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4 Crowd Race for Republican Nomination

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Assemblywoman Paula Boland (R-Granada Hills) and businessman Robert Oltman were considered front-runners for the Republican nomination in the 21st State Senate District when retiring state Sen. Newt Russell threw them a curveball: He endorsed their opponent Wilbert Smith.

The endorsement from Russell has the potential to turn the contest into a three-way race if perennial candidate Smith, director of community relations for Gov. Pete Wilson, can parlay it into campaign donations needed to spread the word to Republican voters.

The surprise endorsement from Russell, who had promised to stay out of the fray, apparently came because a poll, commissioned by a Smith supporter, concluded that Smith stands the best chance of winning crucial crossover Democratic support from fellow African Americans in the general election in November.

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While acknowledging that Boland would have liked to have Russell in her corner, her aide Scott Wilk pronounced it a “sad day in Republican politics” when an endorsement is based on the race of a candidate.

Smith, a former Bank of America vice president who opposes affirmative action, says that race is not, nor should be, an issue in the campaign. Besides, Russell also extolled Smith as an “articulate spokesman for conservative causes.”

In addition to Russell’s blessings, a letter from retiring Rep. Carlos Moorhead (R-Glendale) concludes that Smith is the most qualified Republican candidate.

The winner of the Republican primary March 26 will meet Democrat Adam Schiff, who is running unopposed for the nomination. Schiff is a former federal prosecutor with the kind of law enforcement credentials that appeal to moderates of either party.

“He’s the most formidable Democrat to be fielded in this race for 30 years,” said Wellington Love, Russell’s district office chief.

Love said much has changed in the district in the two decades Russell has been in office. Republican voter registration has plummeted from 58% to 42%, so Democratic support is essential in holding on to the seat.

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Boland, who is leaving her Assembly seat in the west San Fernando Valley because of term limits, says the endorsement will help her in the end by diluting Oltman’s support.

“That’s probably the end of Oltman,” said Boland, who by virtue of her name recognition was a strong candidate from the minute she entered the race.

Since then, however, Boland has been frequently absent from the campaign trail, citing her Assembly responsibilities and presumably hoping to prevail on her high-profile and strong endorsements.

Not surprisingly, Oltman, a wealthy businessman who lost an Assembly primary in 1992, doesn’t see the race as Boland does. He portrays her as worse than a carpetbagger because she is flouting the will of the voters by running for the state Senate after losing her Assembly seat to term limits--which she favors.

Boland retorted that if the public wanted to make it illegal to run for the other house in the Legislature, they would have done so.

She dropped a hit piece mailer slamming Oltman for claiming to support Proposition 187, aimed at cracking down on illegal immigrants, then conceding at a campaign forum that he voted against it.

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Oltman will not discuss his vote further, saying it’s “confidential.” But he did say he donated money to the campaign and has the backing of Proposition 187’s chief proponent.

Although consultants familiar with the area consider Smith a longshot, he is hoping that the escalating acrimony between Oltman and Boland, coupled with the support of Russell and Moorhead, will help him pull off an upset.

“Boland and Oltman are doing a good job of beating each other up,” said Smith, a former Pasadena school board member, who has lost races for state school superintendent and the Legislature. “We’re going to focus on our strengths.”

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When they are not squabbling, Boland and Oltman--as well as Smith--espouse a conservative Republican platform, heavily weighted toward the social conservative agenda. They favor publicly funded private school vouchers and school prayer.

At a campaign forum, all responded to questions on the government’s role in combating the AIDS epidemic by decrying loose sexual mores and the dangers of sex education in school.

Boland, perhaps known for her efforts to break up the Los Angeles Unified School District, went so far as to call the district “one of the most immoral institutions in our country.”

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On abortion, Smith is the most moderate--favoring government funding when a mother’s life is endangered as well as in cases of rape and incest.

Boland has changed her position. She no longer believes abortion should be an option for rape victims, but only in cases of incest and to save a mother’s life. Oltman opposes abortion under any circumstance.

While all three support tough crime-fighting measures, Smith tempers the punishment side with crime prevention strategies, especially early intervention with children in fatherless homes.

As head of the Assembly Public Safety Committee, Boland has major law enforcement backing and has sponsored numerous public safety measures during her six years in Sacramento representing the Northwest San Fernando Valley. Boland said she is working on a bill to “remove conjugal visits to prisoners.”

Oltman says California prisons are too cushy, and he advocates modeling a system on jails in other parts of the world, such as Mexico and China.

“That’s where all the illegal aliens [in prison] will spend their time,” Oltman said.

Former Glendale school board member Sharon Beauchamp is the fourth Republican seeking to represent the 21st District, which includes Burbank, Glendale, Pasadena and parts of Los Feliz.

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