Wednesday, August 4, 2010

6th District State Representative

In the August primary, newcomer Shelly O’Quinn has to get past one of two men who have already been the 6th District Representative.

Dan Herman
John Ahern, John Driscoll, Shelly O'Quinn
John Ahern, John Driscoll, Shelly O'Quinn
John Ahern, John Driscoll, Shelly O'Quinn

They had seen her every day for what seemed like the past week — whether it was on the sidewalk or out at the air show over the weekend, she was there, waving her signs.

On Monday, 7-year-old Luke was sure he was going to see her again. His father didn’t think it likely. But then, sure enough, the doorbell rang and Luke was summoned for.

“Do you know who it is?” his father asked. “Shelly O’Quinn,” Luke responded with a smile.

Though serendipitous for Luke, that sort of recognition is a big boon for O’Quinn, a Republican challenger in the primary to represent the 6th District in Olympia. She’s a David up against two Goliaths, incumbent Democrat John Driscoll and former state Rep. John Ahern.

“I’m running against basically two incumbents — one current, one former,” says O’Quinn.

Driscoll’s been in the seat for two years, and Ahern held it the eight years prior to that. As any student of history knows, when you’re David, you’ve got to take the first shot. In this case, O’Quinn needs to take down a Republican heavyweight just to move on to the general election in the fall.


The 6th District might safely be called a swing district
. In 2008, it elected a Republican — Kevin Parker — to a state representative position, the third time in as many elections that the seat was held by a different party. In the state Senate race, Chris Marr became the first Democrat to win the district since 1940.

And Driscoll and Ahern’s race wound up close enough to help underscore the old axiom that every vote counts. After initially being declared the winner by 74 votes, Driscoll’s margin of victory was cut to 72 after an automatic hand recount.

“My margin was so thin, I’m taking nothing for granted this year. I’m running as if I were 10 points behind, because I probably am,” Driscoll says.

Driscoll is proud of the legislative record he’s compiled during his first term. He mentions several bills, including a $130 million bond sale authorization that, in part, helped fund construction at Ferris and Mead high schools.

But the ones that seem to have impacted him the most are the ones that “save lives.” He had only been in office three or so weeks when 16-year-old Lorissa Green of Cheney was killed in a crash at the intersection of Highway 195 and the Spokane-Cheney Road. Along with Parker, Driscoll helped get funding put together that paid for safety improvements.

Up against two Republican opponents in the primary, Driscoll says his plan is to let the issues and other candidates sort themselves out. When the general election rolls around, Driscoll says his track record on what he can do for the district will allow him to prevail.

“By more than 72 votes, I hope,” he jokes. On the Republican side of things, unseating Ahern may prove difficult for O’Quinn, a newcomer who’s never run for elected office. Ahern did the job for eight years, which gets to the crux of his argument for voting for him: “Experience counts.”

Ahern speaks of two major bills he passed, one that created a veterans’ home in Eastern Washington and a bill that made a fifth DUI conviction an automatic felony, increasing the amount of jail time mandated by a conviction. The bills underscore two of the three goals listed on his website: making Washington the worst state for felons to live in, and protecting veterans and seniors.

Ahern, a proud conservative, says the No. 1 issue for voters is taxes.

“First of all, the operating budget is entirely too high to begin with. I would just scale back, and I would privatize,” he says. “We just have to cut back — every department take a big hit.”

Ahern’s commitment to privatizing runs deep. He says two initiatives on the ballot, privatizing liquor distribution and the workers’ compensation insurance system, are good starts. He also advocates privatizing the ferry system and the state Department of Printing.

“The best way to do it is to go to the phone book and look under ‘Printing.’ Let it go out for bid,” he says. “Anytime you get government where private industry gets involved, that’s socialism.”


O’Quinn is also a Republican, also a conservative
. She, like Ahern and Driscoll, sees the economy as the issue at the forefront of voters’ minds.

“I believe we need to bring fiscal responsibility and balance back to Olympia,” she says.

Though O’Quinn doesn’t have the legislative experience that her opponents do, she feels her background gives her a special perspective. She’s worked for profits and nonprofits, so she knows how seemingly small decisions can have long-lasting repercussions.

“It’s important to be fiscally responsible with taxpayers’ money, that we have to work on developing a sustainable budget,” she says, ”but we have to understand that everything impacts people.”

When it comes to trying to shore up a nearly $3 billion deficit in the state budget, O’Quinn says that a priority system is needed, rather than just a big cut across the board.

