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Jagels' retirement profiled by AP Behind the scenes of the UC Merced deal: Politico Coffeehouse brings Florez, Parras together $500 million for UC Merced: Costa and Cardoza's "ask" in health care bill Costa: "yes" vote begets UC Merced med school Fuller likely to run for state Senate Costa, undecided on health care, negotiating for Valley McCarthy to appear on CNN Parra vs. Florez: It's on! McCarthy draws criticism from conservative wing May 07 June 07 July 07 August 07 September 07 October 07 November 07 December 07 January 08 February 08 March 08 April 08 May 08 June 08 July 08 August 08 September 08 October 08 November 08 December 08 January 09 February 09 March 09 April 09 May 09 June 09 July 09 August 09 September 09 October 09 November 09 Get e-mail updates from this blog, and download a PDF to print on the go with the Politics, Anyone Printcast.
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Pete Parra and Fran Florez will face off in the Dem primary for the state Assembly's 30th District seat.
Question for the day: Who'll win, and why?
Bonus content! A little background for the uninitiated: Kern's long-running Parra/Florez feud started eons ago. Pete Parra and Dean Florez, Fran's son, were once allies. They had a falling out, though I've never heard exactly why. Dean Florez went on to become a state legislator; he's now termed out and making a run for Lt. Gov. His former staffer, Michael Rubio, successfully knocked Parra from his county supervisor's seat. Rubio is now running for Florez's state Senate seat. Parra's daughter, Nicole, went on to win three terms in the state Assembly. Before terming out there and launching a Sacramento consultancy, she shunned fellow Dems and endorsed Republican Danny Gilmore for her former post. Opponent? Fran Florez, Dean's mother. Gilmore won, though he's expected to quit after his first term. Nicole's father and Dean's mother will now face off in the June primary.
-- Gretchen Wenner, staff writer
Conservative R's must be getting out the message to pile on Kevin McCarthy for donating to a centrist R candidate (endorsed by the NRA, btw) in a New York congressional race. First we got the release (pasted in below) from the local chapter of the California Republican Assembly, sent early Monday. Then today, our Opinion editor got an e-mail from a woman grousing about the same issue. (For another perspective, here's a blog post from an area NPR reporter on endorsements and a Washington Post blog on whether, with a Palin vs Gingrich divide, the special election is a litmus test for 2012.) Here's what's come in so far: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
“The Conscience of the Republican Party”
Here's the email:
Subject: Mr. Price, you may remember me from post-9/11.... ...
Here are stories e-mail links to: New York Post endorsement of Hoffman The Hill story includes this graf mentioning Kevin: Just 17 members — about 10 percent of the GOP conference — have written checks to Scozzafava’s campaign. They include House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.), National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) Chairman Pete Sessions (Texas) and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who is in charge of recruiting candidates to run next year.
-- Gretchen Wenner, staff writer
Jean Fuller and two other Republican state Assembly members have authored their own water bill, the Capitol Weekly reported.
Here's the text of CW blurb:
Assembly Republicans, unhappy with the water-reform package authored by the Senate Leader Darrell Steinberg, introduced their own water plan that they said would curb the authority over groundwater monitoring contained in the Senate plan.
The bill, AB 1 7x, was introduced hours after a closed-door meeting Monday of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Republican and Democratic leaders of both houses. During the meeting, Republicans said they were unhappy over the regulatory powers that the Steinberg bill authorized for illegal diversions, including up to $5,000-per-day fines. Republicans said the provisions were particularly difficult for small farmers in the delta.
The authors of the bill are three the Assembly's Republican negotiators on the water conference committee - Jean Fuller of Bakersfield, Jim Nielsen of Yolo and Kevin Jefferies of Riverside.
The Republicans, which deals with policy and not fiscal issues, was introduced on the same day that legislative hearings began on the Steinberg bill, SB 1 7x, which was the product of months of negotiations between water interests and environmental groups. That bill seeks to expedite and stabilize water deliveries while providing enough water to protect the environment of the delta.
