ELECTION A12 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2022 Drazan rolls campaign into Heppner BY DAKOTA CASTETS-DIDIER Hermiston Herald Christine Drazan rolled her campaign to become Oregon’s the first Republican governor in 40 years into Heppner on Wednesday, Aug. 17, for an ice cream social. The event at the Christian Life Center drew several dozen people and some public offi- cials, including Morrow County Sheriff Ken Matlack and fellow Republicans state Reps. Greg Smith, Heppner, and Bobby Levy, Echo. “Getting involved in public service in the first place for me was about service,” Drazan ex- plained, sitting for an interview within the chapel of the Chris- tian Life Center. “It was really about the opportunity to make a difference and be effective. What I learned as a legislator was that my opportunity to re- ally change outcomes, which is really what defines effectiveness for me, was really limited.” Drazan, 50, served in the Or- egon House of Representatives 2019-22 for District 39, which includes parts of Clackamas County. She also was minority leader until 2021, when she left the state House to run for gov- ernor. “As Republican leader, my caucus members proposed a hundred amendments to var- ious pieces of legislation, and repeatedly it was on party line vote, rejected,” she said. With Democrats holding a supermajority in the Legisla- ture, she said, Republicans have few tools to stop proposals they opposed. It became clear, she explained, there was not going to be an opportunity for her as a Republican legislator in Oregon to work on big issues. But the governor’s office offers just that. “The governor’s role is so crit- ical and so important to provide Yasser Marte/Hermiston Herald Oregon Republican gubernatorial nominee Christine Drazan on Aug. 17, 2022, highlights approaches on how to begin fixing homelessness across Oregon at the Christian Life Center in Heppner. really don’t have the kind of ac- countability that I think Orego- nians want right now.” She criticized the “one size fits all” approach in Oregon gov- ernment. Some rules and expec- tations that might be workable and culturally aligned in the more metro and suburban parts of our state instead affect the ability of rural Oregonians to support their families and lives. To get to Mahonia Hall, Dra- zan has to defeat Democrat Tina Kotek, who served as the speaker of the Oregon House 2013-22, and Betsy Johnson, a longtime Democratic Oregon legislator now running an unaf- filiated campaign. As part of her campaign’s “Roadmap for Oregon’s Future,” Yasser Marte/Hermiston Herald Oregon Republican gubernatorial candidate Christine Drazan, right, on Aug. 17, 2022, greets State Rep. Bobby Levy at the “Get the Scoop” ice cream social fundraiser at the Christian Life Center in Heppner. balance and accountability,” Dra- zan said. “In single party control, if you’re in a state with only one party everywhere you look, you a six-page list of issues and pro- posed solutions she would im- plement as governor, Drazan described a series of “political agendas and bureaucratic hur- dles” that interfere with Ore- gon’s agricultural community. “Sometimes we’re talking about banning the equipment that they use in the fields, like diesel bans,” she said. Drazan has also been vocal about her support for chang- ing Oregon’s education system, citing a low overall high school graduation rate (80.6%) as a mandate for change. According to Drazan’s “Roadmap,” this in- cludes focusing on academic ac- countability and “keeping pol- itics out of the classroom.” She said graduation requirements that were rolled back during the pandemic should be reinstated. “I believe that those were pos- itive, not negative for our kid- dos, and that our expectations should be higher, not lower,” she said. And students who are mem- bers of minorities already face numerous cultural and social challenges, she said, and while there have been leaders focused on addressing some of the social and emotional dynamics within schools, they failed to actually help those students obtain an education. “The thing that we cannot possibly do is then also put them into a position where they don’t even have a strong educa- tion on the other side of this,” Drazan said. “We need kids to be able to have a level playing field and raise up all kids.” Pivoting to Oregon’s home- lessness problem, Drazan has stated publicly she would de- clare a state of emergency on homelessness. She said she would prioritize