THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 2021 A7 Continued from previous page inadequate and unaffordable housing, a lack of mental health and drug ad- diction services, and other factors. But Mannix also was critical of Democratic Gov. Kate Brown for not calling up the National Guard to quell violent protests last year in Portland. Brown did put the Oregon State Po- lice in charge of response to threat- ened violence in the city. Mannix leads a group, Common Sense for Oregon, which joined a law- suit seeking to overturn all of Brown’s pandemic orders. The Supreme Court ultimately upheld her authority to is- sue them. Although restrictions are easing in many counties as infection rates and new cases decline, Mannix said, “Lockdowns have been more severe than necessary.” OREGON GOP — KEY PLAYERS BOB PACKWOOD Aside from Mark Hatfield, who won eight times, Bob Packwood, 88, is the leader among modern-day Re- publicans with five statewide victories. As a 32-year-old state representa- tive, Packwood led a successful effort to win a Republican majority in the Oregon House in 1964, even as presi- dential nominee Barry Goldwater lost Oregon and all but six states. The next year, he founded the Dorchester Con- ference as a gathering for Republicans, excluding “far right-wingers.” “All the politicians of any conse- quence were invited to come, and they came,” Packwood said. “The resolu- tions they passed basically became the resolutions of the Republican Party. Our advantage was having all the offi- cials there be committed to what was done.” The network helped Packwood un- seat Democratic Sen. Wayne Morse in 1968. Years before he resigned under pressure in 1995 amid accusations of sexual misconduct, Packwood was challenged from the right when Joe Lutz, an anti-abortion minister, won 42% against him in the 1986 GOP primary. At the time, Packwood said narrow social issues and a failure to support women’s rights would doom the Republican Party someday. “They are going to have to come back to the middle. They cannot be the party of the right,” he said. “A small mi- nority can often capture a primary, but Vic Atiyeh Bev Clarno 84, Redmond • Secretary of state by appointment, 2019-21 • Deschutes County commissioner by appointment, 2005- 07 • Oregon Senate, 2001-03, • Republican leader, 2003 • Oregon House, 1989-97, • House Majority leader, 1993-94 • House speaker, 1995-97 • Nominee for state treasurer, 1996 Jeff Gudman Died in 2014 at age 91, Beaverton • Governor, 1979-87 • Nominee for governor in 1974 • Oregon Senate, 1965-79 • Senate Republican leader, 1973-79 • Oregon House, 1959-65 Knute Buehler 56, Bend • Candidate for 2nd District congressional seat, 2020 • Nominee for gover- nor, 2018 • Oregon House, 2015-19 • Nominee for secretary of state, 2012 that is not a test of electability.” Packwood also said George W. Bush was right — and Donald Trump wrong — in their stances on minori- ties and immigrants, particularly His- panics and Asians. “By and large, they are hard-work- ing and have conservative values, but not radically conservative,” Packwood said. “They fit the profile of what the party ought to be.” 66, Lake Oswego • Nominee for state treasurer, 2016 and 2020 • Lake Oswego City Council, 2011-19 Kevin Mannix 71, Salem • Candidate for 5th District congressional seat, 2008 • Candidate for gov- ernor, 2006 • Oregon Republican Party chair, 2003-05 • Nominee for governor, 2002 • Nominee for attorney general, 2000 • Oregon House, 1999-2001, elected as a Republican • Oregon Senate by appointment, 1998 • Democratic candidate for attorney general, 1996 • Oregon House, 1989-97, elected as a Democrat; he switched parties in 1997 JACK ROBERTS “If I knew any secrets about how Republicans could win, I would have tried to share them lately,” Roberts said with a laugh. “It hasn’t been working that way.” Roberts, 68, was a nonpartisan Lane County commissioner and the Republican nominee who unseated four-term Democrat Mary Wendy Roberts (no relation) as state la- Bob Packwood 88, Portland • U.S. Senate, 1969-95 • Oregon House, 1963-69 Jack Roberts 68, Eugene • Director, Oregon Lot- tery, 2013-16 • Candidate for Ore- gon Supreme Court (nonpartisan), 2006 • Candidate for governor, 2002; com- missioner, • Oregon Bureau of Labor and Indus- tries, 1995-2003 (first elected in 1994 as a Republican, second time in 1998 in a nonpartisan race) • Lane County commissioner, initially by appointment, 1989-95 Kim Thatcher 56, Keizer • Nominee for secre- tary of state, 2020 • Oregon Senate, since 2015 • Oregon House, 2005-15 bor commissioner in 1994. He won re-election four years later, after law- makers made his office nonpartisan. Roberts was one of the few Repub- licans who publicly supported the candidacy of Bill Sizemore, who won just 30% of the vote in a landslide loss to Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber in 1998. Roberts himself ran for gover- nor in 2002 and came in second in the GOP primary to Kevin Mannix, who later lost to Democrat Ted Kulon- goski. Roberts split the moderate vote with Ron Saxton, who finished third; each got more than 90,000 votes. (Mannix got 117,000.) Roberts traces the split in the Or- egon Republican Party back to 1990, when a third-party anti-abortion candidate drew a record 13% and Democrat Barbara Roberts prevailed over Attorney General Dave Frohn- mayer. Four years later, Democrat John Kitzhaber beat former U.S. Rep. Denny Smith, a staunch conservative, and in 1998, Kitzhaber beat Sizemore. “We lost the far-right conservative part of the party, which we used to be able to draw from,” he said. “We had more moderate people in office. That is where we are missing out in Oregon. I do not know how we reverse that.” KIM THATCHER Thatcher, 56, was elected to the Oregon House in 2004, when she un- seated a Republican incumbent who voted for a budget-balancing tax in- crease. Ten years later, she was elected to an open seat in the Oregon Senate, and has maintained a conservative re- cord on economic and social issues. She said the Republican Party must offer clear alternatives to the policies and programs advocated by Demo- crats. “Republicans have an opportunity to offer reforms to the system to make it truly work for our kids and fami- lies,” she said. “With the way things are going, maybe these reforms will get a second look from the traditional Democrats and independents.” Thatcher was in midterm last year when she won the Republican nomi- nation for secretary of state. She lost to Democrat Shemia Fagan of Portland, another state senator whose primary victory against two rivals was largely bankrolled by public employee unions. Public employee unions contrib- uted more than $350,000 to Fagan’s general-election campaign, and Thatcher said they hold too much sway over Democratic officeholders. “For example, the inability of our schools to reopen is largely because of the teacher’s unions’ refusal to do so,” she said. “It is not because they needed to be put at the front of the line ahead of the elderly for COVID vaccinations.” e e pwong@pamplinmedia.com