A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MAY 10, 2022 Republicans compete in crowded primary fi eld for governor Drazan has edge in recent polls By HILLARY BORRUD The Oregonian With 19 Republicans run- ning for Oregon governor, it’s easy to see why many voters don’t recognize most of the candidates’ names and have yet to decide how they will vote. Nearly half of likely Republican primary voters in a recent survey told pollsters they don’t know who they’ll support. Campaigns will work hard to change that in the fi nal week before the May 17 pri- mary, with a fl urry of polit- ical ads already hitting tele- visions and smartphones that will only intensify . Some of the most well-funded Repub- lican campaigns squirreled away money until now and have begun unleashing ads in hopes they’ll build name recognition as voters begin fi lling out their ballots. Christine Drazan, the for- mer state House Republican leader from Oregon City, has reported raising more than $2 million since January 2021 and spending nearly $1.3 million. Bud Pierce, a Salem oncologist, has sunk $990,000 on his own cam- paign, out of nearly $1.6 mil- lion in total fundraising. This year’s Republi- can gubernatorial ballot also stands out for the vari- ety of candidates. Drazan, who still has two children in high school, has pointed out that if elected she would be Oregon’s fi rst Republi- can woman governor. Jes- sica Gomez, the owner of an electronics manufactur- ing business in Medford and a mom of two school-aged daughters, would be the fi rst Latina governor in the state. Pierce, 65, or former law- maker and corporate consul- tant Bob Tiernan, 66, would be the oldest candidate to become Oregon governor in nearly 90 years. With Republican voter turnout in the non presiden- tial primary potentially under 50% and so many candi- dates to split the vote, some- one could win the Republi- can nomination for governor with a plurality of roughly 65,000 to 80,000 votes. That means the victori- ous Republican only has to win over about 20% of pri- mary voters to clinch the nomination. At a high level, Oregon Republican voters have indi- cated they’re looking for a gubernatorial candidate who can win the general elec- tion, “fi ght the Democrats” and “aggressively push back on what they feel like is the progressive politics in the state,” said John Horvick, the senior vice president at DHM Research. But, Hor- vick said, “There’s so many candidates that the winner doesn’t necessarily have to appeal to what the Republi- cans want this year.” Crime and homelessness Top Republican concerns of fi ghting crime and home- lessness, with Portland as the poster child for problems, dominate most gubernato- rial candidates’ ads. Tiernan has zeroed in on a tough-on- crime approach in his sizable advertising campaign. Tier- nan played a central role in the eff ort to pass Measure 11, Oregon’s mandatory sen- Republican candidates for governor include, in top row from left, businesswoman Jessica Gomez; Sandy Mayor Stan Pulliam; former state House Republican Leader Christine Drazan; and Baker City Mayor Kerry McQuisten; and lower row from left, political consultant Bridget Barton; Salem oncologist Bud Pierce; former Rep. Bob Tiernan; and former Alsea Superintendent Mark Thielman. tencing law, in the 1990s. Shawn Cleave, a partner at public aff airs and lobby- ing fi rm Pilot Strategies who served as policy director for Republican Chris Dudley’s 2010 gubernatorial cam- paign , said Sandy m ayor and insurance executive Stan Pulliam’s messaging is “spot on for a Republican primary in 2022 — even in Oregon,” although he noted those mes- sages do not appeal to him personally. Pulliam, 40, has attacked Oregon schools for adopting protocols to support trans- gender students, as Repub- lican politicians across the nation go after support- ers of transgender children and LGBTQ people gener- ally. Cleave noted there are “a few other known names” in the primary but “I just don’t see a large diff erence between their fi nal vote per- centage and random chance — it takes money in a mar- ket economy to increase name ID.” Bill Sizemore, 70, the anti-tax activist who got vot- ers to pass property tax lim- its in the 1990s and pleaded guilty to three counts of fel- ony tax evasion in 2011, could benefi t from a combi- nation of chance and linger- ing name recognition from his ballot initiative cam- paigns and 1998 nomina- tion for governor. Sizemore has reported raising $25,000, mostly through loans to his campaign, and he reported paying