They’re off and running for the June primary...

The ink on the February 5 presidential primary election returns was hardly dry this week when campaigning for spots on the June primary ballot got underway in Placer County.

Candidates for the June 3 ballot started pulling nomination papers on Monday and have until March 7 to file them. An exception will be the 4th Congressional District race in which there is no incumbent — Rep. John Doolittle is not seeking re-election — and candidates will have an additional five days in which to file.

District 5 Supervisor Bruce Kranz put on a two-for-one act Monday morning.

He set up a canopy, a podium and campaign signs outside Jim McCauley’s election department at DeWitt Center and was flanked by several local and state officials when he announced over a mini-p.a. system that he was going for a second term.

Dozens of cronies and even some passers-by enjoyed the free coffee, fruit juice, cookies and donuts available under the canopy. When the hoopla was over, Kranz strolled into McCauley’s office and took out his nomination papers.

There was no carnival atmosphere for District 4 Supervisor Kirk Uhler. He just showed up in McCauley’s office and got his paperwork from candidate services officials Ferrin Call and Lisa Zacharias.

Uhler served on the board of supervisors for one term in the 1990s. Rather than seek a second term in 1996, he sought the GOP Assembly nomination and was defeated by T. Rico Oller in a nasty race.

Uhler was appointed to the board’s District 4 seat in early 2007 after Supervisor Ted Gaines was elected to the Assembly.

Nor was there much fanfare for Doug Ose, who took out papers as a Republican candidate in the 4th Congressional District. Ose, a former three-term congressman from a Sacramento region district, is seeking to replace Rep. John T. Doolittle, who is serving his ninth two-year term.

In a brief chat with reporters, Ose said he’s looking to take up residence in Placer County and that he might have campaign offices in both Auburn and Roseville.

T. Rico Oller, a former state legislator, has announced his candidacy for the same office but was not seen in Auburn on Monday. He can take out his papers in any of the district’s eight counties or at the California Secretary of State’s office in Sacramento.

Other announced GOP congressional candidates are Eric Egland, an Air Force Reserve officer, and Theodore Terbolizard, about whom the Auburn Augur has some news in this edition.

Charlie Brown, who narrowly lost to Doolittle in 2006, is expected to be unopposed for the Democratic congressional nomination.

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