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Declining to Debate Mano a Mano
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"We are hiring smart, hard-working people to help with the final stages of a DC political campaign. No experience necessary. Work will include phone calls, meeting Ward 3 constituents, and generally backing the candidate. We need you to begin work on this Wednesday, August 30th to Tuesday, September 12th . . . election day."
No word yet on the response from potential applicants.
Examining Campaign's Support
Lawyer A. Scott Bolden , who is challenging two-term incumbent Phil Mendelson (D) for his at-large council seat, has already flooded D.C. mailboxes with six pieces of campaign literature in a desperate bid to gain name recognition.
Now, Bolden is getting a little help.
Voters recently received yet another mailing, this one paid for by the Citizens for Empowerment Political Action Committee, a $200,000 operation funded by Dulles-based electrical contractor M.C. Dean Inc. and Bethesda-based Miller & Long, one of the largest concrete contractors in the nation.
The four crisp photos in the action committee's literature are identical to shots in material produced by Bolden, a former president of the D.C. Chamber of Commerce who has had an adversarial relationship with local labor unions.
Bolden denies any coordination between his campaign and the committee, which would be a violation of campaign finance laws. Bolden said the organization must have taken the photos from his Web site or gotten them from "the public domain."
"We haven't communicated or coordinated with the group," Bolden said in an interview. "It would be inappropriate."
Leaving for Another Candidate
It's been a rough summer for the three trailing candidates in the D.C. mayor's race. Low on funds and even lower on the public's radar, lobbyist Michael A. Brown was dumped by his chief spokesman. Council member Vincent B. Orange Sr. (D-Ward 5) economized by cutting payments to his campaign manager and communications director. And former Verizon Washington president Marie C. Johns watched her finance committee chairman defect to another candidate: Adrian M. Fenty , the Ward 4 council member and mayoral front-runner.
The defection of Deborah Royster and her husband, D.C. Hospital Association President Robert Malson , was particularly painful, since Royster and Johns are friends.
Royster declined to comment publicly on the decision. Malson said the switch was not personal but based on a clear-eyed assessment of the polls.
"As you get closer to the election, some people lose traction and others gain. It seems to me this race revolves around candidates who are seeking change and candidates perceived as a continuation of the status quo," he said. "Marie, Adrian and Michael are change agents. [Council chairman] Linda [W. Cropp] and Vincent are more the status quo candidates. It seemed to us to make sense to solidify around the one who has the greatest chance of winning. And that's what we chose to do."
Malson, who was among the earliest and most enthusiastic boosters of Johns's campaign, said: "Marie did not generate the kind of support from the business community or even in Ward 3 that I believe she was entitled to expect, given her position" with Verizon.
"Without that kind of support, it doesn't seem to me she has a likelihood of winning," Malson said. "Even though I started with her, I can't ignore the fact that he's generated the kind of support he has."
New Schools Officer
The D.C. school system has hired a new chief accountability officer. Cleopatra Figgures , who started Monday, previously served in that position in the St. Louis district. Before that, she spent more than 25 years in the Philadelphia public schools working in various regional and central office positions.
Figgures replaces Meria J. Carstarphen, who left in June to become superintendent of St. Paul public schools, in Minnesota.
Staff writer V. Dion Haynes contributed to this report.







