By Doug Porter
While there is no rule saying a ballot must be filled out completely to be valid, there are four contests you should know and care about as we approach the 2014 general election.
Exhibit A is why we should care about down-ballot races is Judge Gary Kreep, who’s now lurking around Department 7 in the central courthouse, handling a full calendar of landlord-tenant disputes.
People voted for Kreep because the only thing they’d heard (if they’d heard anything at all) were rumors, spread via a suspicious robocall campaign saying his opponent was soft on crime.
So Kreep ascended to the court after defeating 30 year veteran prosecutor Garland Peed a couple years back. His margin of victory was two-fifths of 1 percent.
Kreep was a birther, a defender of the Minutemen Civil Defense Force and an activist with an alphabet soup of right wing groups, the best known of which is the United States Justice Foundation,
Kreep’s local political experience consisted of a contentious term on San Diego’s Human Relations Commission a couple of decades back. His anti-gay, anti-abortion, anti-illegal-immigrant, anti-affirmative-action ideas just didn’t resonate with his fellow commissioners.
Here’s his take on those tumultuous years, via City Beat:
Kreep paints himself as a victim, saying he received death threats and that the city assigned six police officers to protect him at HRC meetings. He also claims that, during the meetings, he was “bombarded with used condoms and pus and blood soaked cotton balls” flung by his opponents.
Last year Kreep was re-assigned to the traffic court for three months following complaints from prosecutors with the City Attorney’s Office about his decisions in some criminal cases and his judicial demeanor. Some lawyers said he could be condescending and short-tempered from the bench.
So you see it’s not just big name politicians and corporate misdeeds in San Diego that contribute to our reputation as a national laughing stock.
Pay Attention to these Community College District Races
While there are no candidates with quite the, uh, flair of Gary Kreep on the local ballot, we do have Donna Woodrum running for a seat on the Community College Board of Trustees.
Under her name on the ballot she’s described as a “Community Volunteer.” I guess that means she isn’t being paid to be secretary/IT director of The San Diego Eagle Forum, which bills itself as “The Home for CONSERVATIVES Who Have No Party.”
The group, according to an article by Claire Trageser, “includes statements on its website declaring homosexuality is a disease that can be cured, that prayer is legal in schools and that Muslims are a threat to America.”
Here’s my favorite quote, via inewsource:
Woodrum and her husband founded Eagle Forum San Diego in 2009, according to her husband’s website gopeprally.org. That same year, they received the Eagle Leaders of the Year award, according to Woodrum’s LinkedIn page. There, she describes the organization as “education-based, but they also encourage their Members and Attendees to run for office or to apply for seats on Boards and Commissions around our county” and says she works to book speakers like Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minnesota, at its events.
Oooooh… Imagine Michele Bachmann speaking at San Diego City College. Wouldn’t that be some great theater?
Donna’s book, The Bible Codes and Your Baby’s Name: Does The Most Popular Book Ever Written Contain Clues to Your Baby’s Name is now discounted on Amazon to $8.99.
Sooo… You just might want to vote for the other name on the ballot for District A, Community College District, Board of Trustees: Maria Neito Senour.
Trust me, there’s no comparison.
The other contested race for Community College Board of Trustees is for District E.
While the candidates in that race are not controversial, I should note that incumbent Peter Zschiesche is running in tandem with Maria Senour. Mr. Zschiesche is also a Founding Director of the Employee Rights Center, which has done great work in providing advocacy regarding workplace issues. especially for disadvantaged and unrepresented workers.
His opponent is Lan Jefferson, whose experience includes serving as a Citizens Equal Opportunity Commissioner for San Diego City, Planning Committee and Redevelopment Project Area Committee Board Member of North Park; Graduate Advisor at UCSD, SDSU and USD; Leadership Enhancement Coordinator for San Diego High Schools; Reading Tutor for Oak Park Elementary School; and Public Library Storyteller in North Park. In addition, Lan is a LEAD San Diego Graduate.
