Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenians Aid Poochigian's Campaign

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenians Aid Poochigian's Campaign

    ARMENIANS AID POOCHIGIAN'S CAMPAIGN
    Hank Shaw
    Capitol Bureau Chief

    Stockton Record, CA
    Aug. 14, 2006

    Ethnic pride may have helped spur donations in run for attorney general

    SACRAMENTO - Most candidates raise the bulk of their cash from
    unions or builders or insurance companies. Not state attorney general
    candidate Chuck Poochigian: The fount of his campaign cash comes from
    fellow Armenians.

    Poochigian, a state senator from Fresno, whose district includes part
    of San Joaquin County, will face former Gov. Jerry Brown, now mayor
    of Oakland, in autumn's election for California's top cop.

    A Record analysis of Poochigian's fund-raising shows he has at least
    900 Armenian contributors who have combined to pump more than $780,000
    into his campaign.

    Compare this to Brown, who state records show has just nine Armenian
    contributors.

    It is a tremendous show of ethnic pride: According to a calculation
    based on population estimates from the Armenian National Committee,
    only about 500,000 voting-age people of Armenian ancestry live in
    California.

    The reason for this outpouring of support is simple, according to
    interviews with dozens of Poochigian contributors: Armenians take
    care of their own.

    "We Armenians stick together - we're a close-knit group of people,"
    said Ted Katzakian of Lodi. "It's just Armenian pride more than
    anything."

    Even tennis star Andre Agassi, who has some Armenian heritage,
    contributed $10,000 to Poochigian.

    "It is a very large extended family," Poochigian said.

    Indeed, nearly every one of the dozen Central Valley Poochigian
    contributors interviewed for this story had a direct connection to the
    candidate; one had a sister who dated one of Poochigian's relatives,
    another had a cousin who went to California State University, Fresno,
    with him, a third has met him at any number of Armenian community
    functions.

    Poochigian deflects the uniqueness of his situation, noting that the
    Portuguese have always helped their own in the San Joaquin Valley and
    the Vietnamese were instrumental in getting Orange County Assemblyman
    Van Tran elected two years ago.

    "I'm certain that there's a lot of groups that seek to be supportive
    of people of their own background," he said.

    Turlock melon farmer Berj Moosekian says ethnic pride helped a little
    when he decided to write Poochigian a check, but he said it's not
    that related to being Armenian. "It's because he supports Valley
    issues. He's sensible and doesn't go to extremes."

    Moosekian and the others see Poochigian as something akin to the
    Second Coming of George Deukmejian. "The Duke" was California's first
    elected Armenian in the 1960s, and later became attorney general and
    then governor from 1983-1991.

    "He reminds me so much of Deukmejian," said Ralph Saroyan of
    Stockton. "In my mind, he is the antithesis of a typical politician."

    Poochigian got into politics volunteering on Deukmejian's 1978 campaign
    and later worked for him during the last two years of his gubernatorial
    term. He calls Deukmejian his role model.

    Both men are viewed by those who know them as hard-working,
    intellectual conservatives, polite to a fault and deeply interested -
    critics say obsessed - with law-and-order issues.

    It was Deukmejian who as a Long Beach state senator sponsored the
    legislation that re-instated the death penalty in California. Jerry
    Brown vetoed it and then suffered one of California's rare veto
    overrides. The Duke then served as attorney general during Brown's
    second term. They remain ideological foes.

    Deukmejian is widely considered responsible for pushing the Armenian
    community into politics. Deukmejian said the effort took years,
    but it worked: "I have often said I never would have made it without
    their support."

    He's transferred that support to Poochigian by writing fund-raising
    letters on his behalf.

    Whether it will lead Poochigian to victory in November remains to be
    seen. Few Californians know who he is, and he trails Brown 54 percent
    to 33 percent in last month's Field Poll. Brown also has $1.7 million
    more in his campaign account than Poochigian heading into the fall.

    Deukmejian thinks money will matter: He says voters need to get to
    know Poochigian as much as they need to know the details of Brown's
    time as governor and mayor of Oakland, and the only way to do that
    statewide is through expensive radio and TV ads.

    "It's an uphill effort, but so was mine," Deukmejian said. "If he
    (Poochigian) and his campaign can raise enough money to get his
    message across, I believe this is doable."
Working...
X