John Graham: Running the beaches
Paul Clinton
In what has become somewhat of an election-season stunt, John
Graham has been jogging down stretches of Orange County’s beaches to
call attention to what he says is his Republican opponent’s
deplorable track record on environmental issues.
The object of Graham’s ire is Rep. Chris Cox; he’s bidding to
unseat him for the 48th District seat. Joe Michael Cobb is the
Libertarian candidate.
“The main reason I’m doing it is to bring attention to the
environment,” Graham said. “Cox’s record is clear on the environment.
He doesn’t care.”
On 13 separate mornings, Graham jogs down a section of beach,
collects a sample of the ocean water and delivers it to a lab for
analysis. Graham started in West Newport at the Santa Ana River on
Oct. 7. He’ll wrap up his tour on Friday at Capistrano State Beach in
South County.
Graham may be making hay over Cox’s record on the environment, but
he has also advanced a series of proposals to improve the public
school system, including a 10% across-the-board pay hike for all
teachers.
If he wins the seat, Graham said he would push for $25 billion in
additional funding per year for teachers’ salaries. In return, he
said he would ask for an extra month of instruction time for
students. The extra spending may be a tall order in today’s federal
belt tightening on budgetary matters.
An even taller order for Graham is winning election to the seat.
The district, which was redrawn based on 2000 Census data, is
among the most solidly Republican in the state, if not the country.
Among registered voters, 52.9% are Republican and 27.5% are
Democratic. The remaining 19.6% are registered with other parties or
have declined to state a preference.
Graham ran against Cox in 2000 for the 47th District seat and
collected only 30% of the vote.
Education is a natural focal point for Graham, who has taught
international business classes at UC Irvine’s graduate school since
1989. He also holds three degrees, including a doctorate from UC
Berkeley.
As a specialist in international trade, Graham has written several
books on the topic of trade with Japan and other Asian countries.
Trade, Graham says, is the best way to avoid war. He even recommends
it as a solution to the current friction with Iraq.
Graham has criticized President Bush, Cox and other Republican
leaders for using war with Iraq to divert public attention away from
the country’s faltering economy.
“All of this is a political ploy,” Graham said. “Right now, Bush
and the boys are using the flag to hide a declining economy.”
During the early 1970s, Graham was a frogman in the Navy’s
demolition team. He was trained to detonate explosives to destroy
various military targets.
Now he’s an advocate for building relationships through trade.
“Trade causes peace,” Graham said. “You use trade as a carrot to
change people.”
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