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Housing crisis tests loyalty to GOP

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Times Staff Writer

Every afternoon, when Karla Schroeder walks her two boys home from school, she takes note of the new real estate signs springing up on neighborhood lawns. These days, they’re not what she’s used to seeing, and she’s not happy about the change.

Along with a great many “For Sale” signs are new ones that say “Foreclosure.” A few weeks ago, she was startled by a bright orange sign that said “Auction.”

The national downturn in the housing market has arrived in Loudoun County, a once-largely rural area on the western fringes of Washington that has become one of the fastest-growing regions in the United States. In addition to the economic effect, it’s stirring anxiety and discontent that have begun to change the climate in which people consider politics -- especially some Republicans.

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“I used to consider myself a Republican, but now I consider myself an independent,” Schroeder said.

The shift is not confined to one county in the mid-Atlantic region. Similar rumblings of discontent can be heard among GOP voters in fast-growing areas across the country that are being hit by the housing crunch, including parts of Florida and Nevada.

For Republican strategists, the change is particularly troubling because, as recently as 2004, high-growth exurban areas like Loudoun County were fertile ground for GOP organizers, who rallied conservative volunteers from churches and community groups to turn out new voters. It was primarily in such areas that Republican strategists beat Democrats at their own game -- registration and voter turnout.

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In 2004, Loudoun County voted to reelect President Bush by 56%, compared with 44% for Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.). The nine-member County Board of Supervisors consists of six Republicans, one Democrat and two independents, both of whom are former Republicans.

With local elections scheduled for today, however, the ranks of independents and Democrats appear to be growing. There are as many lawn placards supporting Democrats as Republicans in Schroeder’s neighborhood.

The shift away from the GOP is partly the result of more liberal voters moving into the county from Washington and Democratic suburbs. But the housing crisis is also playing a substantial role, eroding the loyalty of some longtime Republicans.

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As Schroeder assays today’s vote for members of the county board, she says that for the first time in her life, she is considering voting for a Democrat.

And one of the things she’s unhappy about is those foreclosure signs and the threat she sees in them to her family’s financial security.

“I don’t like seeing that,” Schroeder said recently. “We think about moving, and I worry about whether we could sell our house.”

Scott York, chairman of the county board, reflects the changing political climate. Elected as a Republican in 1995, he left the party in 2003 after clashing with fellow Republicans about how to deal with the area’s explosive growth.

“In the past, independents used to break Republican,” he said, “but that’s not happening so much anymore.”

York expects the change to show up in the balloting for supervisors. “The speculation is that you’ll probably have a huge change on the board,” he said.

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Some think the shift in voter sentiment -- here and in other high-growth bastions of Republican strength across the country -- may carry over into next year’s presidential campaign.

From 2000 to 2006, the population of Loudoun County rose to 269,000 from 170,000 -- an increase of nearly 60%. That made it the fourth-fastest-growing county in the country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The median home price was also soaring. In 2005, it hit an all-time high of $506,000.

Now, not only are prices slipping but foreclosure rates are rising. Nationwide, foreclosure filings have about doubled but in high-growth exurbs like Loudoun County, they have escalated far faster.

In 2005, the county recorded 12 deeds of foreclosure. In 2006, that number rose to 139. And in the first nine months of 2007, County Clerk Gary Clemens filed 643 deeds of foreclosure -- a 50-fold increase in two years.

The story is similar in other high-growth regions. The highest-growth county in the U.S. -- Flagler County in Florida, north of Daytona Beach -- has seen its foreclosure rate triple in the last year.

In 10th-ranking Lyon County, Nev., where most residents commute to Reno or Carson City, 132 foreclosure deeds were filed in the first nine months of the year. Last year, 19 were filed.

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Charles Lawson, chairman of the Lyon County Democratic Party, says home prices have dropped as much as 30% as commuters struggle with higher gasoline prices and try to move closer to their jobs.

Of those who are staying, he says he has seen a distinct uptick in voters switching registration from Republican to Democrat.

“We have people converting,” Lawson said, adding that they often cite miserly spending on roads and schools by the staunchly Republican county government.

“Younger folks with children are really coming around,” he said.

Although the housing crisis is hitting hard in California, it is unlikely to have the same political effect. One reason is that in recent national elections, California has not been a battleground state. And none of its counties ranked in the top-40 high-growth counties from 2000 to 2006.

Tom Slade, who helped build the Florida Republican Party and is a former state party chairman, knows firsthand the anxieties stirred by the housing downturn, and he thinks the political fallout could be significant.

The “For Sale” sign in the frontyard of Slade’s sprawling house on the outskirts of Jacksonville, Fla., has been there for the last 18 months without attracting a buyer, even though the house is listed well below its appraised value.

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“How deep, bad and big this monster will turn out to be is not clear yet, but it has the potential to turn wickedly mean,” Slade said. “Who gets the biggest thumping is anyone’s guess, but I would guess it would be the Republicans since we’ve had control of the executive branch.”

In Virginia, that’s what Democrat Jeanne West is hoping. She’s running against Eugene Delgaudio, the longtime Republican representative on the Loudoun County board whose district includes Schroeder’s neighborhood.

“I think my chances are good. I think people are tired of him,” West said.

Delgaudio is best known as an opponent of illegal immigration. He championed an ordinance restricting how many unrelated adults could share a home -- a measure seen as targeting immigrants. It won him support across the county, including from Schroeder, the mother of two from Sterling who now considers herself an independent. She’s rethinking her support.

Schroeder, who lives a few blocks from West, met the candidate on the street recently, and West made her case.

“I’ve lived here 35 years,” West said, looking at Schroeder’s two boys, in the first and fourth grade. She noted that Delgaudio’s children didn’t go to public schools. “He really has no stake in the schools. He even voted against” the community pool, West said.

Schroeder looked concerned. “We go there all the time,” she said.

Delgaudio has a record of supporting new residential development. “Every house that’s built out there raises my taxes,” Schroeder fumed. “I don’t appreciate getting my assessment telling me that my house is worth $500,000 and I’m paying taxes on that.”

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Schroeder did not promise to support West. But she said she would consider it, and that’s a big change.

Thom Beres, chairman of the Loudoun County Democrats, says interest in the Democratic Party has been on the rise for some time, but it has accelerated recently as the housing crisis has aggravated long-standing worries about traffic congestion, higher property assessments and paying for new schools.

Those issues were creating tensions between slow-growth and fast-growth Republicans even before the housing meltdown. Now the tensions are worse, and a substantial number of voters seem to be edging away from the GOP and toward the Democrats.

“The trends are in our favor,” Beres said.

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maura.reynolds@latimes.com

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