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Impeached Arizona Governor Certified to Run for Senator

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

Evan Mecham, impeached as Arizona’s governor in 1988, officially earned a ballot spot Friday as an independent candidate seeking to unseat Republican U.S. Sen. John McCain.

The 68-year-old Mecham was certified for the ballot when a judge dismissed McCain’s legal challenge to his candidacy.

Most political analysts believe Mecham clouds McCain’s prospects of winning a second term. Although McCain was tainted by the national savings and loan scandal, he was a heavy favorite to defeat his Democratic challenger, Phoenix community activist Claire Sargent. Mecham now will battle McCain for the support of conservatives, potentially splitting that vote.

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McCain was one of the “Keating Five,” a group of senators alleged to have improperly interfered with an investigation into the failure of the Lincoln Savings & Loan Assn., owned by Arizona businessman Charles H. Keating Jr. After an extensive investigation by the Senate Ethics Committee, McCain received a reprimand for using bad judgment.

As a Republican, Mecham won the governorship in a three-way race in 1986. But he was removed from office in 1988 after the state Senate found he had obstructed justice by trying to thwart a state investigation of a threat allegedly made against a grand jury witness. It also found he misused money from a so-called protocol fund by lending $80,000 to his auto dealership.

He lost a comeback bid in the 1990 Republican gubernatorial primary. He decided to launch his independent Senate candidacy in late August after a draft movement for him organized by a Phoenix lawyer generated a favorable response.

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