A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2022 ELECTION 2022 Republican candidates promise victory through uncompromising conservatism therapist Amber Richard- son, Redmond contractor Bill PENDLETON — There Sizemore and former Alsea wasn’t much daylight between School District Superinten- the eight candidates on stage dent Marc Thielman — had at a Tuesday, March 24, Uma- only 30 seconds each to an- tilla County Republican Party swer most questions. gubernatorial forum at the But all candidates still got Pendleton Convention Cen- a shot at making their case ter. to a good-sized audience in The candidates generally Pendleton. The candidates agreed they were going to re- were mostly polite with one verse the policies of Demo- another but occasionally took cratic Gov. Kate Brown, the shots at some of the candi- state should move to a school dates who weren’t in Pend- choice model, the Second leton, which included many Amendment needed to be of the field’s top fundraisers: protected and all government former state House Minority mandates needed to be re- Leader Christine Drazan pealed. of Canby, Salem oncologist The candidates didn’t get and 2016 Republican nomi- much time to expound on nee Bud Pierce, Sandy Mayor their thoughts. The size of the Stan Pulliam and former state field — West Linn political representative and Oregon consultant Bridget Barton, Republican Party Chair Bob Hillsboro retiree Reed Chris- Tiernan of Lake Oswego. tensen, Tigard entrepreneur Oregon hasn’t elected a Re- Nick Hess, Baker City Mayor publican governor since 1982, Kerry McQuisten, Bend mar- but each candidate explained keting consultant Brandon how they would be the one to Merritt, White City massage reverse the trend. BY ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Barton stressed to the au- dience both her experience advocating for rural Oregon and her status as an “outsider.” She told the audience that she would work hard in Salem to advance their priorities. “I’m here to tell you that I would stand in front of a train for you,” she said. As governor, Barton said she would immediately re- place the state’s deputy super- intendent of public instruc- tion, who leads the Oregon Department of Education. Christensen said the most important issue was to end Oregon’s vote-by-mail system in favor of a one-day, in-per- son election so the state could get “election integrity.” He also highlighted his par- ticipation in the attempted insurrection in Washington D.C. in 2021. Christensen faces federal charges for as- saulting Capitol police. “I was arrested by the FBI,” he said. “I’m currently in the system. I care.” In almost all of his answers, Hess said he would work to make Oregon government more transparent and listen to residents instead of lobbyists. Like former Gov. Vic Ati- yeh, Hess said he was a Re- publican from the Portland metro area, which would give him an advantage in trying to break the GOP’s losing streak in gubernatorial elections. “I know it sucks to think about a Portland person, but a Portland person is how we get somebody who’s conservative elected,” he said. McQuisten used her open- ing remarks to remind the audience she helped pass a Baker City resolution that criticized Brown and her COVID-19 restrictions. “I wrote a resolution you may have heard of that told Kate Brown to pound sand,” she said. McQuisten said moderates such as Pierce and Knute Bue- hler couldn’t win the general election, but she, as a “staunch conservative,” could. Nonaffiliated voters re- cently surpassed Democrats as the largest group of voters in the state, and Merritt said Republicans needed to win those voters if they were go- ing to win general elections and govern effectively. He also criticized Drazan for allowing a gun control bill to pass so Republicans could get a seat at the table for redis- tricting only for Democrats to gerrymander anyway. “Compromise is never an option,” he said. Richardson said she was in- tentionally running her cam- paign frugally, adding she had only spent $3,000 on her cam- paign. She also compared herself to former President Donald Trump, saying she was un- predictable and was able to successfully evade the state’s attempts to censor her. “The state doesn’t know what I’m going to do next,” she said. ”Every time I try to do something, they never know what to expect.” Sizemore owns a painting business, but he might be best known for passing multiple ballot measures that limited property taxes in the 1990s. He also ran for governor in 1996, but lost to Gov. John Kitzhaber in a landslide. Sizemore leaned on his ex- perience passing ballot mea- sures and fighting with