What a difference four years can make
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- On Tuesday, the kingmakers could take over the
thrones.
Four years ago, former City Manager Robert Wynn and Balboa Island
activist Steve Bromberg, respectively, helped to elect Tom Thomson and
John Noyes to the City Council. Now, the two men might replace their 1996
choices for the council, should Newport Beach residents elect them.
The scenarios differ a little.
In District 7, where Thomson defeated Measure S supporter Phil Arst in
the last election, Wynn opposes his former protege.
In District 5, Bromberg seeks to occupy Mayor Noyes’ seat on the dais.
While Noyes isn’t running for reelection, he has put his weight behind
Patricia M. Beek, another candidate for the post.
But when the former campaign advisors start talking about the reasons
for entering the race themselves, a disillusion with their former
political allies becomes apparent.
“I don’t dislike [Thomson,]” Wynn said Thursday. “He’s not a bad man.
But as a council person, you have an almost sacred obligation to keep
your ears on the ground. Thomson hasn’t been a team player on the council
and added to the divisiveness that we have in our community.”
Thomson countered that Wynn’s candidacy was a ploy by developers to
take over city government.
“There is no doubt in my mind that it’s a concocted plan to control
the City Council by the Irvine Co. and the Chamber of Commerce,” he said.
“Mr. Wynn is a fine man, but he is a developers’ lobbyist ... I think
he’s running against me because he’s a poster boy for the Irvine Co. and
developers, who didn’t like my balanced approach.”
Bromberg expressed his feelings about Noyes in a similar way to Wynn’s
comments about Thomson.
“I moved away from [Noyes] in November of 1997 for ethical reasons,”
he said, declining to elaborate.
As far as the mayor’s endorsement of Beek was concerned, “it’s not so
much that he’s helping her than that he’s getting back with me,” Bromberg
said.
Noyes countered that he’d chosen Beek over Bromberg for other reasons.
“I find [Beek] to be intelligent and honorable,” he said, adding that
while he disagreed with Beek on Measure S, she would still make a good
councilwoman.
Noyes opposes the growth-control initiative, which would put before a
citywide vote any development that allows an increase of more than 100
peak-hour car trips or dwelling units or 40,000 square feet over the
general plan allowance.
Beek supports Measure S and has been endorsed by the supporters of the
campaign. Bromberg opposes both Measure S and Measure T, which would add
parts of the city’s traffic phasing ordinance to the City Charter and
nullify Measure S, should voters approve both measures.
“All of us in the whole city, we’re all Greenlighters,” said Noyes,
referring the Greenlight initiative, another name for Measure S. “We just
have a different way of getting there.”
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