Saturday, February 5, 2011

The OC GOP central committee: "An incestuous mob of fellow sycophants"


     I’VE BEEN THINKING about the curious and mysterious way that Tom Fuentes has made and still makes a living—and then I remembered a great piece about Tom from about ten years ago: “Dear Mr. Fuentes: letters to the most powerful Republican in Orange County, California."
     Writer Nathan Calahan (that’s a pseudonym) is a close friend of a close friend. I’ve met him a few times; he and I always seem to argue. He used to work for the OC Weekly.
     Well, back in 2000, he wrote a marvelous piece about his year-long correspondence (of sorts) with then-GOP chief Fuentes. In truth, the piece is an overview of Fuentes the man and his odd ways—you know, threatening to destroy people, that sort of thing. Mind you, Nathan wrote this four or five years before Fuentes’ fall—i.e., his ouster from the chairmanship of the County Party in 2004. But, as you’ll see (if you read Nathan’s piece), the knives were already out back in 2000.
     Nathan’s piece has it’s highlights—especially his suggestion, to pen pal Tom, that he exploit the, um, absurd rumor that Tom is gay—for political gain.
     But I thought of Nathan’s article because of something else. Here’s one of Nathan’s letters to Tom:
Dear Mr. Fuentes,

     Boy, you must be busy. I completely understand why you haven't sent me your autographed photo yet. You've been out registering new Republicans ever since that Sept. 24 Orange County Register story appeared! What a headline!

REPUBLICANS DIP BELOW 50 PERCENT IN REGISTERED VOTERS FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1984.

     Who do you think is responsible for this decline: Clinton Republicans? They'd be first on my list of suspects.
     I'm sure you remember Roger Johnson—that turncoat Republican CEO of Western Digital who endorsed Clinton in 1992 and then went on to be named director of Slick Willy's general services administration. Johnson was the first domino to fall. In 1996, more Republicans—including Mayor Tracy Wills Worley of Tustin, ex-Orange County Supervisor Harriet Weider and Central Committee Member Bill Dougherty—endorsed Clinton for re-election. To top it off, Dougherty called the Orange County Republican Central Committee "an incestuous mob of fellow sycophants who are either on the public payroll as assistants to some Republican office holder or fat-cat corporate lobbyists." Dougherty even got personal when he said that "your leadership and your bigoted Right wing of the party has led us down the path of defeat."
"B-1 Bob" Dornan; tightly wound
     So this Dougherty fella called the OC Republican Central Committee "an incestuous mob of fellow sycophants who are either on the public payroll as assistants to some Republican office holder or fat-cat corporate lobbyists," did he?
     What a guy!
     That reminds me of the time that, on TV, up-and-coming Republican and Congressional candidate, Nathan Rosenberg, called Fuentes "a bagman" for former county Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers! (See KOCE's May 29 Election Special Is Highly Charged, LA Times, 5/20/86.) When Rosenberg was asked to clarify the “bagman” remark, he said we oughta look the word up in Webster’s Dictionary. Yessirreebob!
     But, right now, it’s Dougherty’s remark that interests me, ‘cause, all those years ago, he pretty much hit the nail on the head, near as I can tell. And it's almost as if he were talking especially about Tom Fuentes and his pals today!
     I did some quick research. Turns out Dougherty, who was in his early seventies at the time of the 1996 Fuentes fracas, was the long-time leader of the moderates among OC Republicans.
     From his obit in 2002:
     William A. Dougherty, a Villa Park attorney who gained public attention for his defense of Christopher Boyce, the "Falcon" of the spy duo immortalized in the book and film "The Falcon and the Snowman," has died. He was 77.
     Dougherty, who was known as a lively curmudgeon in Orange County Republican political circles, died Wednesday at his home in the upscale community east of Anaheim. He had prostate cancer and fell into a coma on Christmas Day [2001].
. . .
John Schmitz
     Dougherty also became known around California in the 1970s for trying to move the Republican Party in Orange County away from the dominant conservatism represented by such politicians as former congressmen Robert K. Dornan and John Schmitz. Though he never was successful in winning political office himself, Dougherty was considered a leader among the moderate or liberal wing of the local GOP.
     "I always called myself a Dougherty Republican," said local defense attorney H. Dean Steward, a longtime ally of Dougherty's within the party. "There weren't that many of us, but we were dedicated to moving the party back where it should be."
     Dougherty angered many fellow Republicans in 1996 when he supported Democrat Loretta Sanchez after she successfully defeated Dornan. In her literature, Dougherty called Dornan a "war wimp." It cost Dougherty his seat on the county's Republican Central Committee, but after he filed a lawsuit against the party, he eventually was reinstated.
     A highly decorated Marine fighter pilot during World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War, Dougherty retired as a reserve colonel in 1976. He founded the November 10th Assn., a local group of ex-Marines that holds an annual dinner to honor the corps' inception, and was active in the Marine Foundation, a fund-raising group.
     I think I'm in love.

See also

• Dornan and Critic Exchange Angry Barbs at GOP Meeting (1996)
• Push Underway to Get Moderates Seats on Central GOP Committee (2000)
• Other Times articles about Dougherty
• Shut Up, Fag!: Quotations from the Files of Congressman Bob Dornan, the Man Who Would Be President

Loretta v. Bob, c. 1996

Kill me now


Tutoring has evolved. It is no longer as anthropocentric as it once was
     Norberto Santana, Jr.'s article about John Williams (in Voice of OC) appears to be updated--and particularly interesting. It really looks like Williams is toast.

Update: that daffy new tutoring referral “protocol”

Who can 'splain it?
     A PROTOCOL FROM HELL—and SADDLEBACK. You’ll recall that, during flex week, the district set up a system for referring students to tutoring. The new system works like this: faculty who open their Spring semester rosters automatically refer all of their students to tutoring—unless they uncheck a pre-checked box appearing at the bottom of the roster page.
     Wacky!
     I first heard about it on Friday of flex week. The next day—two days before the start of the semester—I posted about the new protocol (Referring students, sight unseen, to tutoring? Huh?), explaining that, on my reading of Title 5, it is unlawful, among other things.
     Title 5, I reported, clearly suggests that
… to do this tutoring thing right, all students who are tutored … must be enrolled [in tutoring] on the basis of a referral. The referral must be by a “counselor or an instructor.” The latter must be referring the student to tutoring because of “an identified learning need.”
Justice: some say IVC's VPI practices a dastardly form of "thought control"
     So, obviously, the new protocol ain’t kosher. Or so I wrote.
     A week or two later, the new protocol came up at the meeting of the IVC Academic Senate, and, at that time, VPI Craig Justice expressed unhappiness with the dang thing. The new protocol, he said, did appear to violate Title 5. (But gosh, hadn’t anybody at Saddleback College, the initiator of this daffy protocol, clued him in about it?)

     THE NIGHTMARE IS OVER. Well, at the last IVC senate meeting (two days ago), Justice explained that he had met with his counterpart at Saddleback College (Don B), and it was agreed that the new protocol would have to be undone and replaced with something that would square with Title 5.
     OK, so that’s one problem solved, I guess. (See also The automatic referral "protocol," part 3: violating Title 5.) Send cash prizes to DtB.

"Hey, Buster. I have an identified need."

Neanderthalic science



     It's hard to believe that Bill went to college. How could he not know what causes the tides?
     The poor fellow now asks: where did the moon come from? And so he seems equally ignorant about stellar evolution and the creation of our solar system.
     How can that be? He must have taken some science courses in college, right? He must've passed some of 'em, right? I'm mystified.




www.colbertnation.com

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...