Assembly assignments signed and sealed
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S.J. Cahn
Newport-Mesa’s two assemblymen, John Campbell and Ken Maddox,
received their committee assignments for the 2003-04 session last
week. And there were no surprises under the Democratically controlled
Capitol tree.
Maddox, it appears, will be the busier of the two. He will serve
on the Agriculture Committee (possibly because those in Sacramento
are confused by his political tag: R-Garden Grove), the Environmental
Safety and Toxic Materials Committee, the Governmental Organization
Committee (which has a lot of members, strangely enough), the
Utilities and Commerce Committee (a hotbed lately, given the energy
crisis) and as vice chairman of the Insurance Committee.
On that last committee, he’ll be able to order around his fellow
Newport-Mesa lawmaker. The Insurance Committee is one of just two
Campbell is on; the other is Utilities and Commerce, which gave him a
noteworthy platform from which to attack Gov. Gray Davis’ energy
policies in the last few years.
THE WRITING’S ON THE WALL STREET
Newport Beach’s Rep. Chris Cox, known as one of the more brainy
and policy-oriented players on Capitol Hill, reinforced his image
last week in an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal.
Cox’s piece, “Settle the Score,” focused on the Bush economic
plan, which is in flux with the appointments this month of John Snow
for Treasury secretary and Stephen Friedman as the top White House
economic advisor. Cox presses that the appointments signal “a
redoubled commitment to pro-growth tax policy,” which should be music
to his constituents’ ears.
But more importantly now, he writes, is the filling of other
vacancies. And, keeping with his focus on the material matters of
government, Cox looks to openings at the Congressional Budget Office
and the Joint Tax Committee.
“Virtually every modern-day inanity in the tax code can be traced
to the flat-earth revenue estimation approach these congressional
agencies employ,” Cox writes. “From the absurd 10-year phaseout of
the death tax (and the even more absurd restoration of it one year
after full repeal), to the unindexed growth of the Alternative
Minimum Tax (AMT) -- not to mention the damagingly high marginal tax
rates on individuals -- congressional scoring is to blame.”
He also points out, since this is politics after all: “By their
charters, neither ... is supposed to be partisan. But decades of
Democratic control over their staff and their approaches has left an
anti-growth bias deeply ingrained in both.”
Putting the right people into these positions, he concludes, “For
President Bush and his new economic team, nothing will be more
crucial to their success.”
ANOTHER NEW COX TEAM MEMBER
Chris Cox hasn’t just been busy penning pieces for the media
lately. He has also hired a new communications director, Kate
Whitman.
Whitman has worked in the Bush White House, the Department of
Labor and was most recently press secretary to Craig Benson, who
scored a surprise win for the New Hampshire governor’s seat this
fall.
The announcement goes long on Whitman’s New Hampshire knowledge
(she’s also served as communications director for the state’s
Republican Party). If Al Gore were president, one can only imagine
the “Cox for president” talk that would have started. But given the
Republican tenant in the White House, the early primary connection
isn’t quite as exciting.
Strangely, the announcement does not mention what a little
investigation pulls up: Whitman is the daughter of former New Jersey
Gov. Christine Todd Whitman.
And as late as this past summer, Whitman’s name was in the air for
a run at a New Jersey House seat.
Whitman is the second voice change for Cox in recent months. In
September, he brought Amy Inaba Freyder aboard as his California
press secretary. Whitman will handle his national, state and local
media dealings from Washington and serve as his press secretary for
the House Policy Committee, which Cox chairs.
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