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Candidates Woo Armenian Americans


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Candidates Woo Armenian Americans

 

By MICHAEL FINNEGAN, Times Staff Writer

 

 

Republican Rep. James E. Rogan of Glendale sends voters a letter typed in the

Armenian alphabet to trumpet his record as a "true friend and staunch ally" of anyone

who can read it.

Not to be outdone, his Democratic challenger, state Sen. Adam Schiff of Burbank,

stammers through a banquet speech in Armenian, one syllable at a time.

Perhaps most daring of all is Democratic Assemblyman Jack Scott of Altadena,

who is running for state Senate. The courtly Texas native dazzles viewers of Armenian

cable TV with his language skills in an ad promoting the 2000 census. With a touch of

his Southern twang, "shnorhagaloutiune," the Armenian word for thank you, rolls off his

tongue.

Welcome to the newest frontier of ethnic politics in the Southland.

A surge in Armenian American voter registration in the Glendale area over the last

two years has led candidates for Congress and the Legislature to court them with an

unprecedented barrage of TV ads, mailings, phone calls and events.

Every major party campaign in the area is mining computerized lists of voters with

names that sound Armenian to target them for ethnic appeals. The candidates have

come to view Armenian Americans as a crucial bloc that could make or break their

campaigns.

With the race so closely fought, some analysts think Armenian Americans could be

the decisive factor. "Frankly, they will decide this Rogan-Schiff race," said Los Angeles

political consultant Eric Hacopian. "This is the largest group of swing voters."

The battle for their support in the 27th Congressional District is especially intense

because the race there is one of the most competitive and expensive House contests in

the nation. Democrats see Rogan as one of the most vulnerable Republican incumbents,

and they need to pick up just six seats to win control of the House.

The district, which covers Glendale, Burbank, Pasadena and several adjacent

communities, is home to more residents of Armenian ancestry than anywhere else

outside Armenia. About 300,000 Armenian Americans live in the Los Angeles area,

nearly a third of them in the 27th Congressional District, according to the Armenian

National Committee.

In the hotly contested races in the overlapping 21st state Senate and 43rd Assembly

districts, candidates are also fighting for the pivotal Armenian American vote.

"Anyone who's politically ambitious in the area is courting them," Hacopian said.

"This is a whole maturation process for a community that's coming into its own

politically."

Candidates in the area have wooed Armenian Americans for years, but two

developments have heightened the community's potency in the 2000 elections.

First, thousands of Armenians who emigrated from Iran, Lebanon and the former

Soviet Union in the 1980s and early '90s have recently become citizens eligible to vote.

Second, the Glendale City Council campaign of Rafi Manoukian, an Armenian

American, was coupled last year with an aggressive voter registration drive, called

"25,000 in 2000," that put several thousand new voters on the books.

Since 1992, the number of Armenian American voters has more than doubled to

roughly 23,000 in the congressional district, according to Political Data, a Burbank firm

that sells voter information to campaigns.

The new voters tend to be less conservative and less affluent than earlier generations

who rallied behind Republicans like George Deukmejian, governor of California from

1983 to 1991. Over the last 18 months, Democrats have slightly outnumbered

Republicans among Armenian Americans who registered in the district.

To candidates in close races, the new voters offer an enticing opportunity, so the

politicians are showering them with attention.

In Asbarez, the leading Armenian newspaper in Glendale, campaign advertising is up

more than 50% over the 1998 election cycle, said Ara Khachatourian, editor of the

paper's English-language edition.

On local Armenian TV stations, the candidates have become fixtures of news and

talk shows.

"Everybody and his brother, they were here," said Vache Mangassarian, a Rogan

supporter who hosts a nightly show on the Armenian National Network from his

Glendale studio.

So far, four candidates have run TV commercials in Armenian: Schiff; Republican

Assembly contender Craig Missakian, an Armenian American; and two losers in the

Democratic primary, Assembly candidate Paul Krekorian and state Senate hopeful

Scott Wildman.

Schiff made his Armenian commercial the first TV ad of his campaign for Congress.

It showed him meeting with Robert Kocharian, the president of Armenia, and speaking

at an event commemoration the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the

Turks from 1915 to 1923.

A Krekorian ad was more upbeat. A fast-tempo Armenian folk tune nearly

drowned out the narrator as words written in the Armenian alphabet scrolled down the

screen: tradition, family, youth, security and future.

Scott appeared during his primary race in a state-funded public service

announcement urging speakers of Armenian to fill out census forms. At the beginning,

he introduces himself: "Parev, yes Assemblyman Jack Scott-yan." At the end, he

reappears with a smile and takes a brave crack at thank you: "shnorhagaloutiune."

Rogan, whose letter to voters was a solid page of Armenian script, plans to shoot a

TV ad starring former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, a champion of Armenian

causes, touting his record on Armenian issues, said Rogan campaign manager Jason

Roe.

Bills addressing Armenian concerns have become a staple of incumbents from the

Glendale area. Rogan, Schiff, Scott and Wildman, an assemblyman, have all sponsored

measures related to the genocide.

Armenian themes have also found their way into campaign mud fights. Rogan's team

took a shot at Schiff last week for missing a state Senate vote on a bill to enable

genocide victims and their heirs to file insurance claims in California. (Schiff, who

sponsored the bill, said the Senate session was called "at the last minute," and he went

to a fund-raiser instead.)

"How can the Armenian community depend on him to be there when they need him

if he's willing to blow off a vote on legislation important to their community to attend a

fund-raiser?" Roe said.

Schiff's campaign, in turn, distributed a scathing anti-Rogan news release from the

Armenian American Democratic Leadership Council. A group official, Raffi Asatoorian,

hammered Rogan's deputy chief of staff, David Silverstein, for attending an American

Turkish Council conference in Washington.

"Despite the fact that Congressman Rogan represents the largest Armenian

American constituency in the United States, his staff, amazingly, is running around

Washington at social events with lobbyists who make a living denying the Armenian

genocide," Asatoorian said.

(Roe said: "They completely distorted something innocent to make it look sinister.")

Some Armenian Americans are enjoying the fuss. At Fremont Park in Glendale,

Serob Saroukhaian recalled TV images of Rogan's visit last year to Armenia. The trip

convinced him to back the incumbent.

His pal Nassis Harbedian was flattered by all the courting ("I like someone who's

thinking about Armenia") but unmoved.

"Which one is Democrat?" he asked. "Always I am choosing in the list Democrats

only: Armenian, Spanish, American, I don't care." Republicans "are going behind rich

people. The Democrats are thinking about middle-class people."

For many of the new voters, the local campaigns are their first experience of

democracy.

"You could vote in the Soviet Union, but . . . it was more part of a farce," said

Vicken Papazian of the Armenian National Committee.

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