Feinstein and Sen. Bergeson Among 6 Women Filing for Top State Posts : Politics: The only woman holding statewide office in California now is Secretary of State March Fong Eu.
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With six highly visible women leading the way, the first formal step toward what may be a major change in California in the 1990s was taken Friday as all candidates for the June 5 primary had to file their declarations of candidacy or be left off the ballot.
As expected, former San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein will be on the Democratic ballot for governor against Atty. Gen. John K. Van de Kamp and several lesser-known candidates.
With the aid of a much-talked-about TV ad, Feinstein moved ahead of Van de Kamp by 19 points in the most recent Los Angeles Times Poll, a dramatic turnaround from the Times’ December survey, when she trailed him by 10 points.
Darry Sragow, a top Feinstein adviser, said the new poll has generated so many queries from volunteers and potential donors that the campaign will move from its cramped Santa Monica headquarters to a more spacious office in the Mid-Wilshire area.
“All of a sudden, Dianne is like the Miata,” said Sragow, referring to a new sports car that is so popular there are long waiting lists. “There is enormous interest.”
Kathleen Brown, daughter of former Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown and sister of former Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., will also be on the June Democratic ballot in a move to launch a statewide political career that is drawing interest from all over the country.
Brown faces no serious opposition for her party’s nomination for state treasurer.
Her opponent in November could be a woman if former U.S. Treasurer Angela (Bay) Buchanan pulls off an upset in June of incumbent Republican Treasurer Thomas Hayes.
State Sen. Marian Bergeson of Newport Beach is also trying to increase the number of women in top political office by seeking the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor. Her major opponent on the June ballot will be state Sen. John Seymour of Anaheim.
Two-term incumbent Lt. Gov. Leo T. McCarthy will have no serious opposition on the Democratic side.
Currently, the only woman holding statewide office in California is Secretary of State March Fong Eu. She has filed her candidacy for June and could have her first major female opponent for the job she has held since 1974 if Los Angeles City Councilwoman Joan Milke Flores wins the GOP nomination for secretary of state in June.
Flores is opposed by Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Gordon Levy.
One woman who bailed out of a political fight for top office is Insurance Commissioner Roxani Gillespie. She was appointed to the job by Gov. George Deukmejian. But when the voters passed Proposition 103 in 1988, they rewrote state law to call for an elected insurance commissioner.
In trying to implement the Proposition 103 reforms, Gillespie has faced severe criticism and has decided not to run for the office, leaving the Republicans with no candidate with the potential of the major Democratic candidates for the job.
Reform advocate Tom Skornia and insurance agent Wes Banister will fight for the GOP nomination for insurance commissioner.
State Sen. John Garamendi of Walnut Grove probably has the best name recognition of the Democratic candidates for the job. He ran a strong race for state controller in 1986, losing to Gray Davis, who will have no serious opposition for the controller’s job this year.
Garamendi’s top opponents for insurance commissioner are Conway Collis, a member of the State Board of Equalization, Walter Zelman, the former head of California Common Cause, television commentator Bill Press and activist-lawyer Ray Bourhis.
A battle for attorney general is shaping up as San Francisco Dist. Atty. Arlo Smith takes on Los Angeles Dist. Atty. Ira Reiner in the Democratic primary. The winner will face former Long Beach Rep. Daniel Lungren, a Republican who helped revise the federal Criminal Code while in Congress.
In the only other statewide office, incumbent Bill Honig has no serious opposition for superintendent of public instruction.
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