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  • Glendale races funded early

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Aug 6 2004

    Glendale races funded early

    Mayor's bankroll bulges months before election

    By Naush Boghossian
    Staff Writer


    GLENDALE -- With city elections still eight months away, Mayor Bob
    Yousefian already has raised $63,594 for his re-election campaign.

    Councilman Frank Quintero raised $39,133 in contributions between
    Jan. 1 and June 30, while Councilman Dave Weaver collected $8,500,
    according to campaign finance reports.

    Councilman Gus Gomez is running for a Superior Court judgeship in
    November, and his election could leave the council with four seats up
    for grabs.

    "It's very early to be raising that kind of money for an April
    election," Councilman Rafi Manoukian said. "It discourages people who
    are planning on running for the office by having funds that large
    available for a candidate."

    Quintero disagreed, saying that people who want to run for a council
    seat will not be swayed.

    "I think in the political process, whoever is determined and
    interested is going to run," he said.

    Early fund raising is becoming more and more common in politics, said
    Democratic consultant Rick Taylor.

    "I think politics has changed in general. These days you have someone
    campaigning for state Assembly 1 years away from the election. I find
    it to be the way you do business in politics today," said Taylor of
    West Los Angeles-based Dakota Communications.

    Also, the increasing cost of running campaigns drives the need to
    raise more money, Quintero and Yousefian said.

    "Glendale is a large city -- the third largest in Los Angeles County
    -- and the days you can run a campaign on a shoestring budget are
    unfortunately over," said Yousefian, who expects to spend about
    $100,000 on his campaign.

    Taylor agreed, saying times have changed since candidates in small
    cities could spend $17,000 on a campaign and win.

    "I think in all small cities the amount of money spent now is 15
    times what they used to spend just a handful of years ago," Taylor
    said. "Today things have changed dramatically, and part of that
    change is the consultant factor -- hiring people to run their
    campaigns, to have better-looking mail and all those things that go
    in(to) a modern-day political campaign."

    But Weaver, who held a fund-raiser in July, questioned the effect of
    contributions to Yousefian from as far as Nevada.

    "In my opinion, there are more individuals and groups out there that
    are trying to gain influence on the council with their large
    donations," Weaver said. "We're starting to see moneys come in from
    outside the community and more development money showing up from
    people who could potentially do business in the city of Glendale."

    Rafi Manoukian changed the face of Glendale politics and the amount
    of money required to run a campaign in this city, Yousefian said.

    In 1999, Manoukian registered 4,000 Armenian voters -- where there
    were 800 before -- and successfully ran against 13 people for an open
    seat by spending nearly $100,000. In 2003, he received the largest
    number of votes in an election in Glendale's history.

    "At this point, I wouldn't put any kind of weight on the amount of
    funds raised," said Manoukian, who always began raising funds in
    December. "But, it certainly gives them a leg up on everybody else."
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