
For statewide offices, Brown and Westlund
October 4, 2008
EDITORIAL
Kate Brown and Ben Westlund have a lot in common in their respective races for
Secretary of State and State Treasurer. Each is raising more money and has more
endorsements than his/her opponents, but, most important, each of them is vastly
more experienced and qualified for those statewide offices.
Ben Westlund for State Treasurer
Along with our endorsement of Ben Westlund for state treasurer, he has received
the endorsement of Oregon's Democratic and Independent parties and, at one time,
that of the Republican Party as well. Of course, the Republican endorsement was
before Lake Oswego businessman Allen Alley entered the race, but several high
profile Rs are sticking with Westlund, including former Secretary of State Norma
Paulus, current legislators Patti Smith and Gary George, and former legislators
Lane Shetterly and Lenn Hannon, among others.
The state treasurer hires and monitors the professional financial managers who
invest money in Oregon's pension fund. The treasurer is responsible for
coordinating and selling state bonds, and meets with Wall Street rating agencies
about Oregon's credit worthiness. But it's also a political position because the
treasurer works with the Legislature to help set fiscal and investment policy.
Westlund supports investment in new energy sources like wind, wave and solar. He
voted to reduce the interest rate school districts pay, saving taxpayers
millions of dollars.
Alley spent time in the 1980s and 1990s with a Boston venture capital firm,
Battery Ventures, eventually becoming a general partner. But he's best known as
a co-founder of Tualatin-based Pixelworks in 1997, initially a successful
semiconductor chip maker. He's still chair of the board of Pixelworks, but the
firm now has such a grim outlook that it faced delisting with the NASDAQ stock
exchange in June.
Alley entered the public sector when he was hired as deputy chief of staff for
Gov. Ted Kulongoski and advised the governor on business and economic
development matters. Kulongoski has endorsed Westlund.
No stranger to business failures himself at times, Westlund succeeded in his
international animal husbandry business selling bovine genetics and founded the
company that made non-toxic substances from marine life fossils used in the
manufacture of cat litter.
He was elected to the House of Representatives as a Republican and during his
tenure was co-chair of the Joint Ways and Means Committee from 2001 to 2003. The
committee oversaw drafting of the state's $11 million budget but was forced to
cut state spending in the economic downturn of 2002-03.
After an unsuccessful independent campaign for governor in 2006, Westlund
switched parties and became a Democrat. He is considered fair and
straightforward by legislators on both sides of the aisle.
In our view, Westlund has both the business and legislative experience to make
him an effective state treasurer.
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