I spoke briefly this morning with first term Hanford City Councilman David Thomas. He confirmed he plans to run for California's 16th Senate District seat. So far the only candidate who has confirmed he's running — and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for the fight — is Kern County Supervisor Michael Rubio. Hoping to talk to Thomas more in a bit. While political types might savor the idea of an Assembly race between a Parra and a Florez, Pete Parra said Friday that potential drama may be one reason he DOESN’T run for the 30th District post. “That’s one of the reasons I hesitate,” Parra, a former Kern County supervisor, said. “I don’t want to bring their family and our family into that situation. It’s not healthy.” Parra is considering running for the seat his daughter, Nicole Parra, held from 2002 to 2008 if current incumbent Assemblyman Danny Gilmore, R-Hanford, does not. Pete Parra’s a Democrat but supported Gilmore for the seat in 2008 and continues to back him. He’d potentially face former Shafter City Councilwoman Fran Florez in the June 2010 Democratic primary; Florez has filed intent-to-run papers. She lost to Gilmore in 2008. Gilmore hasn’t announced publicly whether he will seek a second two-year term. According to the Fresno Bee, he released a statement Thursday saying that while the filing deadline to run is not until March, “I would probably not seek reelection if I had to make that decision today.” Gilmore did not return calls from The Californian Thursday and Friday. In a story published last Sunday, he told The Californian he’s had a really tough time dealing with the fallout of the state’s budget troubles and Sacramento’s grueling partisan politics. Pete Parra said he’ll probably make his decision in a couple weeks. What he needs to figure out, he said, is whether he’d have the needed support locally and in Sacramento, if he really wants more time away from his growing family (grandkids are in the picture now), and if he wants to be part of more Parra vs. Florez drama. (It’s a long story. Suffice it to say Nicole Parra and Fran Florez’s son, state Sen. Dean Florez, D-Shafter, haven’t liked each other nor gotten along for a long time). Oh, and there’s the little fact that Pete Parra doesn’t live in the 30th District, which includes a lot of northwestern Kern County plus the Arvin and Lamont area and parts of Bakersfield. No problem, Parra said. He can move there, just like he moved into the 5th Supervisorial District to run for and hold that office. Parra said if he did run it would be to tackle job creation, water and economic development issues in the economically struggling district. He’s been serving on the California Workforce investment Board, which assists the governor on workforce development issues, and the California Partnership for the San Joaquin Valley, which promotes economic development. A Sacramento man has qualified a...unique...ballot measure to collect signatures for the 2010 ballot. The 2010 Marriage Protection Act would protect marriage — by outlawing divorce in California. Secretary of State Debra Bowen just certified it today. John Marcotte needs the signatures of 694,354 voters to get the measure on the ballot. He's got a slick website that adopted the blue and yellow theme colors from the sucessful Yes on 8 campaign of Nov. 2008. But, as the Huffington Post notes and a video for the measure sarcastically states, Marcotte isn't really prompting the abolishment of divorce. It's his opinion that divorce is a bigger threat to marriage than gay marriage. - James Burger, Californian staff writer Yes, we've heard the rumors too.
The California Target Book's Allan Hoffenblum has reported in his subscription Hot Sheet e-letter that Assemblyman Danny Gilmore won't be seeking re-election.
Hoffenblum told us he heard it from two reliable sources. We have calls in to Gilmore and his staffers and hope to have it confirmed or denied by the end of the day.
Gilmore's frustration with Sacramento was made clear in a piece by (supposedly retired, ha!) Dianne Hardisty in Sunday's Californian.
If the news is true, this means even more political opportunities (and shuffling) in 2010, which is turning out to be a fun-to-watch season for political junkies.
Fran Florez, Dem, has already filed papers to run for Gilmore's seat. If he's out, who will step up from the Republican side?
-- Gretchen Wenner, staff writer
Our former opinion page editor, Dianne Hardisty, wrote a great piece for us that ran Sunday on Assemblyman Danny Gilmore's tough first year representing the 30th District. Here's the top of her piece and a link to the full story. The state budget was awash in red ink and legislators were bitterly battling over program cuts this spring when two Bakersfield mothers walked into Danny Gilmore's Sacramento office. One mother pushed a frail young boy in a wheelchair. The other was accompanied by her autistic daughter. They begged the first-term Republican assemblyman from Hanford not to cut critical medical services for their children and others like them. When the mothers left, "I closed my office door and cried," Gilmore recently recalled, noting that during the height of the budget battles, "every 20 to 30 minutes I had people coming in pleading with me not to cut programs." Gilmore is no stranger to state government. He served more than three decades as an officer with the California Highway Patrol. And he is no stranger to making tough decisions. Before retiring from the CHP, he was the assistant chief of the Fresno district. But what he calls the "horrid" cuts he and other lawmakers have had to make to education, fire and public safety, plus his frustration with partisan bickering and Democrats' response to California's economic problems, have driven Gilmore to prayer. Here's the full story. Rumors have been swirling about state Sen. Roy Ashburn’s future political aspirations since he’s termed out next year. After a quick phone conversation with him, here’s what we know: Running for 2nd District Kern County supervisor? False. “I've never even talked with anyone about that at all,” he said. Running for Rep. Jim Costa's congressional seat? Another