Ray McNally

June 6, 2008 - 3:05pm

Conservative leanings delivered the 4th for McClintock

In the end, state Sen. Tom McClintock’s victory over Doug Ose in the Republican primary for the seat of retiring U.S. Rep. John Doolittle had as much to with the realities of the 4th Congressional District as the candidates themselves.

The conservative tilt of the district, which gave George W. Bush 61 percent of the vote in 2004 and supported the 2003 recall of Gray Davis by a margin of 70 percent to 30 percent, made it a natural fit for McClintock, a veteran state legislator who is widely considered to be something of an icon in right-leaning circles. The tendency for party die-hards and activists to turn out in Republican primaries made the task that much more difficult for Ose, who is widely perceived as a moderate.

“It was an uphill climb the day he got in,” said Richard Temple, Ose’s chief political adviser, referring to McClintock’s March entrance into the race. “Most candidates didn’t want to take on that challenge. Ose did.”

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April 9, 2008 - 4:52pm

Ose says campaign will be 'a broken record' against McClintock

WASHINGTON - Republican congressional candidate Doug Ose made no secret of his campaign’s strategy heading into the final six-week run of the primary campaign: hit Republican opponent Tom McClintock hard – and often, he said in an hour-long interview Tuesday.

“We are going to be a broken record,” said Ose, who is seeking a return to the U.S. House after retiring from his 3rd District seat in 2005.

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