ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, September 26, 1994                   TAG: 9409260061
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: WARREN FISKE STAFF WRITER Note:Strip
DATELINE: ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.                                 LENGTH: Long


THERE'S NEW CALIF. GOLD RUSH - TO NORTH'S COFFERS

ITS AIRPORT is named after John Wayne. Richard Nixon was born there and Ronald Reagan began his two successful presidential campaigns there. So it's no surprise that Orange County, Calif., has embraced Oliver North.

In this conservative fund-raising mecca just south of Los Angeles, Oliver North is credited with assisting in the expulsion of communism from Nicaragua, the election of two local congressmen and the marriage of Charles S. DeVore.

DeVore, a lanky Republican activist who sells computers, says he was in the Army reserves at Fort Bragg, N.C., in 1987 when North was wowing some of the nation with his televised testimony on the Iran-Contra affair.

"I was sitting in an officer's club, when in walks this tall, beautiful woman with an Oliver North pin on her chest," he recalled. "Naturally, I was intrigued, so I went up to her and asked her what she thought of North. She said, `Contras, Hooowaaa!' and I knew right then and there that she was for me."

Five months to the day later, Chuck and Diane DeVore were married.

Why should Virginians care?

DeVore has sent about $100 this year to help North get elected to the U.S. Senate. He's a foot soldier in an army of fans from Orange County who have mustered at least $100,000 for the cause. No other locality outside of Virginia has given as much to a campaign that already has raised more than $10 million.

In Virginia, critics of North have made much of his heavy reliance on out-of-state support. Democratic incumbent Sen. Charles Robb has gotten 71 percent of all $200-plus contributions from outside the state; for North, the comparable figure is 85 percent.

Public-interest groups have questioned whether that means North is national in scope, and that concerns unique to Virginia will receive scant attention if he's elected.

In Orange County, North supporters have a blunt answer.

"This election has national implications," said Tom Fuentes, chairman of the county's Republican Party. "The senator from Virginia has as much to say about raising my taxes as anyone we elect from California ... I'm excited about Oliver North. He's the most genuine candidate of our time."

Conservative politics are not just a philosophy in this affluent county of 2.6 million suburbanites that stretches along the Pacific Coast from Los Angeles County to San Diego County. They are a way of life.

Orange County is where Richard Nixon was born and died and the site Ronald Reagan chose to open his two successful presidential campaigns.

It is home to two Marine bases. Three of the county's four largest employers are defense-contracting firms.

Republican candidates from across the nation flock to Orange County each year to tap the wealth of local business leaders, who contributed $46 million to political causes between 1987 and 1992. But few have roots deeper than North's.

"Ollie is a special friend," said Buck Johns, a wealthy real-estate investor and key Republican fund-raiser. "He's gotten a lot of people elected out here, and we owe him a debt of gratitude. He's a real hero in my mind, sort of like a short John Wayne."

North's status as a kingmaker stems from a 1988 appearance he made on behalf of two long-shot Republican candidates in local primaries for Congress. North never had given a campaign speech before. Both candidates - Dana Rohrabacher and Chris Cox - were former Reagan staffers whom North befriended when he worked at the White House.

Orange County crowds paid top dollar to see North. In two days of campaigning, he raised more than $100,000 apiece for Rohrabacher and Cox and gave them much-needed exposure on television news.

One week later, Rohrabacher and Cox won stunning upsets in the Republican primaries. The two went on to defeat token Democratic opponents in the fall elections.

Rohrabacher and Cox are still in Congress today.

"What Ollie did was give me instant credibility as a true conservative candidate," Rohrabacher recalls. "It's possible I would have won without him, but I wouldn't bet on it."

North learned from that trip that he was a powerful campaigner.

"If you've got the gift, you've got to use it," he said in an interview.

North has returned to Orange County an average of three or four times a year ever since, helping Republicans running for everything from senator and governor to the state legislature and local city councils.

"It's an honor to stand on the podium with him," state Assemblyman Mickey Conroy said. "I'd walk to hell and back for him."

In return, North has asked his allies in Orange County for contributions to his campaign and for their mailing lists of financial supporters.

The enthusiastic response has been felt in Virginia.

In 1991, for example, North started a political-action committee to fund his campaign travels around Virginia with a $50,000 donation from Clifford S. Heinz, an Orange County philanthropist and an heir to the Heinz Ketchup fortune. Heinz declined requests for an interview.

The Rev. Louis P. Sheldon - a noted evangelical activist in Orange County - also is helping out. Sheldon is chairman of the Traditional Values Coalition, a national lobbying organization for 31,000 churches. Through Sheldon's contacts, North has been arranging appearances before several black congregations in Virginia.

"Ollie stands for great American values," Sheldon said. "When he was on trial, we all were on trial. When he is maligned, we all are maligned."

Rohrabacher has sent opinion pieces to Virginia newspapers in defense of North. U.S. Rep. Robert Dornan, a tough-talking Orange County Republican who calls President Clinton "a nerdy little flower child" and once derided women who attended a pro-abortion rights rally as "lesbian spear chuckers," will be guest speaker at a Roanoke fund-raiser for North on Oct. 7.

The Orange County crowd turned out handsomely in June when North, just one week after winning the Republican Senate nomination, attended a $500-a-plate fund-raiser in nearby Pasadena. The dinner netted $43,000 for his campaign coffers.

North, who is sensitive to reports about his out-of-state support, downplays his Orange County connections.

"I'm constantly amazed by the support I've found everywhere I go," he said. "What's important to keep in mind is that I also have a lot of support in Orange County, Virginia."

But influential fund-raisers here say North maintains more than a passing interest in their California community.

"Ollie's not shy about asking for money," Johns said with a chuckle. "Ollie will call you up. He'll get on the other end of the phone and harass you; he'll say, `Why aren't you guys doing a better job out there?' He's an inspirational type of guy. I probably talk to him once a month."

Like Johns, most of the big hitters here achieved their wealth through real estate. In 1950, Orange County was mostly undeveloped farmland, with 216,000 residents. Today, its $76.7 billion-a-year economy is the 35th largest in the world, outstripping countries such as Poland, Greece and Israel.

The median price of a house here today is $243,000 - the most expensive market in the nation.

"We're renegades out here," said Johns, who is a director of the Lincoln Club, a powerful political-action committee for Orange County's conservative business interests. "Most of the people came here because they believe in free enterprise and self-determination. We don't like government standing in our way. We don't like government, period."

Fuentes, the local Republican chairman, is proud of Orange County's role in politics.

"The liberals go up the road to Hollywood for their money," he said. "The conservatives know to come here."

It's not just the wealthy, however, that back North's campaign.

Federal records, which list the names of only those individuals who have given $200 or more to a campaign, detail $43,000 in Orange County contributions to North through June.

North campaign officials, who base their national fund raising on small patrons contacted through direct mail, privately acknowledge that the actual total from Orange County may be three or four times that amount.

Many of the small contributors are retired people who are enamored not only by North's politics, but also by his chatty fund-raising letters that often include news about his family, pictures and autographs.

"I like Oliver North because he's a good Christian man," said Anna Woods, a retired school teacher who sent the campaign $25. "I know he lied to Congress, but it was for an important cause. Haven't you ever lied to your family?"

Keywords:
POLITICS



 by CNB