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San Diego voters see dark skies after mayoral ballot
AP ^ | 7/25/5 | Elliot Spagat

Posted on 07/25/2005 7:34:40 AM PDT by SmithL

When voters cast ballots for mayor Tuesday, they won't be considering campaign promises to open new libraries and parks, add police officers or pave streets.

Candidates trying to replace Dick Murphy after he resigned amid a wave of scandal have nothing but bitter medicine for the nation's seventh-largest city.

Debates are filled with dark talk about filing for bankruptcy, slashing jobs and turning over the city's beleaguered pension fund to a court-appointed trustee.

The political turmoil will likely last long after the ballots are cast. With no one expected to win a majority of votes, the top two finishers in the nonpartisan race could compete in a Nov. 8 runoff.

"What is the matter with San Diego?" a debate moderator asked six contenders in a television studio ticking off a litany of political problems in the city.

"Sometimes I say it's sun poisoning," quipped front-runner Donna Frye, a Democratic councilwoman and surf shop owner.

The election comes as "America's Finest City" is being roiled by uncertainty.

Murphy, a Republican and former judge, left office only seven months into his second term, after a disputed election and amid widening federal investigations of a pension fund that has a deficit of at least $1.37 billion.

The city's failure to complete overdue audits of its finances has hamstrung its ability to borrow money and fueled talk of bankruptcy.

Last week, a jury convicted two councilmen -- one who was filling in as acting mayor -- of federal corruption charges in a failed scheme to repeal San Diego's ban on touching dancers at strip clubs.

The councilmen quickly resigned, leaving one of every four people in this seaside city of 1.3 million without a representative on the City Council.

"Whoever becomes mayor is going to inherit a gigantic mess," said Marjorie Wegner, 61, a former social worker who has been attending campaign debates. "Hopefully we don't need bankruptcy."

Frye, 53, promises to end what she sees as a culture of secrecy at City Hall -- the same platform that nearly carried her to victory in a write-in bid last year. She lost to Murphy only after a judge tossed out more than 5,000 ballots on which voters wrote her name but failed to darken the adjoining bubble.

Frye is the only Democrat among the leading candidates, the only woman and the only opponent of a measure on Tuesday's ballot that aims to keep a Christian war memorial cross on public land.

She has often been on the losing side of lopsided City Council votes. She cast the lone dissenting vote in 2002 on what would become a disastrous decision to enhance city pension benefits.

The wife of legendary surfer Skip Frye and a former clean-water activist is a favorite of environmentalists.

"She's for clean government, clean air, clean environment -- Mrs. Clean," said pollster John Nienstedt Sr., president of Competitive Edge Research & Communication in San Diego. "She's got the left side of the political spectrum."

Still, Frye probably won't win enough votes to avoid a runoff, political analysts said, making it a likely race for the second spot on the runoff ballot between former Police Chief Jerry Sanders and businessman Steve Francis, both Republicans.

Francis, who founded a hospital staffing company, estimated he has poured at least $1.6 million of his own money into the campaign. He has stuck closely to his theme that City Hall needs an outsider to run it like a CEO. His ubiquitous television ads promise, "No New Taxes. No Bankruptcy."

His alternative is slashing up to 10 percent of city jobs, excluding police and fire protection.

"We don't need a mayor who's going to throw in the towel on bankruptcy the first day in office," he said in a debate Thursday, trying to set himself apart from Sanders and Frye, who haven't ruled out bankruptcy.

Francis, 50, got off to a rocky start when he announced his bid in May -- getting chased by television crews after he refused to answer reporters' questions. He has since gained ground with a blizzard of television ads and campaign mailers, some attacking Sanders as a big spender.

Sanders, 55, ran the Police Department from 1993 to 1999 and is making his first run for elected office. He touts himself as a turnaround specialist for his work reviving local United Way and Red Cross chapters.

He insists he won't raise taxes to solve the financial mess. He says bankruptcy is a last resort, only if the city's powerful labor unions refuse to make concessions.

Others in the field of 11 candidates include Republicans Patrick Shea, an attorney who insists bankruptcy is the only way out of the financial problems, and Myke Shelby, a Harley-Davidson motorcycle dealer who has campaigned to save the war memorial cross.

With no state or federal measures on the ballot and many voters on summer vacation, turnout could suffer. More than 65,000 of the city's 600,505 registered voters have already mailed in ballots.

At a recent debate, several candidates looked stumped when a questioner asked what new projects they would launch. It wasn't long ago that the political debate in San Diego was dominated by efforts to build sport stadiums.

"That's not where we live," said Shea, the husband of pension-board whistle-blower Diann Shipione.

