Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Gunning for Bill Simon ; (California's leftists media after Simon )
The American Prowler ^ | Published 4/23/02 12:39:00 AM | George Neumayr

Posted on 04/26/2002 12:39:58 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-28 last
To: Munson
Maybe I'll switch to the Orange County register.

I've done that. They're not The Wall Street Journal but they're a step up from the Times.

21 posted on 04/26/2002 10:21:00 PM PDT by Euro-American Scum
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: The Ghost of Richard Nixon
...California is on the verge of bankruptcy! Davis ... is extremely dangerous to this country.

California socialism is terminally ill. Why elect Bill Simon to prolong its existence? It's a lose/lose situation. If he succeeds, socialism limps by. If he fails, the socialists will blame the conservatives, sweeping them out of power for the next 10 years. I like Bill Simon, and will vote for him, just not yet. First let socialism blow itself to 40 billion bits. Let Davis be at the controls when she blows.

22 posted on 04/26/2002 10:40:36 PM PDT by Reeses
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: Euro-American Scum
How about if no one bought it and wouldn't read it, even if it was free!

Now that would be a great kick by old man reality!

23 posted on 04/26/2002 11:50:22 PM PDT by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
WHEN YOU'RE RIGHT, YOU'RE RIGHT!

San Francisco Chronicle by Lance Williams 4/21/02

Steve Frank, Republican gubernatorial candidate Bill Simon's deputy political director, holds a key job in the effort to return the party to California's top office.

But some Republicans, both moderate and conservative, fear that Simon's association with people like Frank, and with the issues he represents, could cost the party the election.

Frank, 47, is an anti-abortion activist who once raffled off a shotgun in a Georgia congressional race to boost turnout among opponents of gun control.

A former lobbyist for the Church of Scientology, he helped elect a slate of born-again Christians to a Southern California school board on a platform of banning classes in sex education and evolution.

For more than a decade, in alliance with such groups as the Christian Coalition and Operation Rescue, he has battled to push the Republican Party -- most recently, via the ultra-conservative National Federation of Republican Assemblies -- further to the right.

Critics worry that Frank's presence on the campaign team could undercut Simon's efforts to attract moderate voters in his race against Democrat Gray Davis.

Frank is "anti-abortion, anti-gun control, for (school) vouchers -- the real hard-line, right-wing slate," said Robert Larkin, a moderate GOP activist who has often squared off politically against Frank in Simi Valley (Ventura County), where both men reside.

"It's hard to see" how Frank can help Simon attract moderate voters, he said.

Simon campaign spokesman James Fisfis said criticism of Frank is off the mark.

"Steve Frank is an asset to this campaign -- he works hard and contributes a great deal," he said.

Simon's staff includes not just conservatives like Frank, Fisfis said, but moderate and liberal GOP activists as well -- reflecting Simon's ability to rally "the entire spectrum" of the party.

"What Bill was able to do is unite people," Fisfis said.

But Barbara Chiodo, former president of both the conservative California Republican Assembly and the Log Cabin Republicans gay group, said Frank's politics are tightly focused on opposition to abortion and gay rights laws.

He targets Republicans who disagree, she said.

"He can't even relate to normal conservative Republicans, which I consider myself," she said. ". . . I'll tell you very sincerely that there are a ton of us who will not support Simon because of Steve Frank."

Frank's current role shows that Simon "has got an evangelical mentality," she asserted.

Chiodo and others point to the recent uproar over Frank's hiring of an activist from the anti-abortion, anti-gay rights Traditional Values Coalition to electioneer for Simon in the GOP primary.

Phil Sheldon, son of coalition founder the Rev. Lou Sheldon, distributed e- mails touting Simon as the candidate who would "undo four years of liberalism, homosexuality and anti-family values in California at the hands of Gov. Gray Davis," computer records show. After The Chronicle reported on the affair, Simon cut Sheldon loose.

In a brief interview, Frank said stories about him should note his volunteer work for the Girl Scouts, the Travelers Aid Society and other charities. He declined additional comment.

Bronx-born but raised in Southern California, Frank began a life of conservative activism as a schoolboy booster of the 1964 campaign of Barry Goldwater, according to published accounts.

He does political consulting, has twice run unsuccessfully for local office and also has been employed as a printing-supply salesman, he once told the Wall Street Journal.

And from 1992 through 1994, state records show, Frank worked as Sacramento advocate for an affiliate of the Church of Scientology, the applied religious philosophy founded by former science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard.

On behalf of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights, in Hollywood, Frank lobbied lawmakers on "the protection of religious liberties and a drug-free U. S.A," and on a bill that would have made it more difficult to sue churches for emotional distress, the records show. The measure never passed.

