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Roberti Revels in Hard-Fought Victory Over Rowen

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Smiling with relief, state Senate Leader David A. Roberti sat in his new San Fernando Valley office Wednesday and reflected on how he dodged the Last Hurrah by spending $1.5 million and fielding an army of campaign workers to beat back a strong challenge from a Republican woman.

The veteran liberal Democrat, one of California’s most powerful politicians, barely survived a bitter clash with novice candidate Carol Rowen, whom he outspent almost 9 to 1. Roberti won 42.4% of the vote to Rowen’s 38.7%

Roberti’s special-election win in the Valley’s 20th Senate District allows him to keep his Senate career alive even though his current, Hollywood-based district was erased by reapportionment earlier this year. He said he found the experience to be rejuvenating.

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“I even walked precincts. I haven’t done that in a long time,” he said as he sat at his desk in the Van Nuys State Building.

“I recommend it to anyone who holds public office. . . . It’s a democratizing experience,” he said.

Rowen’s gender was “an enormous advantage,” he said, in a year when there was a “mega-trend” in favor of woman candidates in the wake of the controversial Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings.

“It was the ‘Year of the Woman,’ second to none. I think that’s great. I’m just glad it didn’t happen here,” he said.

The Valley seat was open because its previous occupant, Alan Robbins, resigned last year and pleaded guilty to federal corruption charges. The 20th District covers Van Nuys and other south-central parts of the Valley.

Roberti campaign aides conceded Wednesday that they were deeply worried during the campaign that Roberti’s lengthy incumbency, anti-abortion views and newcomer status in the district would combine to sink him in the race with Rowen.

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“If she had run a halfway decent campaign, she would have beat us,” said one adviser. “We were lucky.”

Rowen tried to turn the election into a referendum on abortion, emphasizing her support for legalized abortion and warning that Roberti would push for abortion restrictions in California if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns the landmark Roe vs. Wade ruling. A devout Catholic, Roberti opposes abortion on religious grounds.

Rowen also tried to capitalize on widespread voter antipathy toward incumbents and the Legislature, painting him as a political boss and an apple-polisher for special interests that have contributed millions of dollars to his campaigns.

But Roberti said that despite the anti-incumbent sentiment, 20th District voters seemed to want a legislator with experience.

He criticized Rowen as a one-issue candidate and attributed his victory in part to more than 330 volunteer workers who turned out to help him on Election Day. He also praised his own willingness to hustle campaign money and votes in the toughest race he has faced since being elected to the Senate in 1971.

But under voter-approved term limits, he must leave the upper house in 1994.

Roberti said he does not have any other lawmaker in mind to succeed him as Senate president pro tem in 1994 and is instead concentrating on the upcoming state budget negotiations with Gov. Pete Wilson.

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He also said he plans to begin looking for a house to buy in the Valley, but that he will not sell his Tudor-style home in pricey Los Feliz as long as his 88-year-old father lives there.

Asked what he will do when he leaves the Senate, Roberti noted that he is a lawyer and “that’s probably what I’d do.”

He said his wife, June, told him in no uncertain terms that the 20th District campaign “is my last one, ever.”

But he quickly added, with an expansive smile: “However, it’s a new morning after an election . . . and I’m enjoying this win.”

Roberti’s tenure as president pro tem, a post he has held a record 11 1/3 years, seems secure for the time being, even though he appeared weakened by his narrow win over Rowen.

Democratic and Republican sources in Sacramento, who spoke on condition of anonymity, agreed that he probably will remain unchallenged if he aggressively raises campaign funds for Democrats in November and in the 1994 election cycle. Roberti is a premier fund-raiser, but the campaign against Rowen cut deeply into his reserves.

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“The question is,” said a GOP strategist, “how wounded is David Roberti now and how do other members of the Democratic caucus feel this is going to affect their ability to get elected this year and two years hence?”

“The bottom line is: Who is best at making (individual Democrats’) reelection chances better?” the strategist said.

Times staff writer Carl Ingram contributed to this story

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