The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 6, 1986 - Page 5 State Dems hold House, GOP retains Senate By MICHAEL LUSTIG Daily news analysis The coattails of Gov. James Blanchard's landslide victory were long, but not quite long enough to help Democrats win a majority of seats in the Michigan Senate. Republicans retained control of the Senate by a 20-18 margin, the same as before the election. In the House, however, Democrats picked up seven seats, increasing their margin to 64-46. One incumbent Democrat was defeated in Tuesday's elections, while five Republican incumbents lost their House seats. Thousands of voters across the state and in Washtenaw County apparently voted split tickets. In Washtenaw County, Democrat Blanchard won about 70 percent of the votes cast, but voters seemed to switch allegiances in choosing Republican Rep. Carl Pursell over challenger Dean Baker for the Second District Congress seat. MICHAEL TRAUGOTT of the University's Center for Political Studies says the outcome was a combination of declining signif- icance of party identification and increasing use of personal, as opposed to partisan, campaigns. Dale Apley, the Republican candidate for the 18th District state Senate seat, had hoped people who voted for Pursell would also vote for him, but that was not the case. While Pursell won almost half of the votes cast in the county, Apley only received 36 percent and lost to incumbent Sen. Lana Pollack. Had the Democrats won the Senate, Pollack could have won more than re-election. She could have been in position to be a committee head or vice-chair- woman, but now the best that she can hope for is to become minority party chairwoman of a committee. In any case, Pollack will now have more influence in the Senate than she did as a first-term senator. State Rep. Perry Bullard was re- elected as representative of the 53rd District for the eighth time, defeating challenger Vic Holtz by a two-to-one margin. He has been committed to helping the Uni- versity since he was first elected in 1972 and will continue to do so. He will also retain his position as chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. Bullard's participation in a visit to Ann Arbor's new sister city, Juigalpa, Nicaragua, shows that he is so confident of support from his district he can even leave the country during Election Day. Because the overall make-up of the Legislature is essentially unchanged, the University's status will probably remain the same. Blanchard's large margin of victory and the increased number of Democrats in the House may eventually benefit the University because they may be more willing to spend more money on the University. The Associated Press contributed to this report. What to do now?; Losers fac, By STEVE BLONDER Next time. Those two words are ringing in the ears of Republican challengers Dale Apley, who hoped to be a state senator, and Vic Holtz who ran for state representative. Apley summed up the thoughts a losing candidate may have: "Anybody who runs once always wants to run again." Apley said he hasn't decided which office to run for next. Holtz, however, said the Repub- lican party has already asked him to s challenge Rep. Perry Bullard's 53rd district seat again in 1988. "I AM COMMITTED to the I Republican party. My campaign people asked me tonight, 'When do we meet again?"' Holtz said shortly ! after conceding the race to Bullard Tuesday night.3 Holtz says he lost because of several reasons. He feels he didn't publicize Bullard's 15 percent absentee rate. "At the very least," he said, "I intend to let all of the people know of his voting record over the next two years." Holtz also said the low voter turnout affected the outcome.of the race. "Twelve thousand people 'e future from my 53rd district who voted in 1984 did not come to the polls this time. I think that they were the wrong 12,000 people." Apley attributes his defeat to Pollack in the 18th district to apathy among local Republicans and his late entry into the race. "I'M NOT SURE if a lot of Republicans got out and voted because the Republican numbers just weren't there," he said. Neither candidate feels that his election attempt was worthless or a failure. Both Holtz and Apley emphasized the accomplishment of many campaign goals. Holtz said, "We did everything that we wanted to do. Had I been given another $5,000, I wouldn't have done anything different except for \maybe having a bigger party at the end." LSA sophomore Debbie Buch- holtz, President of the College Republicans, is now faced with the task of "building up the College Republican organization so that we can help the Republican candidate in next spring's local elections." She expressed disappointment with the way Republican candidates fared. Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON William Lucas with his wife, Evelyn, beside him, addresses supporters after conceding the Michigan guber- natorial election to incumbent James Blanchard. Blanchard beat Lucas by a 68 to 31 percent margin. Ilanchard -defeats Lucas by more than tWO-to-On DETROIT (AP) - Democratic ov. James Blanchard trounced epublican challenger William ucas to win re-election, winning 8 'percent of the vote Tuesday. ucas who was trying to become e nation's first black elected ,governor, won 31 percent. That's the biggest victory margin in a Michigan gubernatorial race in almost 60 years. With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Blanchard had 1,624,285 votes, =Lucas had 747,159 and Martin McLaughlin, the Worker's Ieague gubernatorial candidate, had ,762. "I think it's a classic case of the governor running as a Republican...and having the power of incumbency as well," Lucas said at a news conference yesterday in downtown Detroit. "The Blanchard policies were Republican policies." Lucas, 58, said he would omplete his term