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Reprinted
from
December 20, 2006
Rebecca
Otto is proof Democrats can win here
Final
Draft - by Cliff Buchan
There shouldn’t have been any doubting that Rebecca Otto could win an
election. She had done it before in the Forest Lake area.
There may have been some who gave Otto little chance and little hope
when she launched an election bid for Minnesota State Auditor. It was a
bid that sent her head-to-head with the incumbent, Pat Anderson, who
easily won the four-year state office duties in 2002.
Otto spent 18 months running for the constitutional office and after
winning the DFL-endorsement for the position, won a September primary
contest.
When the ballots were all counted on Nov. 7, Otto had defeated the
incumbent and other third-party candidates by 11 percent. It was an
impressive win by an impressive candidate.
And really, it shouldn’t have come as a surprise. Otto had demonstrated
in the past she could win and she also benefitted from a strong
anti-incumbent voter attitude on Nov. 7.
During a meeting with the ECM Editorial Board in St. Paul last Friday,
Otto came across as an energetic and confident woman who is ready to
carry on a career of public service, this time on a statewide playing
field. With a solid blend of business and governmental service to her
credit, she is in position to take on the new duties quite well.
She gave praise to some of the ventures initiated by Anderson, pledged
to do good work for the people of Minnesota and insisted she would keep
politics out of the equation.
Otto, who lives in May Township with her husband and son, said the key
to her statewide success was her pledge to work with the people to make
sure government works well. Add her bipartisan support (she was endorsed
by former Republican Gov. Arne Carlson) and a desire to bring people
together and it equates to a winning formula, she said.
As state auditor, Otto says she will be proactive in working with local
forms of government in attempts to head off problems before they happen.
“Most people don’t want to go there,” she said of local governmental
officials who strive to do their jobs correctly.
Through training, communicating and simply listening, governments can
get the information they need, Otto says. She believes Anderson has put
in place some of the tools that can help to that end and has a
professional staff that will make the transition a smooth one.
There is no question that Otto is good on the campaign trail, too. That
is something she found success with in her home area.
Otto came on the local scene in 2001 when she successfully chaired an
operating levy campaign for ISD 831 in Forest Lake. She won a school
board seat in that same fall election.
While Otto was just one of many who helped carry the day in the levy
election that fall, she was the face out front and the key leader who
shaped the campaign and energized the public and parents to back the
proposal.
That success and her experience on the school board carried her to the
state legislature. In 2003 when Rep. Mark Holsten left his House 52B
seat to assume an appointive position with the Minnesota Department of
Natural Resources, Otto won the special election against Matt Dean.
Although Dean came back to defeat Otto in the 2004 regular election, she
had proven that a Democrat could win in a heavily Republican district
like 52B.
That trend continued this fall in the race for the state post. In
Washington County, Otto outdistanced Anderson, winning the county,
51,588 to 42,757.
In the five Forest Lake precincts, Otto narrowly defeated Anderson, 3712
to 3667. Otto won three of the five precincts. Not many Democrats can
claim the same.
The win is even more impressive in that Anderson is a Forest Lake High
School graduate.
Otto also carried both Anoka and Chisago counties.
Otto says much of her success goes to her willingness to work hard. In
the final days of the campaign, she door knocked extensively to
supplement other forms of advertising, including television spots and a
well constructed Internet site.
And it worked as people of all ages were attracted to Otto’s campaign.
“People knew who I was,” she said last week. “People were aware.”
There is a parallel here to the way Otto engineered Forest Lake’s levy
campaign five years ago. Like her pledge to be an advocate for the
people as auditor, she carried that same promise and theme in the school
community contest. She was believable.
Is anyone really surprised that Otto was able to pull off this win? They
shouldn’t be.
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