Voters weren't
energized:
Make fall governor's race what primary wasn't
A Register-Guard Editorial
Thursday, May 18, 2006
In an editorial board interview
before Tuesday's primary election, Jim Hill was asked whether he thought Oregon
would be better off if Republican Kevin Mannix had been elected governor four
years ago. Hill, a Democrat, had to think for a while before saying "no."
Hill's reticence encapsulated the mood in both major parties. Gov. Ted
Kulongoski won the Democratic primary with 54 percent of the vote, the lowest
percentage in memory for an incumbent governor seeking his party's nomination.
Ron Saxton won the Republican primary with 43 percent, far short of a majority,
surviving an onslaught of negative campaigning by Mannix, the second-place
finisher.
These tepid showings came in a low-turnout election — 36 percent in Lane County.
Statewide turnout may prove to be the lowest ever for a primary election in
Oregon.
Voters simply weren't energized by their choices. Hill, a former treasurer, and
Lane County Commissioner Peter Sorenson sensed the lack of enthusiasm for
Kulongoski. Both challengers fell short, but not before peeling away
constituencies that helped elect Kulongoski in 2002 - notably, public employees'
unions.
Former legislator and state Republican chairman Mannix, making his fourth run
for statewide office, was judged a spent force, receiving only 30 percent of the
vote. On his way to defeat, however, Mannix and his supporters smeared former
Portland School Board Chairman Saxton as a flip-flopping pal of former Gov. Neil
Goldschmidt. Saxton will have to clean some mud from his shoes before he can
turn his attention to running against Kulongoski.
Both Saxton and Kulongoski will have to consolidate their bases of support while
reaching beyond them. Saxton moved rightward to gain the GOP nomination, and now
must soften his message without alienating voters who supported the other
Republican candidates. Kulongoski will need to repair his relations with labor
without becoming anyone's captive.
A Kulongoski-Saxton race could be more elevating than Tuesday's preliminaries.
Kulongoski has a brisk economic wind in his sails which, he will plausibly
argue, would allow him to steer a bolder course during a second term. Saxton
will attempt to persuade Oregonians that after a string of four Democratic
governors stretching back 20 years, it's time for new thinking in Salem. The
general election campaign could provide what the primary did not - a discussion
of Oregon's future, not just its past, and of the state's promise as well as its
problems.
The two nominees can expect to contend with state Sen. Ben Westlund of Bend, a
former Republican running as an independent. Tuesday's results, and the
sour-tasting campaign that produced them, are undoubtedly encouraging to
Westlund. Voters are waiting for someone to engage their imaginations - if a
candidate can do that, the party label won't matter.
The only other statewide race will be a runoff for a position on the Oregon
Supreme Court. Jack Roberts, a former labor commissioner and candidate for
governor, won a plurality Tuesday. He was the only candidate with statewide name
familiarity, he had strong financial backing from advocates of limits on civil
lawsuits, and he was the only choice for conservative voters who chose to see
the race through a liberal vs. conservative lens.
Virginia Linder, an appeals court judge, spent far less to finish in second
place, but may pick up the support of trial lawyers who backed the third
candidate, Pendleton attorney Gene Hallman, in the primary. It's sure to be a
hard-fought contest that will set a spending record for Oregon judicial races. .
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