repealing Mea- sure 110, which rescheduled and legalized small amounts of narcotics. She said the measure is one of the many factors that contribute to Oregon’s home- lessness problem. And merely amending the “regulatory environment specif- ically around housing,” she said, does not address the holistic problem of homelessness. “Frankly, if we have a chal- lenge around our land use sys- tem, let’s tackle it,” Drazan said. “If it’s affecting our ability to be responsive to homelessness, it’s probably affecting our ability to be responsive in other issues.” Drazan campaigned all week in Eastern Oregon, including stops at Burns, Ontario, Baker City, John Day and Fossil. Heppner was the last place on this swing. GOP hopes stoked in Oregon as party hits West Coast low The Center for Politics forecast said the undulating national political scene and three strong candidates was enough to put a question mark next to the Democrats’ historic win streak for the Oregon governorship. “Outgoing Gov. Kate Brown (D) is deeply unpopular, and there may be some desire for change in the Beaver State,” Kondik wrote. “Johnson, the in- dependent, would still be the most sur- prising winner, and Kotek and Drazan both will be working to try to prevent their voters from flocking to her ban- ner.” Two other major national forecast- ers — the Cook Political Report and FiveThirtyEight — have previously moved the Oregon governor’s race from a likely Democratic win to the less cer- tain leaning Democratic victory. BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau A new election forecast says there’s wobble in Democrats’ 40-year hold on the Oregon governor’s office, even as Re- publicans hit a historic low point along the West Coast. The Center for Politics at the Uni- versity of Virginia on Thursday, Aug. 18, moved the Nov. 8 race for Oregon governor from “Leans Democratic” to “Toss-Up.” “This is despite the state’s blue lean and the fact that Republicans have not won a gubernatorial race there since 1982,” wrote Kyle Kondik, the center’s managing editor. The key change is the near certainty of a three-way race for governor that might trip up Democrats seeking to hold onto a job last held by a Republican when Vic Atiyeh won a second term 40 years ago. Former Democratic State Senator Betsy Johnson of Columbia County turned in nominating petitions with over 48,000 signatures on Tuesday — more than twice the minimum needed to get on the Nov. 8 ballot as an unaffiliated candidate. Secretary of State Shemia Fagan has until Aug. 30 to verify a random sam- pling of petition signatures in time to officially add Johnson to the general elec- tion alongside Democrat Tina Kotek of Portland and Republican Christine Dra- zan of Canby. “The race sets up an unusual situation where the winner may not need to crack even 40%,” Kondik wrote. THREE CANDIDATES — AND NO ‘CENTRIST’ NOMINATION Much of the election debate has cen- tered around who Johnson would most hurt, Kotek or Drazan. All three served as late as last year in the legislative lead- FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. Jaime Valdez/Pamplin Media, File Republican nominee Christine Drazan, left, and unaffiliated candidate Betsy Johnson, right, listens to Democratic nominee Tina Kotek speak during a governor’s debate July 29, 2022, that the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association hosted at Mount Hood Oregon Resort in Welches. ership. Kotek as House speaker, Drazan as House minority leader, and Johnson as a swing-vote Democrat and co-chair of the budget-writing Joint Ways & Means Committee. All left office early to run for governor — with Johnson also dropping her Democratic party af- filiation of 20 years. Adding to the scrambled election math is a decision by leaders of the In- dependent Party of Oregon — known as the IPO — to forego an alliance with one of the candidates. “There will be no cross-nomination on this one,” Independent Party board member Andrew Kaza of Redmond said Aug. 18. A cross-nomination by the self-de- scribed “centrist” Independent Party is usually used by a candidate as sym- bolic of being the less partisan choice in a race. GOP MISSES EARLY CHANCE TO END WEST COAST SHUTOUT The Oregon election speculation came on the heels of Washington voters earlier this month ensuring the official end of a 56-year winning streak by Republicans for the office of Washington secretary of state. 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