As a Republican candidate for Spokane County prosecutor, Chris Bugbee doesn’t wring his hands over alleged plots by the United Nations to take over the country.
Still, to receive the local GOP’s endorsement, he had to support the withdrawal of the government from the U.N. He hasn’t thought about the issue and doesn’t really care.
And he didn’t get the party’s nod. (Instead, the local party’s vice chair, Dave Stevens, did.)
“It’s one of those things I really wouldn’t have a position on,” says Bugbee, who’s never run for office before. “I’ll support [the party’s positions] as a voter or I won’t support them as a voter. But as a prosecutor, most of them don’t matter.” Bugbee’s predicament is one a handful of local, first-time Republican candidates are also facing this year: They feel edged out of party politics by what they say is an unfair endorsement process. All say their lack of knowing the right people, or disagreeing with the party’s more extreme views, led to their being shunned.
Shelly O’Quinn, who’s running for John Driscoll’s seat as state representative, says she was never given a chance to seek the party’s endorsement. Just weeks after she announced her candidacy in September, the county GOP endorsed John Ahern, the former occupant of Driscoll’s seat who is heavily involved in party politics.
“‘Who are you to run against the beloved John Ahern?’” O’Quinn says of the sentiment she received from the party’s central committee. “But I’m not running against him, I’m running against John Driscoll.
“They’re trying to make it seem like I’m not Republican enough,” she adds. “I’m a conservative, but I consider myself a rational, reasonable conservative.”
Steve Salvatori, a candidate for county commissioner, says he received a similar reaction from the committee. The steering committee, he says, had a “fairly narrow definition” for what makes a good candidate.
“They’ve narrowed the hole so much, if you’re not an exact match you’re not in,” he says. “I agree with 85 percent of what’s in the platform. That’s why I’m a Republican.”
Salvatori refused to sign the party’s “pledge,” which has four simple statements, each followed by two boxes: “yes” and “no.”
“They asked us to uphold the [United States] Constitution, state Constitution and party platform,” Salvatori says. “Those are not equal documents.”
Then there’s a declaration about promoting “free enterprise” and another opposing taxes. The final statement reads, “I will support the right to life from conception to natural death.”
“I’m pro-life, but I make exceptions for rape, incest and the health of the mother,” Salvatori says. “They did not think I was pro-life enough.”
Salvatori says the steering committee — composed of Cindy Zapotocky, Dave Stevens, Curt Fackler, Joanne McCann, John Christina and a dozen district leaders — is “focused on picking a candidate that will do well in the primary” but will face trouble in the general election.
Fackler, also the party’s spokesman, says nothing nefarious is happening during the endorsement process — they pick, in their estimations, the best candidate.
“Every one of them, if they do get through the primary, we’ll endorse them,” he says. “We think they’re all Republicans.”

Before I put up the Ahern sign I decided to sit down with a couple of folks I know who sit on the local GOP Board (which by the way does not include John Christina - he´s never been a voting member of the board, so perhaps you should get your facts straight.) after talking to them I came to understand why they supported who they did. Michael Baumgartner has been willing to come and listen, and discuss issues even where there was disagreement, plus being unopposed in a Republican Primary helped too, and his diligent work in support of the country as a diplomat was a bonus, so he was an easy decision. Ozzie Knezovich was quite easy they told me, long before anyone had even thought about him having an opponent. Matt Shea again has done a good job, so he was easy. In the contested races, John Ahern announced his ´re-election´ early on, and many on the board felt that there were issues with the ballots in 2008, and that Ahern holds the right positions and deserves (if the voters support him) to have another shot at John Driscol.
I also asked about the Prosecutor race because I can´t stand Tucker, no one I know can, and basically they said the decision to oppose Bugbee was made reallly easy when he essentially declared himself a Democrat by giving money and being recognized at the kickoff for the state senator with the most radical leftwing voting record, Chris Marr. That really bothers me, I would rather the position be non-partisan myself, but If Bugbee wanted to run as Independent or a Democrat, he should have done so, rather than pretending to be a Republican. Its just about Ethics.
Republicans need to unify, but they need unify around principle. Nowhere in the document the candidates needed to agree to, does it say anything about the crazy UN stuff, or any other of the INlander´s crazy conspiracys. Its about being fiscally conservative and pro-life, you can read it on the Gop´s site.
After my conversation with these folks I did decide to put up the Ahern sign. I would suggest that people get to know your county board district leaders, meet them for coffee, if you are a Republican they do Represent you, and you should know them, so you can decide to run for PCO and possibly oppose them next go around, you have to be engaged to make a difference even at the party level.
Jul 08, 2010 | Reply to this comment
That´s just silly. Marr isn´t even the most liberal senator in Eastern Washington (hi, Lisa Brown) and if you stack him up next to the McDermotts and Murrays of the world the differences couldn´t be starker. Jul 16, 2010
Then he holds a Flag day patriotic rally on the WRONG day and then has the audacity to collect donations for his campaign. Now thats really patriotic using the ol bait and switch scam. The City Parks department was going to cancel that little faux pas but it was too late.
He registered to vote on Jan 25 since being out of the country (and of touch) so he has a real grasp of the states politics. His web page states "we need leadership in Washington". Well, that actually is Olympia or is ol Baumly got his eyes on Cathy McMorris´s seat? Nothing better than a carpet bagger from the Palouse.
Baulmy states he was overseas for 5 years yet his resume shows he only started working over there in 2007. Must be that accounting degree that comes up with 3.
Marr isnt the best thing since sliced bread, but I would rather have a semi-competent Democrat than Baumgartner who has an honesty and integrity problem at every level and whom is a johnny come lately to Washington State politics. Well not late, but how about non-existant and clueless? Jul 08, 2010 | Reply to this comment
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Beware-of-Spokane-Man-Marshall-Smith/130425666985732?ref=search
http://www.spokesmanreview.com/blogs/conversation/archive.asp?postID=12349
http://www.spokesmanreview.com/blogs/conversation/archive.asp?postID=10941 Jul 08, 2010 | Reply to this comment