She’s perfectly fine as a candidate. Peter’s done a great job over the years, both at City College and as an activist. You could say he put the “Alt” in Alt-labor in this town.
San Diego School Board
I didn’t even think I was going to write about this contest.
Then UT-San Diego endorsed Amy Redding. Not because she’s necessarily more conservative than incumbent Kevin Beiser, but because she’s their candidate to be the education “gadfly.”
While I acknowledge that having a outlier on the school board can be a good thing, I don’t think it’s the best idea as a basis for electing somebody to office. Scott Barnett and John deBeck both assumed that role after winning office based on their merits and vision.
Also, the unspoken reason for UT-San Diego’s blessing is that Beiser puts the “A” in activist for the Democratic Party. It’s true. There’s just about no liberal/left event in town that doesn’t involve an appearance by Beiser. This tells me two things: a) he’s ambitious and b) he cares about the issues.
Unlike Manchester’s minions, I don’t view activism as a bad thing. It’s payback time: we need to keep Kevin in office.
Judge of the Superior Court
This is another contest I thought I’d pass on commenting about.
Then Ken Gosselin made the news yesterday (again), for all the wrong reasons.
Last spring Gosselin was involved in controversies involving questionable campaign signage and embellishing his resume. Now an ethics complaint has been fled against him for failing to mention his candidacy and relationships with law enforcement agencies prior to being seated on a jury panel.
Gosselin’s campaign signs tout him as “Law Enforcement’s Choice” for the November election.
From UT-San Diego:
In June, Gosselin edged out one of two opponents seeking to fill seat No. 25 on the San Diego Superior Court bench, gaining 31 percent of the votes. He’s now in a runoff with Brad Weinreb, a deputy attorney general, in the Nov. 4 election.
A month after the primary, Gosselin showed up for jury duty in Vista and was questioned along with other potential jurors to serve on a gang case. It wasn’t until the next day, after Gosselin had been seated on the panel, that the defense lawyer learned he was involved in an election.
Debby Kirkwood, a deputy public defender, said Gosselin should have mentioned his relationships with law enforcement and told the judge about his endorsements.
Deputy DA Brad Weinreb’s endorsement by San Diego’s Lincoln Club (among others) makes it difficult for me to get excited about his candidacy. But since City Beat (among others) has paved the way here and bitten the bullet to endorse Weinrab, I suppose you ought to consider voting for him. Or at least not voting for Gosselin.
What Could Go Wrong?
Finally, this, from the Los Angeles Times:
Richard Mirman was named interim publisher and chief executive of the Orange County Register, the publication announced late Monday night.
Mirman is a former casino executive who specialized in marketing at Harrah’s Entertainment in Las Vegas, according to the Register….
…The announcement comes weeks after layoffs hit the Register and Freedom Communications ceased publication of its Los Angeles daily, the Los Angeles Register, five months after it debuted.
On This Day:1947 – Over Rogers Dry Lake in Southern California, pilot Chuck Yeager flew the Bell X-1 rocket plane and became the first person to break the sound barrier 1964 – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his non-violent resistance to racial prejudice in America. He was the youngest person to receive the award. 1972 – “Papa Was A Rolling Stone” was released by the Temptations.
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What about the State Assembly Districts?
Candidate Barbara Decker is running against Assembly Speaker Toni Atkins in the 78th Assembly District.
Is Toni even running or is she just expecting a win? She has raised around $2 million dollars (a real cash cow) in her campaign and she is spending it on other candidates and her party — certainly not her own campaign. Oh wait, she did take a bunch of supporters up to Sacramento on her campaign’s dime to watch her be sworn in as Assembly Speaker.
For those of you who do not know who Barbara Decker is, she is the only alternative to Toni Atkins. She is a fiscal conservative as well as an environmental, green candidate. Barbara has been active in legislative issues for the past 6 years as a volunteer in politics. She wants to keep Sacramento’s hand out of your wallet.