“We need to say government cannot be everything, so we need to look at what government is doing and prioritize our spending,” she says.

Because of the state’s top-two primary, it seems Driscoll is all but certain to advance to the general election, leaving Ahern and O’Quinn to duke it out for conservative voters.

O’Quinn has had her conservative credentials called into question. Recently, a YouTube video surfaced of O’Quinn speaking to the Friday Morning Republican Breakfast Club.

Originally, the video began by showing O’Quinn’s logo, except that each “o” was replaced by President Obama’s logo. Though the logos have since been removed, the rest of the video includes edited cuts of O’Quinn speaking, interspersed with video titles underscoring the points she makes — “Shelly doesn’t care if river set-backs are 90 or 150 feet. Do you?” O’Quinn says she doesn’t have a problem with the video’s content so much as with how it was done — the logos, and the fact it appears to have been shot from below a table, out of sight.

Ahern told the Spokesman-Review his campaign had nothing to do with the video, but it’s clear he doesn’t think O’Quinn is a true conservative.

“Shelly’s kind of in-between moderate and liberal,” he says. O’Quinn says there’s a difference between willing to talk to moderates and being one.

I counter that to say I consider myself a reasonable, rational Republican who’s willing to have a conversation,” she says. “It doesn’t mean I compromise my values. It means I’m willing to have a conversation to figure out how we move forward with our state.”

electionheader.jpg

6th District State Representative

In the August primary, newcomer Shelly O’Quinn has to get past one of two men who have already been the 6th District Representative.

Spokane County Assessor

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Spokane County Prosecuting Attorney

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The Odd Duck

One Democrat tries to hold back the Republican flood toward the Spokane County Board of Commissioners.

The Third's Party

Dems take on the chosen Dem and a GOP candidate cites the Bible — all in one district.

Storming the Castle

Cathy McMorris Rodgers has a healthy advantage in fundraising, name recognition and … well, see for yourself.

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John Ahern said that he had nothing to do with the secret video that his campaign manager Josh Kerns took with a phone from under the table >>> REALLY!! What are you babbling about now John? Josh is your campaign manager; how did he get the surreptitious video from his phone to the internet if that´s not what the Ahern campaign intended? How much more creepy does your campaign get?
It’s clear to me that Ahern’s experience counts for how to run a dirty campaign.
Aug 04, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

I saw that video too and just who is that to the right of the upskirt videographer with his SEG (Eating Grin) and whom refuses to come forward to confirm the videographer? Instead of pointing the finger at the guilty party, he gives the Voters the finger by refusing to tell the truth. Just more of the same and its more of what you can expect from a carpetbagger. Thanks Inlander. Aug 04, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

O’ Indypendant has heard about this video for months yo. So to explain to the peeps who have better things to do than pay attention to the self-serving histrionics of petty politics, I leave ya with these lovin words of wisdom yo…

Don’t be distracted by the spin yo.

Any political type whose lookin for a job and money from the voters should say what they believe and believe what they say yo.

They should ALWAYS say what they believe and believe what they say yo. Cameras rollin or no, yo.

IT IS NOT HOW THE VIDEO WAS MADE. IT IS WHAT SHE SAID IN THE VIDEO YO

The video was made at a public political meeting with her speaking to a crowd of voters yo. I’ve seen videos like this all summer on Fox New where political types show their real mindset and speak without a prompter yo. They always complain like a purp getting caught with weed about the narc who made the video

Some fools even try to deny what they said yo. Why yo??:???

Because it is damage control dudes and dudettes…

The slimy political types don’t want fool voters to see what they really think cause then you fool sheep won’t vote for them….word to your ballot….yo

The job of state rep is one vote of 98 to spend billions of dollars yo

Ya want to know the type of person ya place in that position yo…even in candid moments yo

They might complain and even go insane when they get caught, but the validation is in the vid; they are what they are yo….

And don’t worry about who made the vids yo… They are heroes trying not to get sued, exercising their freedom of speech and hearing dudes and dudettes…

I feel a rhyme comin on….


Shelly O’Quinn
The Vid is in
You are yourself
So don’t you spin

You’re in a rut
Call Netthercut
He’ll sue the dudes
And save your butt

Petty issues
tears and tissues
Don’t make a rep
Voters ensues

Say what you mean
With Words spin-clean
Then a stray vid
Won’t show you green…


Yo
Aug 05, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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