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ELECTIONS CONGRESS : Gallegly Far Outdistances Rivals in Campaign Contributions

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Rep. Elton Gallegly (R-Simi Valley) has amassed nearly $121,000 in campaign contributions to bolster his reelection bid, while none of his potential rivals have raised even the $1,336 filing fee to qualify for the ballot.

Gallegly, who plans to seek a fifth term, raised $93,546 in the last six months of 1993, according to financial reports filed with the Federal Elections Commission.

Gallegly’s receipts included $14,000 from special-interest political action committees. The Lockheed Employees PAC, Sunkist PAC, Employees of Pacific Enterprises PAC and Professional Insurance Agents PAC each gave Gallegly $1,000 or more.

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Gallegly, who spent $862,061 to defeat a challenge from Democrat Anita Perez Ferguson in 1992, has always said he will raise and spend as much money as needed to win.

The fund-raising prowess of the incumbent Republican prompted a strikingly bleak assessment of a Democrat’s chances at an upset in the 23rd Congressional District that covers all of Ventura County except for most of Thousand Oaks.

“If money talks, we don’t have a chance,” said Hank Starr, chairman of the Ventura County Democratic Central Committee.

So far, Gallegly’s two Republican challengers and one Democratic opponent have not raised the $5,000 that triggers a requirement to file campaign finance reports. Nor have they raised enough for the filing fee to get their names on the ballot.

Gallegly’s lone Democratic challenger, Frank Stephenson, a 53-year-old college placement consultant from Ojai, said he has yet to raise any money for his campaign.

“If ideas mean anything, then we have a chance,” he said. “If it’s just about money, who knows?”

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Stephenson said he hopes to collect 3,000 signatures to avoid paying the $1,336 filing fee. He said he has collected several hundred so far.

Republican candidate William Clifford Winter, a 38-year-old nurse’s assistant, said he also has not raised any money.

“I was out of work for awhile,” he said. “Right now I’m more focused on paying the rent. But I’m not giving up.”

Somis resident Charles Russo, the other Republican candidate in the race, could not be reached for comment.

Congressional challengers have been much more active in the 24th Congressional District, which represents most of Thousand Oaks, part of the San Fernando Valley and Malibu.

Richard Sybert, a former top aide to Republican Gov. Pete Wilson, has loaned his campaign treasury $409,290 of his own money to challenge Rep. Anthony C. Beilenson (D-Woodland Hills).

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Sybert reported $404,859 in campaign cash on hand but owed himself $405,816 as of Dec. 31, according to campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Elections Commission. In all, Sybert’s debts totaled $430,000.

Beilenson reported a cash total of $68,389 at the end of the year and a debt of $50,000. Beilenson remains unchallenged in the Democratic primary.

Sybert’s campaign treasury dwarfs that of his two challengers for the GOP nomination in the June primary--Robert K. Hammer and Mark Boos Benhard. Hammer, a Newbury Park banking consultant, reported a cash total of $35,182, but he has loaned his campaign $51,945. Benhard, an Agoura public relations consultant, had nearly $10,000 cash on hand.

Benhard said Sybert, who only recently moved to the 24th District, is using his money to try and “scare other candidates out of the race.”

“But it doesn’t scare me,” Benhard said. “We’re not trying to buy ourselves a seat in Congress. We’re trying to earn it through a grass-roots effort.”

Though Hammer loaned his campaign $51,945, he said it was made at a great sacrifice to his family. “I’m not wealthy,” he said.

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Sybert, who plans to formally announce his candidacy next week, defended his large campaign loan.

“I’m putting together enough money to run a campaign to beat Beilenson,” he said, noting that Beilenson spent about $800,000 in 1992 to defeat his Republican opponent, former Assemblyman Tom McClintock of Thousand Oaks.

Beilenson, who is seeking his 10th term in Congress, said he hoped not to spend more than $250,000 in his reelection bid. But he said he is prepared to raise as much as $1 million if necessary.

“I hope to spend a great deal less than that,” he said. “But that will depend on what we’re up against. If Sybert wins the Republican primary and he has a great deal of money, we will be forced to spend as much.”

Beilenson raised a total of $55,239 from individuals during the last six months of 1993. As a matter of principle, he refuses to accept contributions from special-interest political action committees.

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