false. “I'm an active candidate for the Board of Equalization,” he said. “As far as I know I can't run for two offices at the same time.” So that's a no, no and yes, to the Board of Equalization. “But I love all the rumors,” he said. - Californian columnist Lois Henry Bakersfield businessman Stan Ellis said Thursday he’s considering running for either Jean Fuller’s Assembly seat or Roy Ashburn’s state Senate post. Ellis, majority owner of the Bakersfield Jam and about a dozen other businesses, said he’s been lobbied by locals and consultants in Sacramento to run in the 32nd Assembly District GOP primary. Ellis lost to Fuller in the 32nd primary in 2006. “I’m frustrated because I feel we need stronger candidates,” Ellis said. “Sacramento needs someone that will fight, and I mean really fight.” He said he wouldn’t necessarily take himself out of the Assembly running if Fuller seeks re-election. Ellis said one reservation is that he worries he’d make for a “poor politician” because he’s also frustrated at the political system and “I don’t know that I would think with a clear head.” He said he doesn’t like how people promise the world when they run for office and then after they’re elected, bow to party lines or special interest groups. But Ellis said he’d make for a “great public servant.” “I’m bombarded every day with new regulations and I believe in a part-time legislature,” Ellis said. “And I wouldn’t take a salary until the budget is balanced.” So far in the 32nd Assembly District race, Fuller hasn’t announced whether she will run for re-election while two fellow Bakersfield Republicans, Kern High School District Trustee Ken Mettler and psychologist Dean Haddock have filed intent-to- run papers. Democrat Virginia McClellan-Rodriguez has also filed. In the 18th Senate District, Fuller and former Assemblyman Bill Maze, R-Visalia, have filed a statement of intention to run. So has Democrat Carter Pope of Lake Isabella. - Government editor Christine Bedell I finally heard from Dean Haddock about his potential run for the state Assembly. In an e-mail sent Wednesday evening, the Bakersfield psychologist said he filed intent-to-run papers for the 32nd District Republican primary to be prepared if incumbent Jean Fuller, R-Bakersfield, doesn’t run for a third and final term. When he ran for Kern County supervisor in 2006, Haddock said, he filed three months before the primary and it wasn’t enough time to generate the needed support. Haddock noted he came in second in a group of five candidates. (Mike Maggard won). Obviously responding to my story in Wednesday’s paper that quoted local political observers as saying Haddock was a weak candidate and unqualified for state office, Haddock laid out his experience in his e-mail. (Haddock did not return my calls Tuesday for the Wednesday story). Haddock wrote that he was elected to the Republican Central Committee last year, is a Bakersfield planning commissioner and has served on the Kern County Work Force Investment Board for three years. Haddock said he’s also done community work including as a volunteer reserve sheriff’s deputy and as a probable cause hearing officer for almost 20 years. “I have also helped the people of our community with parenting, marriage, civics and healthcare advice in my volunteer daily one-minute radio segments ‘Living Right and Free with Dr. Dean Haddock’ on KNZR AM 1560 the past three years, as well as helping families through interviews and articles with your newspaper for the past 25 years,” Haddock wrote. He said if he runs for Assembly he will focus on promoting job creation and growing the economy, reforming state government and keeping the streets safe. “Too many businesses are leaving the state and too many people are losing their jobs,” Haddock wrote. “I am not a career politician; I am a small business owner. I will make it easier for more companies to invest in California creating new jobs by limiting over-regulation and taxation of businesses that create jobs. “I will end business as usual in California politics, passing common-sense reforms to stop wasteful spending and hold bureaucrats accountable for how they spend our tax dollars.” Fuller has not announced her political intentions for next year. Kern High School District Trustee Ken Mettler has said he will run in the Republican primary for the seat if Fuller does not. - Government editor Christine Bedell Add this to the mounting pile of evidence Jean Fuller is not running for a third Assembly term: Local psychologist Dean Haddock has filed an intent to run for her 32nd Assembly District seat, according to the California Secretary of State's office. Haddock and Fuller have the same campaign consultant, Mark Abernathy. I haven't reached Haddock yet but the phone number he listed in his intent to run papers is to Abernathy's firm, Western Pacific Research, so he's still in that camp, obviously. Haddock ran for county supervisor in 2006; he lost to then-Bakersfield City Councilman Mike Maggard. City Councilman Ken Weir, another Abernathy guy, appointed Haddock to the Bakersfield Planning Commission this year. Another potential 32nd Assembly District candidate is Kern High School District Trustee Ken Mettler. He's filed an intent to run but has said he's waiting to see what Fuller does because he wouldn't challenge Fuller. Fuller is considering running for the state Senate seat being vacated by the terming-out Roy Ashburn. Last week she said she'll think about what to do after she gets some policy work done. - Government editor Christine Bedell
I just caught wind of this story from The Hill. Interesting: Kevin McCarthy tried to recruit the "Miracle on the Hudson" pilot for Congress, but failed. Here's the top; below's a link: No surprises at this morning's press conference: Zack Scrivner announced he'll go for the 2nd District County Supervisor's seat.
In the cute-but-useless information category, it's his son Zachary's 3rd birthday today.
Zack Scrivner sent out a press release Sunday announcing a press conference Monday. Will this be the 2nd district county supervisor's seat? Perhaps the location is a clue... Here's today's release:
October 4, 2009 |