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Mailer Effects Last: Long After Election Glendale Councilman Wants P

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  • Mailer Effects Last: Long After Election Glendale Councilman Wants P

    MAILER EFFECTS LAST: LONG AFTER ELECTION GLENDALE COUNCILMAN WANTS PROBE
    By Eugene Tong, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    June 25 2006

    GLENDALE - If the City Council were a high school cafeteria, Councilman
    Frank Quintero - at least for now - would be the quiet kid forced to
    eat lunch by himself.

    Weeks after a failed state Assembly run in which he caught flak for
    an attack mailer some denounced as anti-Armenian, the mood around
    him seemed tense at last week's council meeting.

    In contrast, the other four council members - three of them
    Armenian-Americans - joked and jibed while approving budgets and
    countering critics.

    "It's almost like he's a whipped puppy dog, losing that election,"
    said Barry Allen, head of a local watchdog group called Vanguard.

    Quintero, who lost to Burbank school board member Paul Krekorian in
    the 43rd Assembly District's June 6 Democratic primary, has denied any
    connection with the offending mailer distributed by the Oakland-based
    California Latino Leadership Fund.

    "I don't have any ill feelings toward any council member," he said
    in an interview. "I had nothing to do with that flier. It was an
    independent expenditure."

    The mailer sought to link his Armenian-American opponent to terrorism
    by way of the Armenian National Committee of America, which endorsed
    Krekorian. A former ANC leader no longer tied to the advocacy group
    was sentenced in 2001 to 37 years in prison for stolen explosives
    and weapons possession.

    "Things like this shouldn't be happening," said Councilman Bob
    Yousefian, who was among those offended by the mailer. "And this was
    done by people who had been discriminated (against) in the first place.

    "All bets are off against the candidate (when running for office).

    But when you attack a whole group of people, I don't think that's
    fair game."

    Quintero said he was ready to put the campaign behind him and return
    to work. He also is pressing for a state investigation of the mailer,
    a matter the City Council is slated to consider Tuesday.

    "I'm back at the job I was elected to do," he said. "I'm looking
    forward to spending my time working (on) city issues. There are plenty
    of things we need to work on."

    But members of the council's Armenian-American majority may not be
    as forgiving.

    "(Quintero) has chosen to completely deny it and not take
    responsibility for it," Yousefian said. "He has to take some
    responsibility for it.

    "Time has a tendency to heal things. I hope that will take place. I
    think Frank is going to have to take steps to basically wave the
    olive branch."

    Councilman Ara Najarian - who is also pushing for an investigation
    to help "clear up some of the air" - downplayed the flap.

    "There may be some tense and uneasy moments," he said. "(But) we're
    not going to vote against Frank just because he votes one way. We're
    not trying to isolate him or alienate him. He's a full-fledged member,
    and I for one expect him to participate fully."

    It's in the best interest of politicians to make nice, said Sherry
    Bebitch Jeffe, a political scientist at University of Southern
    California's School of Planning and Public Policy.

    "To get anything done in politics takes a majority of the vote," she
    said. "You can't hold a grudge." But with three Armenian-Americans
    on the council, "the defeated candidate has a harder job."

    City Manager Jim Starbird, who has more than 30 years' experience
    in municipal management, is optimistic that the council will remain
    functional.

    "Maintaining a professional relationship despite their differences is
    always important in maintaining a council that will function well,"
    he said. "I'm hopeful that we can separate the campaign issues that
    arose from the Assembly race and the issues that confront the city.

    "You don't really expect all members of a council to think alike all
    the time. What's important is how they express these differences, and
    working through the differences they have and coming to a conclusion."

    As for Quintero, who was elected in 2001 with help from the ANC,
    he still has time to mend bridges with his former supporters.

    "He still has two more years before the next election," Allen said.
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