Chris Cox: Offering give-and-take with Washington
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S.J. Cahn
Chris Cox sees his job in two parts.
As Newport Beach’s Congressional representative since 1988, he
takes Orange County views to Washington D.C. and reports back to
Orange County what he is doing “and what the government is doing to
us and for us.”
That constant give-and-take, he says, is what keeps him in contact
with his constituents. So does having to get reelected every two
years.
“The job itself melds with getting around the community and doing
what’s necessary to let people know what I’m doing,” he said.
While he has been in his district -- the redrawn 48th that now
includes more of South Orange County -- during this fall’s race, he
has heard voters talk about a litany of issues both global and local,
Cox added. The list runs from homeland defense and the Bush
Administration’s policy on Iraq to water quality, urban runoff and
beach erosion in Newport Beach.
And voters, Cox added, are sophisticated enough to understand how
the disparate issues tie together and where the federal government
has a role. The government, for instance, can demand tighter control
of urban runoff, help pay to educate the public about the changes and
find money for treatment facilities.
“It isn’t a question of big, national issues exclusively, or local
issues, exclusively,” he said. “It can be and is both.”
With his dozen years in the House and prior work in the Reagan
White House, Cox brings with him a wealth of knowledge of such
issues. He can rattle off the Irvine Water Ranch District’s plans to
develop a natural treatment system and how much it costs. He points
out the need for work on Aliso Creek in South County. And he can
speak at length about the federal government’s important role in
protecting Newport Harbor.
On the larger scale, he is a noted expert on foreign policy
matters, in particular China and North Korea.
He also is a strong backer of President Bush’s policies, including
his aggressive stance on forcing Iraq to agree to weapons
inspections. Those efforts, Cox said, are in line with the
administration’s war on terrorism.
Iraq, North Korea and Al Qaeda -- even the IRA, to a great extent
-- are all part of the same network, Cox said. They use the same
suppliers and often the same training grounds.
“What all these groups share in common is a hatred for the United
States,” he said.
As a result, each demands attention, Cox said.
This month’s bombing in Bali, in which a longtime Newport resident
was killed and another hurt, point to the problem, he continued. Al
Qaeda did not detonate the bomb, but an affiliate did.
As chairman of the House Policy Committee, he also is considered
the fifth-ranking Republican in the House. The policy committee helps
establish Republican priorities on issues and bills. He also is a
member of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and the House
Committee on Financial Services.
After so many years in office, Cox said, he is still engaged in
the job because it is only since President Bush’s election that he
has a chance to work with a Republican president while being in the
House majority.
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