The Day

California Republican Sen. Sharon Runner dies

- By JONATHAN J. COOPER

Sacramento, Calif. — California state Sen. Sharon Runner, who left the Legislatur­e in 2012 to undergo a double lung transplant and three years later made a dramatic return to the Senate, died Thursday, her family said in a statement. She was 62.

Runner, a Republican from Lancaster, died at home following respirator­y complicati­ons.

Runner and her husband, George Runner, a member of the state Board of Equalizati­on, were a powerful force in the California GOP.

They were the first couple to serve concurrent­ly in the Legislatur­e after Sharon Runner won her husband’s Assembly seat in 2002, when he moved up to the Senate.

The duo co-authored California’s Jessica’s Law, approved by voters in 2006 to restrict sex offenders from living near parks, schools and other places where children congregate.

Sharon Runner often called herself “the funner Runner” compared with her more serious husband.

She was absent from the Legislatur­e for much of this year after her health again took a turn for the worse, and she had opted not to seek re-election this year.

“We take comfort in the fact that the Lord truly directed her path, and she is now home in the arms of her Savior,” Runner’s family said in their statement.

Sen. Joel Anderson, R-Alpine, spent the past two years seated next to Runner during floor debates and remembers her as an optimist who never backed down at the Capitol or in life.

“She had a very soft manner about her. But she was tough as nails and a real fighter,” Anderson said. “Health-wise, the odds were against her, but she fought.”

Before embarking on their political careers, the Runners co-founded Desert Christian Schools, which has grown to three campuses with nearly 1,700 students.

Sharon Runner was a conservati­ve who served in the state Assembly from 2002 to 2008. She was elected to the Senate in 2011 but did not seek re-election in 2012 after her transplant.

She was treated for limited scleroderm­a, or CREST syndrome, an autoimmune condition that attacks the body’s connective tissue.

After recovering, she won a special election last year and returned to the Senate. Her bill to allow the governor to cancel a special primary election and declare a candidate elected if there is only one qualified person on the ballot was sent to the governor’s office for final considerat­ion a day before her death.

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