Los Angeles Times

Ex-state GOP leader to run for U.S. Senate

Silicon Valley lawyer George Sundheim is 2nd former California Republican chairman to enter the race.

- By Michael Finnegan and Phil Willon michael.finnegan@latimes.com Twitter: @finneganLA­T phil.willon@latimes.com Twitter: @philwillon

George “Duf ” Sundheim, a Silicon Valley lawyer who led the state Republican Party during the recall of Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and election of Arnold Schwarzene­gger, will announce his candidacy for U.S. Senate on Wednesday.

Sundheim, 62, is the second former state GOP chairman to enter the race for the Senate seat that Democrat Barbara Boxer plans to vacate next year. The first, Tom Del Beccaro, announced his candidacy in April.

Both are running in a state that has not elected a Republican to the Senate in more than a quarter-century; where no Republican has won a statewide general election since 2006; and where Democrats hold a 15% advantage over the GOP in voter registrati­on.

Sundheim says he is confident he can persevere.

Although he is a fiscal conservati­ve and highly critical of President Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran, he diverges from party orthodoxy on many core issues. He supports abortion rights and a “pathway to citizenshi­p” for some immigrants living here illegally, and he believes climate change has been caused, in part, by human behavior.

“Our country is going in the wrong direction. You have to have a vision that is different than strictly right versus left,’’ Sundheim said. He said California­ns, regardless of party allegiance, will look beyond the fact that he’s a “balding white guy and a Republican” because they want change.

Sundheim said he decided to run for the Senate because he was concerned that many California­ns had “given up hope” about politics, with low voter turnout reflecting unhappines­s about the lack of action on stagnant wages and underperfo­rming schools.

Along with Sundheim and Del Beccaro, the field of Republican candidates includes state Assemblyma­n Rocky Chavez of Oceanside. The two major Democrats in the race so far are state Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris and Rep. Loretta Sanchez of Santa Ana.

Regardless of party, the candidates who finish first and second in the June 2016 primary will advance to a November 2016 runoff election. They have until March to declare their candidacie­s.

Sundheim, who lives in Los Altos Hills near San Jose, led the state party from 2003 to 2007, a period that included the recall of Davis and the election of Schwarzene­gger, a Republican, as his replacemen­t.

On Sundheim’s watch, Schwarzene­gger won a second term in 2006, and Republican Steve Poizner was elected state insurance commission­er — the party’s last two statewide victories.

Sundheim has a bachelor’s degree in economics from Stanford University and a law degree from Northweste­rn University. He practiced business law from 1980 to 2002.

Some of his clients manufactur­ed theme-park rides and sold video games, he said. Some were “very generous,” and he hasn’t had “a real job” since he left the firm, he said.

Recently he has served as a court-appointed mediator as well as a private mediator for adversarie­s trying to avoid litigation — experience he said could prove useful in partisan Washington.

“I think there’s some skills I could bring to the table,” he said.

 ?? Paul Sakuma
Associated Press ?? FORMER GOV. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, left, with George “Duf” Sundheim in 2006. Sundheim led the state Republican Party from 2003 to 2007.
Paul Sakuma Associated Press FORMER GOV. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, left, with George “Duf” Sundheim in 2006. Sundheim led the state Republican Party from 2003 to 2007.

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