Politics & Government
Democrat Secor to Run Against Hunter
Two-term Republican incumbent grabs two-thirds of votes in heavily GOP 50th District, but Democrat David Secor won the second most votes, according to an early count.
Republican Congressman Duncan D. Hunter will run against Democrat David Secor as Temecula's congressman in the November ballot if the results are unchanged by the time the count is finished.
An updated tally is scheduled to be released around 6 p.m. Friday, though this morning the Registrar of Voters announced the result of approximate 63 percent counted so far.
Read a rundown of local races here.
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Temecula's current congressman is Darrell Issa, though the city will no longer be in his district next year .
Duncan D. Hunter, the son of longtime House member Duncan L. Hunter led Secor 67.2 percent to 17.2 percent. Trailing were Democrat Connie Frankowiak at 7.5 percent, Libertarian Michael Benoit at 5.4 percent and Republican Terri Linnell at 2.8 percent.
Find out what's happening in Temeculafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The two-term 35-year-old Republican congressman is a former Marine and the lone congressman with recent combat experience.
Hunter would have to win 12 more elections to match the record of his father in the East County and North County district, which became even more heavily Republican this year with the loss of La Mesa in redistricting.
In November, when he emerged as a challenger, Secor noted the hunger strike in 2010 by Democratic candidate Ray Lutz, undertaken to push Hunter into more debates.
A resident of Crest, Secor vowed: “I am going to make news,” but is still deciding exactly how. He said the reason Hunter resisted debating Lutz “was because (Lutz) didn’t make Hunter bleed. I’m going to make Hunter bleed, so that he will be forced to deal with me.”
His only debate with Hunter has been via questionnaires, including one
Secor, who is in his mid-60s, retired after 19 years as a clerk in San Diego Superior Court but also has worked as a truck driver and warehouseman.
“I’ve been in housekeeping in a department store, I’ve been in maintenance. I’ve taught school. I graduated from San Diego State in ’72,” he said in a where he described himself once as a “functional alcoholic.”
He said he conquered his addiction in 1990 when he joined Alcoholics Anonymous.
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