored
Retired Navy Capt. Emily Sanford of Costa Mesa was recently
appointed by Veterans Affairs Secretary Anthony J. Principi to serve
on the Department of Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee on Women
Veterans beginning in June.
Sanford served in the Navy for 27 years and is the Orange County
Republican Party’s sergeant-at-arms.
Outgoing Orange County Republican Party Chairman Tom Fuentes was
nominated by Rep. Chris Cox to attend the National Hispanic
Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C., this summer. The summit will
address proposals relating to jobs, healthcare and education. Fuentes
will retire later this month after 20 years at the helm of the county
GOP.
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