pub- lic employee unions, skills he thought would help him re- form Salem. Thielman touted his time as a “man of action” in Al- sea, where he and the school board passed a resolution making face masks optional before the state lifted its own mandate. He said the state should require schools to teach gun safety courses in fifth, eighth and 10th grade. As governor, he also would have the state arrest Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt. Kitzhaber, Roberts endorse Read for Oregon governor now, the steps it will take to get there and an honest conversa- Two former governors have tion about the difficult choices endorsed state Treasurer Tobias involved with securing that fu- Read among the 17 Democrats ture. Tobias Read has the cour- age and the integrity to lead us seeking their party’s nomina- tion for governor in the May 17 in that conversation and be- yond the polarization and di- primary. visiveness that is shredding the They are John Kitzhaber, a fabric of our community. Democrat who was governor “Bold, outcomes-based lead- from 1995 to 2003, and again ership, unfettered by the status from 2011 to 2015, and Bar- bara Roberts, a Democrat who quo, is what Oregon needs and what Tobias brings to this race. was governor from 1991 to I am proud to support him.” 1995. In statements released by Read’s campaign, each had a Roberts, on March 3: unique commentary (following “Oregon needs a governor below). with a statewide record of tack- ling tough issues, delivering results, and fighting for Orego- Kitzhaber, on Tuesday, nians living in every corner of March 22: this great state. “What Oregon lacks today “Tobias has shown he can is a vision of where we want bring people together, and he our state to be a decade from BY PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau will continue his work to build with a teenage babysitter while mayor of Portland in the 1970s. economic opportunity and a Read has been elected twice better future for all. That’s why as state treasurer — he I’m supporting To- cannot seek a third bias. Oregon needs consecutive term in his proven and steady 2024 — and was a leadership.” state representative Democratic Gov. from Beaverton for 10 Kate Brown, who is years beforehand. barred by term limits He has raised less from running again Kitzhaber so far this year than after serving almost his main rival for two full terms, is not the nomination, for- endorsing anyone. mer House Speaker Neither is former Tina Kotek — about Gov. Ted Kulongoski, $337,000 to $608,000 a Democrat who — but Read has served from 2003 to begun airing TV 2011, although he said commercials. As of Wednesday he may Read Wednesday, Read do so in the future. reported $761,000 Former Gov. Neil cash on hand; Kotek about Goldschmidt withdrew from $1 million. public life in 2004 after news Though neither mentioned disclosures that he had had sex Rich, poor, old, young. Compassion doesn’t discriminate. it in their endorsement state- ments, Kitzhaber and Rob- erts have had past issues with Kotek, who led that chamber for a record nine years. In February 2015, Kotek and Senate President Peter Courtney called on Kitzhaber to resign amid an ethics scan- dal primarily involving Cylvia Hayes, his fiancée. Kitzhaber fi- nally did so just 38 days into his fourth term and was succeeded by Brown, who was next in line as secretary of state. Roberts, the first woman to be Oregon’s governor, said last year that Kotek and Courtney had been the Legislature’s pre- siding officers for too long. She said their long tenures concen- trated too much authority in a few hands. Courtney, a Democrat from Salem, is retiring after a record 38 years in the Legislature and 20 years as Senate president. Kotek stepped out Jan. 22 as speaker and from her north/ northeast Portland House seat, which she held for 15 years, to focus on her current campaign. Although there is no official limit for presiding officers — who appoint the leaders and members of legislative com- mittees, assign bills to them and otherwise control the flow of legislation — the informal limit was four years, until Ja- son Boe won a third term as Senate president in 1977. Boe did so despite opposition from a group of Democratic sena- tors, including Frank Roberts of Portland, who was Barbara Roberts’ husband. Boe ended up being president eight years, until he lost a primary bid for state treasurer in 1980. LIFE IS SHORT BUY THE TIRES TAKE THE TRIP Our calling is you. Call or go online for an appointment, or drop in and see us! FREE PRE-TRIP SAFETY CHECKS 3 Batteries 3 Tires 3 Suspension LEW BROS TIRE (541) 523-3679 210 Bridge St., Baker City, OR 97814