himself thousands of dollars for campaign work including fundraising letters and media, according to state records. Drazan, who served three years in the House before stepping down to run for governor last winter, said she is eager to change Ore- gon public policy in a way she could not as leader of the minority party in the state House. “A Republican gover- nor creates that,” said Dra- zan, who is 49. She has hired the East Coast campaign consulting fi rm that helped reelect Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, “because they know how to get Republi- cans elected in Democratic states.” Drazan proved to be a sharp and eff ective politi- cal leader for House Repub- licans. Less than a year into her fi rst term, she convinced fellow Republicans to oust then-leader Carl Wilson, of Grants Pass, and elect her to the job. Drazan delivered in her new role, helping Repub- licans to pick up a net of one House seat in the November 2020 election thanks in par- ticular to a hard-fought and expensive campaign for a northwest coastal district. At the same time, she took a fi rm stance that violence was not an acceptable way to oppose COVID-19 man- dates, including the closure of the state Capitol to the public. Drazan led the House Republican caucus to vote to expel then-Rep. Mike Near- man for letting armed right- wing demonstrators into the Capitol during a December 2020 special session; Near- man cast the lone “no” vote. On policy, Drazan sent a clear message to fossil fuel and other natural resources industries that House Repub- licans would do whatever was necessary to shut down Democrats’ greenhouse gas cap-and-trade plan, when she led her caucus in a 2020 Capitol walkout to protest the climate change bill up for a vote in the state Sen- ate. Later that year lawmak- ers reconvened in special sessions and Republicans worked with Democrats on a series of police reform and accountability bills. ‘Broadening the base’ Pierce has been cam- paigning since late 2020, traveling around the state while continuing to work at least fi ve days a week as a cancer doctor. His second campaign for governor was immediately marked by tragedy: Pierce’s wife, Selma, was killed hours after he announced his candidacy when a driver struck her while she was out for a walk on a December evening. Pierce said that if elected governor, he would push for an overhaul of Oregon’s property tax system so that nonprofi ts like hospital sys- tems would have to begin paying taxes and everyone else could pay less. “I’m very interested in broaden- ing the base and lowering the rates,” Pierce said. Tiernan, who has been out of public offi ce in Ore- gon since 1997, came roar- ing back onto viewers’ TV screens this spring thanks in large part to two big cash infusions to his campaign: $500,000 from the California owners of bargain chain Gro- cery Outlet and a $500,000 personal loan he gave to his campaign. Tiernan served as chief operating offi cer of Grocery Outlet from 2003 to 2007. “I have a track record of running and turning around large multi million dollar businesses with thousands of employees — fi xing prob- lems and getting results,” Tiernan said in response to a question from The Orego- nian . “The homeless problem will be resolved. Our streets and parks will be clean. Riots, lawlessness or out-of- control crime will have been stopped. Our schools will be teaching, not preaching political correctness.” Primary: Kotek and Read are both focusing heavily on leadership Continued from Page A2 Gov. Kate Brown, a Dem- ocrat, also angered certain Oregonians by issuing some of the nation’s most expan- sive and longest COVID-19 mandates. She also disap- pointed some voters by order- ing or allowing schools to be closed for longer than in most other states and frustrated others when she put teach- ers in line to receive vaccines before older Oregonians. It’s an open question how much Brown’s high disap- proval rating — a recent poll found she was the least pop- ular governor in the nation — could hurt the chances of the Democratic nominee for governor. Kotek and Read are both focusing heavily on leader- ship and how they’d improve government operations that are failing Oregonians. “I think what we need in our next governor is some- one who’s willing to say what most of us already know right now, what we’re doing isn’t working,” Read said during an Oregonian editorial board interview. Kotek said she wants to be governor so that she can ensure better delivery of government services in the future, including pro- grams