Cox confirms judgeship talks
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S.J. Cahn
NEWPORT BEACH -- Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach) acknowledged
Wednesday that he has talked with the White House about a possible
federal judgeship, but he said he is still far from deciding whether he
will leave his congressional seat.
“I have told my colleagues in Congress not to run for my leadership
post just yet,” Cox said. “I have not yet determined my own mind.”
Up until this point, Cox has been noncommittal about rumors that have
circulated all month that he is one of President Bush’s picks to fill
vacancies on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
The rumor has sparked considerable interest among would-be
replacements for Cox’s seat, which is the most Republican in the state
and considered among the safest in the country.
The list of hopefuls has become a near who’s who of Orange County
Republicans. Top possible contenders include state Sen. Dick Ackerman
(R-Tustin), Assemblyman Bill Campbell (R-Villa Park) and Supervisor Todd
Spitzer.
Others who are considering a run include former Assemblywoman Marilyn
Brewer, former Rep. Jim Rogan, Newport Beach philanthropist John Crean,
state Sen. Ross Johnson (R-Irvine), Newport Beach Realtor Bill Cote,
former state Sen. John Lewis, Newport Beach physician Don Udall and
Tustin millionaire Mark Chapin Johnson.
Cox said he is weighing both family concerns and input from
constituents as he works toward a decision.
“The feedback I received during the two-week congressional recess that
I spent in Orange County strongly encouraged me to remain in Congress,
and I am certainly weighing that heavily,” Cox said, adding that a
decision could be made within the next few weeks.
If Bush does nominate Cox and the congressman accepts, the road to
confirmation is paved with a couple of Democrats.
One of those Democrats, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, and Cox will meet
within the next week to discuss “a variety of issues,” said Howard
Gantman, a spokesman for Feinstein.
The meeting with Feinstein is potentially important because of an old
Senate tradition giving Feinstein and her California colleague, U.S. Sen.
Barbara Boxer, the power to approve any judicial nominees from their
state.
This practice, dubbed the “blue slip” process, is in dispute in the
Senate now, with Democrats charging that Republicans are unfairly
altering the way nominations are handled.
When Democrats controlled the Senate before the 1994 election, they
allowed a nominee to go ahead with the approval of just one home-state
senator. This allowed a nominee by President Reagan, for instance, to go
ahead with the OK of a GOP senator.
After that election, however, the Republican majority changed the
policy so just one senator could hold up a nomination -- a tactic used
most dramatically by Sen. Jesse Helms (R-North Carolina), who allowed
none of President Clinton’s nominees from his state to be confirmed.
Now, Democrats are charging that Republicans are altering the process
back the way it was, denying Democrats the political payoff of holding up
any of Bush’s choices.
Either way, Cox faces the uphill battle of not having a Republican
senator to back his nomination, said Mark Petracca, chairman of UC
Irvine’s Political Science Department.
When word first leaked that Bush was considering Cox, Boxer reacted
coolly to the prospect. Feinstein has made no public comment, Gantman
said.
Cox and Feinstein have some political history. Early in last year’s
election, Cox had considered a run against Feinstein, even moving
$900,000 into a Senate campaign committee. By the middle of 1999,
however, he had given up the idea and transferred the money back to his
congressional campaign chest.
For his part, Cox said it is too early to discuss the possible
confirmation process.
TEASE
BY GEORGE
Costa Mesa businessman and major El Toro airport proponent George
Argyros is nominated by President Bush to be ambassador to Spain. See
story, Page 3.
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