There are five key issues Barbara Decker is most concerned about addressing when she is elected to the State Assembly — Water, Taxes, Education, Jobs and Property Rights (Prop 13). The top item is the hidden gas tax in 2006’s AB32 where in Jan 2015 every driver in California will be impacted by a 15 to 75 cent per gallon gas tax. Toni has the power as Speaker of the Assembly to address AB32’s hidden gas tax. What has she done?
I like the alternative. I am fiscally conservative and socially liberal. Barbara Decker has my vote.
I can only write so fast. Give me a break.
I have written over a dozen stories so far on the November elections and have absolutely no intention of slacking off. I have also solicited nearly that many stories by other writers. Coverage of the Assembly races will come.
FYI–Decker doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell against Atkins. She’s the incumbent Speaker of the Assembly, has a ton of money and polls just about as high in favorability as Todd Gloria with San Diegans. But you knew that already, since you’re associated with the Decker campaign, didn’t you?
And then there’s this tweet….
Elisa Brent @MomsGarage · May 1
#ImpeachObama and #ProsecuteHillary #NeverForgetBenghazi LIES,LIES,LIES
I am not a supporter of the current administration. That has nothing to with our state and our city. I support Dems, Reps and Independents. I will stand up against wrong doings anyday! Just like you — call them out!
We may not agree 100% of the time but we can find common ground on either side of the aisle. We are all travelling down the same road. Sometimes we change lanes to the left or the right but we are moving forward together.
I just joined her campaign within the last two months. She was impressed with my grassroots effort during the recall of Bob Filner which was the 4th largest grassroots effort in U.S. history. I though maybe she might be too conservative for my taste but seriously she is ready to get to work to save my wallet and yours.
Yes, she may be considered the underdog but you know I have a soft spot for the underdog. I worked on Mike Aguirre’s 2013 mayoral campaign. I do not choose a candidate based on their party. I chose the candidate who will help me and my family be able to afford to live in California, specifically San Diego.
Even though I think SD will get it right this time, let’s hope Elisa doesn’t rally her base to reelect the deadbeat Kreeper:
What base is that? I do not have a base. Does home count?
I am an Obecian. We are free spirits. Peace, love and happiness!
Sure… peace, love and conspiracy theories. Have you been dippin in that slough again?
Voting for judges makes no sense whatsoever. Most voters are clueless what qualifies someone,, hence the Judge Kreeps of the world… Its like propositions, if the legislature did their job, and there would be no need for these either.
The League of Women Voters has a fabulous website called SmartVoter.org that helps voters get educated on the propositions and judges. I went to their candidate meet & greet and they really spent a lot of time trying to help educate voters on where they can find info on the judicial races — re-appointments vs elections. Brad Weinreb was the only candidate for judge to show up.
Thanks for your notes! I needed some help filling out my ballot and you’ve framed the issues perfectly.
There’s definitely no comparison between Maria Nieto Senour and Donna Woodrum.
Maria has, for over twenty years, advocated for under-represented students and, indeed, all students, providing them the support they need to enter a trade or move on to a four-year university. She stood very tall in opposition to forces at SDSU, a while back, who didn’t want to give preference to local students. She has supported whole heartedly the work that’s been done to help veterans return to student life. She worked towards allowing community colleges to award bachelor degrees.
She’s a social and political activist who gives to the community on many fronts. She has directed a Master’s degree program in counseling called CBB, a community-based block (classes are held in City Heights and at ECC where their clients live) at SDSU that’s designed to develop counselors who can work not only in society-at-large but in inner-city communities.
She’s a past SDSU outstanding professor with roots in the barrio community in San Antonio and inner-city Detroit. She works for a better world non-stop. Donna Woodrum could never give to our community colleges what Maria Nieto Senour has given and will continue to give.