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California State Senator In Biggest Political Challenge

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  • California State Senator In Biggest Political Challenge

    CALIFORNIA STATE SENATOR IN BIGGEST POLITICAL CHALLENGE
    By E.J. Schultz, Fresno Bee

    Scripps Howard News Service
    September 26, 2006, Tuesday 4:24 PM EST

    If Jerry Brown was born into politics, Chuck Poochigian, you might say,
    stumbled into it over breakfast.

    The year was 1977. The occasion: a morning organizing event in Fresno
    for then-state Sen. George Deukmejian.

    Deukmejian was ramping up his run for attorney general and looking
    for volunteers. Poochigian, fresh out of law school, seemed to fit
    the bill.

    "They were looking for someone who was a young attorney," he recalls.

    And so began a nearly 30-year political career that this fall brings
    Poochigian to his greatest challenge yet: a run for attorney general
    against Brown, a better-known and better-funded Democrat.

    To say the race is a study in contrasts is an understatement.

    Poochigian, a 57-year-old conservative Republican state senator,
    grew up on a family farm in rural Fresno County. He spent nearly 20
    years volunteering for campaigns and working behind the scenes before
    plunging into elected office in his mid 40s with his election to the
    Assembly in 1994.

    Brown, the mayor of Oakland, is the son of a governor. His entry
    into state politics began with a bang when he was elected California
    Secretary of State in his early 30s. He went on to serve two terms
    as governor and make three runs for president.

    Brown, 68, remains one of the most well-known politicians in
    California, a fact that has helped him to a double-digit lead in
    early polling and a more than $1million fundraising edge.

    Poochigian says the gap can be closed.

    "My challenge is to overcome my name identification," he said. "His
    challenge is to overcome his record."

    So far the candidates have spent more time attacking each other's
    past than debating the issues of today.

    The Poochigian team conjures up the image of Governor Moonbeam, the
    "flaky" and "too liberal" Gov. Brown of the 1970s and early 1980s who
    supported a prisoners' bill of rights and vetoed a bill to reinstate
    the death penalty. (The Legislature overrode the veto.)

    The Brown camp paints Poochigian as an "out-of-touch" and "extreme"
    career legislator who voted with business and against the environment.

    The rough-and-tumble of a statewide political campaign seems an
    unlikely place to find Poochigian, a mild-mannered policy wonk who
    seems more at home breaking down legislation than slinging one liners.

    "For me the campaign is an essential path to having the opportunity to
    serve, and that's it," he said. "I'm not interested in politics for
    the sake of just taking a victory lap. My reward comes from getting
    into the job, doing the people's business."

    The grandson of Armenian genocide survivors, Charles Suren Poochigian
    was born in 1949 and raised in Lone Star, an old railroad town
    southeast of Fresno. His elementary school didn't have a Cub Scout
    troop or baseball team, so Poochigian got involved in the 4-H club
    and worked on the family farm.

    He got a business degree from California State University, Fresno,
    in 1972 and a law degree from Santa Clara University in 1975. After
    graduation he opened a general law practice with Steven Vartabedian,
    a college and law school friend.

    Vartabedian, now a court of appeal justice in Fresno, said he and
    Poochigian were "short-hair-cutted geeks" in college, bucking the
    long-haired hippie trend of the day. "OK, let's calm down," was their
    attitude, he said. "We're here to get an education, we're not here
    to save the world."

    That's not to say Poochigian isn't outgoing. Vartabedian saw the
    political ability in him from the start. "You walk into a room and
    he's the kind of person that knows everyone and will converse with
    so many people," he said.

    A noted punster, Poochigian thrives on one-on-one conversations,
    but shies away from the limelight of a news conference. When he first
    came to the Legislature, reporters joked that his favorite quote was
    "off the record: no comment," said Deborah Gonzalez, Poochigian's
    chief of staff for the past seven years.

    Poochigian's first full-time political job came in 1988 when he
    was named to the senior staff of Gov. Deukmejian, whom Poochigian
    would come to idolize. Poochigian was responsible for interviewing
    potential appointees to boards, commissions and the judiciary - a job
    he performed with a penchant for detail, Deukmejian said. His reports
    were "much longer memos than I would normally get, and I used to kid
    him about it a lot."

    Poochigian, who had no intention of getting into politics, expected
    it to be a "two-year stint and back home." But he ended up staying
    on through Gov. Pete Wilson's inauguration and took over as Wilson's
    appointments secretary after the governor's initial choice resigned.

    He ran for the Assembly in 1994, at the urging of Bill Jones, who
    left the Fresno-area seat to run for Secretary of State. Poochigian
    won the election easily and quickly became a behind-the-scenes
    power player. As a freshman he was named chairman of the powerful
    appropriations committee, a rare assignment for a rookie.

    He was elected to the Senate in 1998, earning a reputation among
    Republicans and Democrats as a fair-minded, hard-working legislator.

    One of his greatest legislative achievements was carrying the 2004
    workers compensation overhaul bill that has been widely credited
    with saving employers billions of dollars. He has written numerous
    crime bills, including one that closed a loophole that allowed child
    molesters who targeted their own family members to avoid prison time.

    He says he is guided by the principle that "the primary goal in
    government is public safety."
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