STATE MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, March 10, 2021 A7 Oregon GOP: Facing the elephant in the room Atiyeh: ‘I never left my party. My party left me.’ Department, an estimated 60 judges in about 100 lawsuits — often dis- missed because of a lack of evidence — and the Republican-controlled U.S. Senate. But then came Jan. 6, when sup- porters of President Trump listened to several stirring speeches, then marched on the U.S. Capitol and invaded it by force, in an effort to overturn the will of the voters. Five people died. Many of the attackers used social media to brag about the incursion — in real time — while security cameras and the Wash- ington press corps caught countless photos and videos of the effort to over- throw the election. Despite all that, the executive com- mittee of the Oregon Republican Party took a stance saying Trump actually won, and adopted a resolution brand- ing the violent breach of the Capi- tol as a “false-flag operation” by par- ties other than the ones who bragged live on Facebook and Twitter as it was happening. That’s when Knute Buehler, the 2018 Republican nominee for Oregon governor, left the party altogether. Buehler, a physician and former state representative from Bend, says there is a route for Republicans to win again — but not by embracing “wacky conspiracy theories.” “Our political system works best when there is a balance of power, and By Peter Wong Oregon Capital Bureau When Vic Atiyeh was in the last year of his life, he was happy to accept an accolade from a former aide calling him “Oregon’s last great governor.” But as his personal archive was opened in 2013 at Pacific University — where he had been a trustee — Ati- yeh also said he did not want his leg- acy to be the last Republican governor of Oregon. Yet voters have elected only Dem- ocrats to the governor’s office since Atiyeh, formerly a state legislator from Beaverton and a businessman in Portland. It’s the longest streak for either major party in Oregon history. Republicans dominated statewide offices when Atiyeh was governor 40 years ago. They were led by Oregon’s U.S. senators of that era — Mark Hat- field and Bob Packwood, each with five victories — but also the secretary of state, state treasurer and attorney general, even though Democrats con- trolled the Legislature. Republicans have become a threat- ened species at the statewide level. Just two Republicans have been elected Contributed photo Knute Buehlerr to statewide office in the past two decades. Their ranks are shrinking further. Knute Buehler once carried the GOP banner in Oregon. Now he’s left the party. In November, Democratic presi- dential nominee Joe Biden won the race for the White House, unseat- ing one-term incumbent Republican Donald Trump. The win was certified and recertified after several statewide recounts, and was acknowledged by states’ elections officials, governors, secretaries of state, the U.S. Justice not when one party dominates, espe- cially for such a long duration,” Bue- hler said. “Things get unbalanced and you do not get good policy. Instead you get a lot of people who are disen- chanted, who feel shut out of the pro- cess and disregarded. “But,” Buehler added, “it is a pretty hard route for a Republican right now, especially with the events in January.” Decline and fall Bob Packwood’s rise to the U.S. Senate in 1968 coincided with con- tinued Republican dominance in Ore- gon over a couple of decades, despite a Democratic voter registration edge dating back to 1956. “But we have no bench” of potential candidates for statewide office, Packwood said, either in the Legislature or elsewhere. Thousands more have left the party without fanfare. According to the Oregon secre- tary of state, whose office compiles figures at the end of each month, registered Republicans statewide dropped by almost 8,500 from November to January. Republicans now constitute just 25.5% of all reg- istered voters, compared with 36% 20 years ago. Oregon’s share of registered Dem- ocrats also declined during those decades, even as their totals surged past the 1 million mark, from 39.4% in 2001 to 35.5% in 2021. The share of voters not affiliated with any party grew from 21.7% to 31.8%. In those two decades, voters have elected Republicans statewide only twice. One was Gordon Smith, who won a second term in the U.S. Sen- ate in 2002 but lost six years later. He became president of the National Association of Broadcasters. He maintains a home in Pendleton, but has said he will not seek public office again. The other was Dennis Richardson, a former state representative who lost to Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber in 2014, but was elected secretary of state two years later. Richardson died of cancer in 2019. One of Richardson’s early endors- ers for governor in 2013 was Atiyeh, who knew about second chances. He was elected governor on his second try in 1978 (he lost four years earlier) and was re-elected in 1982. He endorsed most of the subse- quent GOP nominees, with the likely exception in 1998 of Bill Sizemore, who won just 30% in a landslide loss to Kitzhaber. But Atiyeh never endorsed his par- ty’s rightward drift and focus on social issues. “I never left my party,” he said in 2012. “My party left me.” Grace period given to counties that fall to COVID-19 ‘extreme’ risk level Grant County remains in lower risk category By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau risk level, the top of the four- tier rating system that also includes high risk, moderate and lower. The higher the risk level, the more restrictions are in place on businesses, dining and activities. It was a dose of good news after a period in which most of the state had been in extreme risk at one point or another. “For the second time in a row, we are seeing great prog- ress in stopping the spread of COVID-19 across Oregon and saving lives,” Brown said Feb. 23. Of the counties on the extreme risk rating prior to Feb. 23, Brown announced seven had dropped one step to higher risk: Crook, Jackson, Lane, Marion, Polk, Umatilla and Yamhill counties. Mal- heur and Union dropped to medium, while Wasco fell all the way to lower. Five counties: Benton, Coos, Douglas, Jefferson and Josephine are currently on the extreme list. Risk level adjustments are made every two weeks. But measurements are taken every Friday and analyzed each Monday. The numbers are published weekly, with the period between reassignments called “the warning week.” With the next assign- ment of risk levels set to be announced March 9 and go into effect March 12, state officials evidently saw some counties trending back up to S230452-1 Mtn. View Mini-Mart 211 Front St., Prairie City 541-820-4477 Weekly Specials Sunday - Family Style Joy’s Choice | Thursday - Asian | Saturday - Sushi 137 E. 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Two poten- tially more virulent and eas- ier-to-spread versions of the virus showed up in Oregon. CONSTRUCTION Blazing Fast Internet! Debbie Ausmus 245 South Canyon Blvd. John Day, OR 97845 OPEN WED. & THUR. 9 am - 5 pm extreme risk. Brown’s office did not say what counties were of con- cern. The “warning week” numbers indicate trends, but the final status would also be determined adding in the as-yet unknown statistics of this week through Friday. The drop in infections was part of the recent good news that has seen overall new infections down their winter TOM CHRISTENSEN CHRISTENSEN TOM S232614-1 Counties that might fall back into the state’s most restrictive extreme risk level for COVID-19 spread will be given a two-week grace period on heightened restrictions, Gov. Kate Brown announced Thursday. Brown said the state’s low overall infection rates and its steep trend downward since the winter holidays allowed for “a bit more time” for some state trouble spots. The state currently ranks 49th of the 50 states in new infections per 100,000 people — only Hawaii scores better. With a positive test rate of 3.9%, Oregon is firmly on track for numbers to con- tinue downward statewide, and 1 million vaccine shots have been administered to residents. The governor said she made the decision to waive the restrictions “recognizing the challenges businesses encoun- ter when facing a switch back and forth between extreme risk and other risk levels.” The drop to the high risk level meant that restaurants could offer limited indoor din- ing, a key change during the cold, wet winter months that have stretched into March. Higher numbers would have required a return to the tighter restrictions on busi- nesses, dining, and activi- ties. Brown’s message did not include any changes to rules covering counties already in the extreme risk level. 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