Committee Members

Chairman Mike Osborn
1st Vice Chair
2nd Vice Chair
Dean Kunicki
Darin Henry
Secretary Kirstin Neumann
Treasurer Arkady Milgram

1st District – Ventura, Ojai

Mary Osborn – Caucus Chair, Neil Andrews, Kirstin Neumann, Mike Osborn, Paul Thompson

2nd District- Conejo Valley – Thousand Oaks

John Andersen – Caucus Chair, Darin Henry, Rebecca Henry, Matthew Hewitt, Eric Grubel, Arkady Milgram

3rd District- Camarillo – Santa Paula Fillmore – Port Hueneme

Sean Paroski – Caucus Chair, Toni Strickland, Chris Valenzano, Chris Collier

4th District – Simi Valley, Moorpark

John Absmeier – Caucus Chair, Adam Haverstock, Reg Richardson, Dean Kunicki , Ray Cruz

5th District – Oxnard

Ex Officio Members

Congressman Elton Gallegly, State Senator Tony Strickland,  Assemblyman Jeff Gorell, Assemblyman Cameron Smyth, 2010 Republican Nominee for Congress: Tom Watson , 2010 Republican Nominee for State Controller: Tony Strickland, 2008 Republican Nominee for the State Senate, 23rd District: Rick Montaine, 2010 Republican Nominees for the State Assembly: Mike Stoker, 35th District and Terry Rathbun, 41st District

Ex Officio Alternates

Dianne Alexander, Jarrod DeGonia, Joanne Stoker, Regina Risolio

Committee Alternates

Brenda Givargis, Lindsay Kaye, Alan Munson, Susan D. Tanner, Claira Guerra,

What Is A Central Committee?

A county central committee is the official political organization within the county.

The committee performs duties that are prescribed by law and does all things necessary to carry on a full-time, aggressive, party program.

California law provides for the election of a county central committee at every direct primary for each legal political party.

A candidate for a county central committee must file nomination papers with 20 to 30 local signatures, whereupon his name is placed on the primary ballot to be voted on by members registered in his party within his own supervisorial district. Term of office is two years, service is without pay, and the committee usually levies annual dues upon its members.

Each committee holds a biennial organization meeting. Republicans meet the first Tuesday after the first Monday in December following the direct primary in June. At those times they elect a chairman and other officers and committees it deems necessary and adopts rules or by-laws.

In counties with 20 or more assembly districts such as Los Angeles, each assembly district central committee consists of seven members. In counties which contain less than 20 yet more than 4 assembly districts, each assembly district central committee is comprised of six members. For counties like Ventura, which have four or less assembly districts, a complex mathematical formula based on supervisorial districts and election returns determines the number of central committee members. In San Francisco, which is both a City and County, there are eight members elected from each assembly district or portion thereof. In addition to regular members there are also ex-officio members.

Ex-officio members include nominees or incumbents for state senate and assembly, and nominees or incumbents of each of the following offices in the county in which they reside: Governor, Lt. Governor, Treasurer, Controller, Attorney General, Secretary of State, Member of State Board of Equalization, and Senator and Representative in Congress from California. Ex-officio members have all privileges including the right to vote in the central committee.

The committees may remove any member other than an ex- officio for several causes: Affiliation with or registration in another party; public advocacy that voters should not vote for a nominee of the party for any office; or giving support or avowal of a preference for a candidate of another party or a candidate who is opposed to a candidate nominated by the party. Missed meetings may also cause removal.

A member moving from the Supervisorial or Assembly district from which elected or appointed must automatically resign from the committee.

Vacancies between elections due to death, ineligibility or resignations are filled by appointment and voted approval by the remaining members of the supervisorial district caucus. In the event of a tie between the remaining members or if the district caucus has no members, the full committee votes on the appointment.

Paid for by the Ventura County Republican Party (a County Central Committee) ID #742080 and not authorized by any candidate. All non-corporate donations will be used for both Federal and State purposes based on a percentage authorized by the FPPC and FEC. All corporate donations will be used 100% for State Purposes.
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