Think Again • EE R F By Tim Nesbitt BARGAIN COUNTER Free ads to subscribers DEADLINE: Friday prior to publication Westlund can’t win, but he can spoil the race for governor O regon’s political pundits are calling this a three-way race for governor. If that’s the case, put Ben Westlund on the bottom of your tri- fecta ticket, because he’s a sure thing to finish third. Westlund has been getting a lot of attention from the media for his de- fection from the Republican Party and his announcement that he will run for governor as an independent. But this is a two-way race be- tween Democrat Ted Kulongoski and Republican Ron Saxton. If Westlund gets in, he’ll create a photo finish between those two. But West- lund himself won’t even be in the picture. I respect Ben Westlund. But he’s no Jesse Ventura, the professional wrestler who muscled his way to an upset win of the Minnesota gover- norship as the Reform Party candi- date in 1998. Westlund doesn’t have that kind of name recognition, nor does he have even a minor party to support him. And, as a Republican who recently abandoned his party, Westlund is not likely to pick up many votes from that party’s rank and file. This means that Westlund will have to compete for votes from unaf- filiated voters and disaffected De- mocrats, which is hardly a prescrip- tion for success when you have a polarizing candidate like Saxton in the race. Saxton is running to the far right on issues of importance to most union members, Democrats and in- dependents who work for a living and worry about their families’ well- being. He opposes continuing the voter-approved cost-of-living adjust- ments to our minimum wage. He’d leave workers to fend for themselves with little or no help from govern- ment, opposing limits on usurious payday loans and questioning K whether there’s any role for govern- ment “to deliver or pay for health care.” And, for workers rattled by recent attacks on retirement benefits in the public and private sectors, Saxton’s proposal for public employ- ees won’t be reassuring: He’d fire all of them if that’s what it takes to ter- minate the pensions that the Oregon Supreme Court ruled are protected by the state constitution. (Memo to public employees: Ku- longoski cut Public Employees Re- tirement System benefits, but fought to keep a solid defined-benefit pen- sion plan intact for new hires; West- lund voted for the PERS cuts and for even steeper cuts for new hires; and Saxton wants to blow up the PERS system for current employees and new hires alike. There are real dif- ferences among these candidates, even on a grudge issue like PERS.) Westlund can try to run between Saxton and Kulongoski on working family issues. But, on many of those issues, he’ll be slogging over squishy ground. What’s the point of defend- ing cost-of-living adjustments to the minimum wage, which Westlund promised to do last session, when he also backed the restaurant associa- tion’s demand for a reduced mini- mum wage for tipped workers? That’s not the kind of principled stand that voters want from an “inde- pendent” candidate. Westlund gets credit, as does Ku- longoski, for opposing the artificial spending limits endorsed by Saxton that would create more budget crises for our schools. But Kulongoski comes to the race with bragging rights for securing the revenue divi- dends we’re now getting from a re- bounding economy. This gives Ku- longoski the resources to be the man with a plan for improving our schools, expanding college aid to middle-class families and stabilizing ramers/metro mailing service 3201 N.W. YEON PORTLAND, OREGON 97210 (503) 274-1638 FAX (503) 227-1245 THE ONLY UNION MAILER IN OREGON Visit our Web site at www.kramersmailing.com MEMBERS OF TEAMSTERS LOCAL 223 — Eric Brending, Owner — PAGE 6 the Oregon Health Plan, which should provide the edge he needs to outflank Saxton…unless Westlund gets in the way. Westlund can run, but he can’t win. Based on voter registration and turnout patterns, the votes cast for governor this fall will come almost equally from Democrats (40 percent) and Republicans (40 percent) with the balance from unaffiliated and mi- nor-party voters (20 percent). Sax- ton and Kulongoski will win large majorities of their parties’ rank and file. So Westlund will have to build his campaign on the voters who are unaffiliated or disaffected, who tend to wander all over the political track. It will be difficult for Westlund to se- cure the large majorities among these voters that Saxton and Ku- longski can deliver from their par- ties’ registrants. And, even if he could, there aren’t enough votes there to make up the difference. Remember Ross Perot’s impres- sive showing in Oregon’s 1992 presi- dential election? He got 24 percent of the vote — a solid third place fin- ish. Westlund can’t win, but he can af- fect the outcome of this race, more likely by pulling votes from Kulon- goski than from Saxton, if only be- cause Republicans are more lock- step loyal to their candidates. If he runs, Westlund could end up rewarding the extremists in his for- mer party who want workers to live with smaller paychecks, buy their own health insurance and pay for their own retirement benefits. That would be an ironic legacy for a politician who is campaigning against “extreme partisanship.” Tim Nesbitt is a former president of the Oregon AFL-CIO. 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