"I'd love to run as the mayor of Fantasyland," said Libertarian Richard Rider. "Sadly, I have to run as the mayor of San Diego."

three to get ready

Eleven candidates appear on Tuesday's ballot for mayor of San Diego. If no one wins a majority in the nonpartisan race, the top two finishers will compete in a Nov. 8 runoff. The three leading contenders are:

Donna Frye

AGE: 53

EXPERIENCE: City councilwoman since 2001, surf shop owner. Previously a clean-water activist

PERSONAL: Married to legendary surfer Skip Frye

PARTY: Democratic

PLATFORM: Open government

Jerry Sanders

AGE: 55.

EXPERIENCE: San Diego police chief, 1993-99; former head of United Way of San Diego County

PERSONAL: Married to Rana Sampson. Two adult children

PARTY: Republican

PLATFORM: Seek labor concessions, including higher retirement age and higher employee contributions to pension plan

Steve Francis

AGE: 50.

EXPERIENCE: Co-founder and executive chairman of hospital staffing company AMN Healthcare Inc. Served in the Nevada Legislature in the 1980s

PERSONAL: Married to Gayle Francis. Two children

PARTY: Republican

PLATFORM: Cut city work force up to 10 percent, excluding police and fire personnel. No new taxes, no bankruptcy


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: elections; murphyslaw; sandiego
Almost showtime
1 posted on 07/25/2005 7:34:40 AM PDT by SmithL
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To: SmithL

Jesus Christ!

All they need now is to elect the liberal - San Diego is toast.


2 posted on 07/25/2005 7:44:20 AM PDT by clee1 (We use 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 2 to pull a trigger. I'm lazy and I'm tired of smiling.)
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To: clee1

All they need now is to elect the liberal - San Diego is toast.
-----
Yeah, an open-border liberal. Just what California needs more of...


3 posted on 07/25/2005 7:49:29 AM PDT by EagleUSA (S)
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To: SmithL

Twenty years ago San Diego was forced to build a sewage treatment plant to treat 'effulent' from Tiajuana before the powers that be realized that 85% of the homes in TJ are not connected to a sewer. That had been the metaphore for San Diego ever since. Lots of crap, going nowhere at tax-payer expense.


4 posted on 07/25/2005 7:49:42 AM PDT by pikachu (What if there were no more hypothetical questions?)
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To: SmithL

I find it hard to swallow, that he has supposedly
stolen over 1.3 *Billion* in less than 8 months
in office.

Something stinks here, other than him.


5 posted on 07/25/2005 8:03:45 AM PDT by NickatNite2003
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To: SmithL

Frye is Howard Dean with long hair.

I'm rooting for Francis at this point.


6 posted on 07/25/2005 8:57:57 AM PDT by adam_az (It's the border, stupid!)
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To: EagleUSA

Frye is a lackey of the city unions and a liar.
Let's see if supposedly "red zone" San Diego votes
in this leftist nut. I think San Diego has become
more liberal than people care to admit.

I like Francis, although I live outside the city limits
and can't vote in this election.


7 posted on 07/25/2005 10:27:28 AM PDT by jrp
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To: clee1
Donna's the leading candidate but it's all but certain to go to a November run-off. Sanders, the likely #2 is a RINO. Francis is who the local party is pimping but he's a carpet bagger and looks like a washed-up Nevada politician looking to revitalize his career by buying a mayoral office.

There are actually others running but the media has anointed these three as the "front runners".

MOST IMPORTANT: A YES on Prop A which would transfer our Mt Soledad War Memorial to the National Parks Dept. It's been under fire from an annoyed atheist for . Just last week, days before the election, he got a judge to say it required 2/3rd to pass not the simple majority everyone believed.

8 posted on 07/25/2005 7:36:20 PM PDT by newzjunkey (San Diego: **YES ON A** Protect Mt Soledad War Memoral from annoyed atheists!)
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To: NickAtNite
Are you talking about Murphy? This policy underfunding of the pension started before he became mayor in 2000. It began under another Republican's watch and thanks to city manager Jack McGrory who happens to be backing Sanders.

At this point, however, the deficit is up over 1.3 billion and probably well beyond. They've been stealing money from all manner of other programs for this. The situation hasn't yet reached "rock bottom" and when it does there will probably be more indictments.

9 posted on 07/25/2005 7:41:24 PM PDT by newzjunkey (San Diego: **YES ON A** Protect Mt Soledad War Memoral from annoyed atheists!)
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To: newzjunkey

Yea at first i was worried it wasnt a run off and frye would win but now since theres going to be a runoff frye cant sneak in like she tried to last time. I dont really like francis but im leaning more toward him than the RINO sanders.

Frye will get her butt kicked come runoff time doesnt matter who the republican is.


10 posted on 07/25/2005 7:45:13 PM PDT by SDGOP
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