What ever happened to the notorious "board majority"?


     This is a brief follow-up to yesterday's post: Dissent does history: the "shared governance" wars at the South Orange County Community College District (1995-2005)

What became of the original Board Majority?

     The original Board Majority—Frogue, Williams, Lorch, & Fortune—was a crew of hapless fools. It was infused with intelligence only insofar as members were replaced: by Wagner, then Fuentes, then with Lang's move to the dark side in 2005.
     FROGUE. (See petition.) Though he survived (not by much) the massive 1998 recall effort (“I beat ‘em with one hand tied behind my back!” he crowed), by 2000, Frogue's fifteen minutes were over. Mathur, et al., then hatched a plan for Frogue to resign toward the end of his term (June 2000) to be replaced—via board appointment—with County GOP chief and prince of darknessThomas Fuentes
     The appointed Fuentes thus gained the insuperable incumbency 
advantage when he ran for election in November, which was necessary, since he came with heavy baggage (he had many detractors among Republicans, especially among women, children, and small animals). He remained on the board until his death in 2012 (despite missing virtually a whole year of meetings owing to his terminal illness). His funeral, which Fuentes himself planned, had the pomp and pageantry befitting a great man, not the feared and despised, hateful bastard that he actually was. (See Harber and Caspers attempt to bribe a developer, but then they die instead. See also Republican consultant, Eileen Padberg, hates a certain misogynistic party leader.)
     Fuentes became the de facto head (or co-head, with Don Wagner) of the 2000-2009 version of the conservative "Board Majority." In December of 2009, the Wagner/Fuentes/Mathur alliance suddenly exploded (see below), marking a significant change in district politics at the board level.

     
FORTUNE. Dorothy Fortune ended her time at SOCCCD ignominiously, in 2003, maintaining her seat on the board for some time despite having moved far from the district, a violation of law. She resigned just as local journalists closed in. (See Junior College Trustee in O.C. Quits, LA Times, Sept. 18, 2003)

     LORCH. Teddi Lorch, who was appointed to the board in 1993, vacated her seat at the end of her 1994-98 term, making no secret of her desire to acquire the chief district HR job. When Chancellor Sampson blocked her hire (she's dumber than a box of rocks; see video below), she sued the district for "age discrimination," among other reasons. I do believe that the district settled (trustee Padberg, of course, was a close friend), giving her the HR position, for which she was, naturally, utterly unsuited. Nevertheless, she kept it for many years, to the consternation of the district community.

     WILLIAMS
. John Williams, that junketeer extraordinaire,  retired under an enormous cloud. While trustee, with Tom Fuentes' help, he snagged two low-level county offices, Public Administrator and Public Guardian, milking them for all they were worth. But his abject incompetence in those roles (something this blog had a significant role in bringing to light; this DtB post seemed to set off lots of warning bells) led to demands that he resign. In the midst of that controversy, in 2010, he quit his SOCCCD trustee gig.
     But things only got worse for him, politically, and he became the poster child for OC political corruption, and that's saying something. In January of 2012, still a huge embarrassment to the GOP establishment, he finally resigned. Whew!
     But to the horror of everyone—except for remnants of the union Old Guard—he then decided to run for his former trustee seat! He was opposed in this by the Republican establishment (including Don Wagner, Todd Spitzer, and Frank Ury). In the end, he came in third behind Tim Jemal, who ran unaffiliated.

     SAMPSON. Cedric Sampson, the only yes-man chancellor in memory, died in November, 2002, age 60, of leukemia. He was fired by the board in early 2001—he had been on leave owing to illness. Trustee Wagner briefly noted Sampson's passing during the Nov 2002 board meeting. 

     MATHUR. Mathur's exit from the district was ugly. This DtB post comes closest to describing the political moment in which Mathur was canned: Crony Boy to terrorize Nepotism Boy, January 29, 2010. 
     I could have sworn I wrote a blow-by-blow of the board meeting in question, but I can't seem to find it. Probably, I'm thinking of this post, a doozy, about the preceding meeting (December 2009), in which, to everyone's amazement, the core trustee alliance of Fuentes/Wagner suddenly exploded, evidently to smithereens.
     (Possibly, this post sheds light on that explosion. Also, see this post.)
     By then, ridding the district of Mathur was Don Wagner's chief goal in life, and he achieved it, simultaneously destroying whatever alliance he enjoyed with (GOP kingmaker) Tom Fuentes, Mathur's biggest booster (and Wagner's campaign manager: he was running for State Assembly). I'm told that Mathur did some discrete dark deed of such unfathomable enormity that it caused Wagner to run around the district offices openly swearing that he would "fire that bastard." 
     Good for you, Don.

Subsequent versions of the SOCCCD "Board Majority"
     Starting in December of 1998, with the exit of Lorch, the (even redder) conservative Board Majority was Wagner, Padberg, Williams, Frogue, and Fortune. Wagner was the brains of the bunch.
     Starting in the late summer of 2000, with the resignation of Frogue, the conservative Board Majority was Wagner, Padberg, Williams, Fuentes, and Fortune. (Fortune left in late 2003.) Wagner and Fuentes (Fuentes was chair of the OC GOP) dominated the board (though Fuentes never sought the board presidency, preferring a more indirect and reptilian agency).
     Arguably, the (conservative) Board Majority era ended in December of 2009, when the Mathur/Wagner/Fuentes core (supported by Williams/Lang—Padberg's hatred of Mathur removed her from the majority) exploded, as described above. The new "majority" was Wagner, Padberg, Milchiker, and sometimes Williams, which was unified, with the exception of Williams, only by a hatred of Mathur (and to some extent, Fuentes) and not a shared right-wing vision. Williams, who learned not to hate unions while a dumb cop, left in 2010; Fuentes died in 2012, but ceased to be a factor a year before. Replacements moved the board to the left: Moderate Republican. Still pretty clueless (with some possible exceptions: Jemal?), but not evil. 
     With the recent replacement of Lang with experienced unionist Carolyn Inmon, the board may transcend mere moderate Republicanism. We shall see. More than leftism, this board desperately needs to have a clue. Let's hope Inmon has one and lets her light shine. Given this district's history, however, I doubt any such thing will occur. But the mediocre is much better than the Neanderthal. 
     I am not entirely without hope.




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