as Wayne County executive, which ends this ar, and then think about his future. "We have made absolutely no Election res alter Reago L plans at all," he said. "I have faith that I will be able to do something meaningful that will make a contribution to society." He said he was not embarrassed by the margin of his loss, and that the GOP shouldn't't be either. Lucas, who switched parties last year, did not rule out the another run at political officer as a Republican. Blanchard, Michigan's first Democratic governor to win re-election in nearly three decades, refused to call his victory a mandate. "I think it is still too early to know what it all means, " he said. "I hope it's an expression by people all over this state that we've done a good job and that we have the potential to do even more in the future." Although Blanchard won easily, the Republican-controlled state Senate is bound to make his next four years difficult. Despite a few close races, the GOP hung on to its 20-18 majority in the Senate. e margin * In the state House, Democrats gained seven seats to take a nine- seat majority, 63-47. Two long-serving Democratic state officeholders, Attorney General Frank Kelley and Secretary of State Richard Austin, each handily won re-election. Kelley beat GOP challenger Robert Cleland 69 percent to 31 percent, and Austin beat Republican Weldon Yeager, 70 percent to 29 percent. °{ ip a, fi , rs EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT GOING TO ISRAEL FOR A SUMMER, YEAR OR A SEMESTER IS IN THIS AD. Come to the Fishbowl on Mon., Nov. 10 for the Israel Programs Fair. (212) 750-7773 . - .........- - - - - - - , Incumbents re-elected ults won't n 's agenda (Continued from Page 1) "We can say it all in four words. The Democrats are back," Kirk said. "It was a dynamic victory, one that shifts the momentum in our direction as we prepare for the next national election." "We expanded our base in the South and the West, which was necessary following the 1984 election," he said. P Democrats will hold a comfortable 55-45 majority in the new Senate, reversing the GOP edge of 53-47 in the old 99th Congress and giving them the control they lost in 1980. Democrats also won at least 258 House seats to 173 for the Republicans, for an increase of at. least five seats. That was far fewer 0 han historical standards would ictate, a result that heartened Republicans. Four House races were still too close to call long after the last ballots were cast. Republicans heralded their impressive gains in governor's Dems gain dh WASHITNGfTON-The 19R6f races. They captured 11 seats currently held by Democrats, including Texas, Florida and Alabama for the first time since the Reconstruciton, and now control 24 of 50 governorships. "I think what we did in the South and across the Sun Belt is indicative that we're still in pretty good shape," as the two parties look toward 1988, said GOP Chairman Frank Fahrenkopf. Reagan said the results prove the "political spectrum continues to move our way," and sought to disabuse Democrats of any ideas that he would serve out his term quietly as a lame duck. "You can take it from me. Washington ain't seen nothing yet," he said in a variation of his refrain from the 1984 re-election campaign. The president called the election results "fairly good news" overall. Reagan traveled over 25,000 miles in a bid to retain the Republican majority in the Senate. hope for '8 to U Board{ By JOHN DUNNING Democratic incumbents swept away their Republican opponents in the race for the two available seats on the University's Board of Regents. Incumbent Regents Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) and James Waters (D- Muskegon) joined Gov. James Blanchard in his landslide victory by holding onto their seats on the Board of Regents for another eight years.. Brown and Waters won the election with a final vote of 1,184,726 and 1,081,584 respec- tively. While Republican challen- gers, Cynthia Hudgins of Ypsilanti and Gary Frink of St. Claire, received 817,223 and 796,339 votes respectively. FRINK SAID he was somewhat discouraged by Tuesday's results, but he plans on running again in 1988. In that year, Frink said, there will probably be a strong Repub- lican presidential candidate at the top of the Republican ticket, so straight-ticket voting should help Republicans gain seats on the Board of Regents. Regent Thomas Roach (D- Saline) emphasized that while winners in regental elections tend to belong to the same party as the winner at the top of the ticket, that doesn't guarantee that Republicans will win the next Board of Regents' election in two years. Nobody can tell now the winning presidential candidate in 1988 will be a Democrat or a Republican. The University regents meet monthly on the second Thursday and Friday of most months to 8 elections rntzre'rl hv, T)Pmrmtc LONG ISLAND ICE TEAS AND FREE PIZZA ONLY AT of Regents- discuss administration proposals and give the final stamp of approval on all decisions. A few of the controversial issues the regents dealt with last year are divestment from companies that do business in South Africa, guide- lines for classified research, the University's policy on honorary degrees, and the proposed code of non-academic conduct. The regents are elected for eight- year terms. and serve staggered terms with two regents up for re- election every two years. frenIt N i4 A clious meatsW.cauer n home 4iWrrids .- vi cmh (0es -uts - c C1d den'- AcrA a AS c ttdr-and e S rYB Kerrytown Shops 407 N. Fit th Avenue Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (313) 662-4221 Name Address City State Zip School Year______________ Or write for more information: ISRAEL PROGRAM CENTER American Zionist Youth Foundation 515 Park Avenue New York, NY 10022 t THURSDAY 10 p.m.- close 338 S. 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