passed while she was speaker, such as paid family and medical leave. That pro- gram is expected to launch nine months late, costing Oregonians approximately $453 million in missed ben- efi ts. “Right now, the sta- tus quo isn’t good enough,” Kotek said. “I’m running for governor because we have to get the job done.” In all, 15 Democrats are running in the May 17 pri- mary. Aside from Kotek and Read, who have raised $1.9 million and $1.5 million since January 2021, the next largest campaign spending is by George Carrillo, a pro- gram manager at the Oregon Health Authority. Carrillo has reported raising $173,000 and spending $122,000, according to state records. Both of the leading can- didates are spending a lot of time talking about the two issues that likely primary voters rated as top concerns: homelessness, which voters rated as their No. 1 concern, and crime. Top issues Kotek said she would focus on getting the most vulnerable Oregonians expe- riencing homelessness, who she said are veterans, fami- lies, unaccompanied youth and people 65 and older, into housing within her fi rst two years in offi ce. “Our streets should look better,” Kotek said. She has made increas- ing Oregon’s supply of hous- ing a top priority for years and pushed for tens of mil- lions in spending on shel- ters in early 2020, before the state received federal stimu- lus and tax revenue windfalls that ultimately helped boost housing budgets. Read said in a recent City Club of Portland and KGW debate that Portland-area leaders have not tackled homelessness with “urgency and seriousness.” His plan would prioritize increasing shelter and transitional hous- ing and proposes “clean- ing up our public spaces ” by prohibiting camping next to highways and helping local governments pay for increased garbage pickup and other sanitation services. Read and Kotek both said it’s important to adequately fund police, although that’s not something they directly control. Read said he would launch a statewide gun buy- back program, while Kotek said she believes a more eff ective solution is a law passed earlier this year to direct some Medicaid spend- ing to violence interven- tion when people injured in shootings or other violence crimes wind up in the hospi- tal. Kotek said she also sup- ports a push from Portland’s Black community for more after school programs as one approach to stem the city’s record gun violence. One way Read’s cam- paign stands out is his focus on education, an issue that voters usually rate as among their highest concerns. “I want us to measure our- selves as a state based on the well-being of kids,” Read said in an interview. “I think that’s the ultimate mecha- nism to measure what the state’s going to look like in the future.” He wants Ore- gon to provide universal pre- kindergarten and raise liter- acy by third grade, in part by ensuring every student has a teacher trained in the science of reading. In any other year, that might appeal to a broad swath of Oregonians. The $9.3 billion S tate S chool F und, which accounts for 30% of the state general fund and lottery budget, is an area of state government where the governor has sig- nifi cant control. John Hor- vick, senior vice president at DHM Research, said in the recent past when poll- sters asked Oregon voters to list the top issues of concern, they almost always named “jobs, the economy and edu- cation,” Horvick said. “Then with COVID-19, education just isn’t showing up as the dominant issue.” Horvick said he does not know why voters aren’t list- ing education as a top con- cern this year, but one pos- sibility is that other pressing issues crowded it out. “If you look at the leadership ques- tions, a lot of (voters who were surveyed) are just mad WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 Old-fashioned fun games & contests • prizes SATURDAY & SUNDAY May 14th & 15th • 11am-4pm Join the Clatsop County Historical Society for some old-fashioned family fun and games on the Flavel House Museum Lawn! FREE! Event Sponsored by: For more info, contact the Clatsop County Historical Society by phone at 503-325-2203 or email at info@astoriamuseums.com at Kate Brown,” Horvick said. Another way Kotek and Read are diff erentiat- ing themselves is on how they would approach turn- ing around state government. Read has said he would ask for the resignation of all agency directors; Kotek said that based on input from a human resources expert, she would meet with each agency director and ask them to prove to her why they should have those jobs.