But inside California Republican politics, Frank is better known as a tireless, tough political strategist who, beginning in the 1980s, helped remake the party -- and drive many moderates from it -- by electing religious right activists to key posts on county and state committees.

His bare-knuckle style and tough rhetoric is unnerving, said Peggy Sadler, who was among the moderates ousted in 1991 from the Ventura County GOP Central Committee by a slate of anti-abortion candidates assembled by Frank.

Frank "was so far right, and it's either his way, or you don't belong in the Republican Party," she said. ". . . They used to call me an anti-Christian liberal, and I was secretary at the Presbyterian Church here for 26 years. . . . It made me very uncomfortable."

Frank, she said, was "divisive, that's why I was surprised that Simon hired him. I hope everything goes well."

In 1995, Frank served as political strategist for a Christian Coalition slate that won control of the Ventura County school board, said Superintendent of Schools Charles Weis.

By Weis' account, Frank and the evangelicals had an ambitious agenda terminating sex education and HIV-AIDS awareness classes, banning Planned Parenthood speakers from schools and refusing federal aid.

At one point, they sought to remove the teaching of evolution from science classes, or augment it with Bible-based creationism, he said.

Weis said the effort foundered, in part because the board proved "way too right-wing for the average conservative American."

But for about a year, "every meeting, we had pickets. Every board meeting was standing-room-only in the room, with reporters and TV trucks outside," Weis said. "It was hell."

By 1998, Frank was serving as parliamentarian for the state GOP. At a September convention, he pushed to run the abortion rights group Republicans for Choice organization out of the party, according to interviews and press accounts.

He also pushed the party to oppose reconfirmation for Supreme Court Justices Ronald George and Ming Chin -- both appointed by Republican Gov. Pete Wilson -- because they had voted to overturn a law requiring teens to obtain parental consent for abortions.

By then, Frank also was president and driving force of the National Federation of Republican Assemblies, an organization that he hoped would turn the national party to the right in the wake of moderate U.S. Sen. Bob Dole's trouncing by Bill Clinton in 1996.

The organization's platform, posted on its Web site, advocates prayer in schools and opposes abortion, gun control and drafting women into the armed forces.

"The Constitution was written to govern a moral and religious people, and it is being destroyed by those who are neither," its bylaws state.

Frank has proved a tireless advocate for the organization, traveling to 44 states to set up chapters. In November 2000, he turned up in suburban Atlanta, where he capped a get-out-the-vote drive among opponents of gun-control by raffling off a $1,500 Benelli Super Black Eagle 12-gauge shotgun.

Gerard Hegstrom, then Democratic Party chairman in DeKalb County, dismissed the raffle as a "stunt" that failed to give Republicans traction in their attempt to unseat liberal Rep. Cynthia McKinney. Nevertheless, the event made headlines in the Southeast.

Frank has big dreams for the federation.

Its message to moderate Republicans, he told his hometown paper, the Ventura County Star, is: "We don't want a seat at the table. We want the table. "

The organization isn't nearly that influential, says John Pitney, a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College, but it does increase the pressure on GOP candidates to incorporate hard-line conservatives in their campaigns.

http://sfgate.com/templates/brands/chronicle/images/chronicle.gif

24 posted on 04/29/2002 8:48:19 AM PDT by Saundra Duffy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Steve Frank is a personal friend of ours. He was a speaker at the FReeper "Post Inaugural Victory Brunch" televised on C-Span. The guy is ONE OF US!! If the Simon doesn't get going ON THE OFFENSE, we're doomed. Go, Simon campaign! Go ON THE OFFENSE!!!!!! And stop being ashamed of conservative people and issues!! For victory & freedom!!!
25 posted on 04/29/2002 8:50:03 AM PDT by Saundra Duffy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Grampa Dave
"Gay" Davis has got to go! He's a menace to all. A disgrace, a failure, an embarrassment, a liberal nightmare. I want Simon's campaign to GET GOING and stop pandering to the politically correct among us. There's room in the GOP for ALL persuasions IF and only IF they'll go on the offense and stop being ashamed of folks like Steve Frank. There's nothing to be ashamed of. Frank is a hero!! For victory & freedom!!!
26 posted on 04/29/2002 8:54:31 AM PDT by Saundra Duffy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Saundra Duffy
The guy is ONE OF US!!

Great to know that!

The attacks on Frank mirror the tactics the left is using on Karl Rove don't they!

27 posted on 04/29/2002 12:16:07 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: Saundra Duffy
So he was also a lobbyist for the Church of Scientology. Interesting how the article left that detail out.
28 posted on 04/29/2002 12:31:19 PM PDT by Belial
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 24 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-28 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson