Kalmick, a small business owner from Huntington Beach, is challenging three other Democrats — OCC professor Richard Lara, Costa Mesa resident Alan Schlar and Huntington Beach Mayor Debbie Cook — for the chance to challenge Rep. Dana Rohrabacher in the general election this November. Ronald R. St. John, a Huntington Beach property rights attorney, will face Rohrabacher in the GOP primary.
While lacking in political experience, Kalmick hopes the entrepreneurial shrewdness he’s cultivated over the past decade — he started a computer consulting firm as a teenager — will serve him well as the race moves forward.
“One of the great things about my business is that it allows me to work with just about anybody — everybody’s got a computer,” he said. “Large corporations, public schools, small businesses, I know them all.”
Kalmick hopes this exposure will allow him to approach people from all walks of life throughout the campaign season. Indeed, a cornerstone of his strategy will include wooing Republicans — votes he said he’ll need to win the general election — and asking them to consider if they truly ascribe to the party’s values, he said.
“You can talk to people who still make a lot of money, think they are Republicans, but still make under $250,000 a year,” he said. “They have kids who want to go to college, and they don’t want to have to pay for that — they want federal help. So you can ask them: Would you like Pell Grants? Yes. Subsidized Stafford loans? Yes. Well, the Bush Administration has cut funding for those.”