Stepping up to the plate for himself
Alicia Robinson
After knocking on doors and shaking hands on behalf of other
candidates for years, Mark Leyes decided it was time to make the
effort for himself.
Leyes is vying for the Republican party’s nomination for the 68th
District Assembly seat, against Van Tran.
A Garden Grove City Councilman who has worked with and for the
government in various jobs, Leyes said he’s ready to take a seat in
Sacramento himself.
“At some point I just kind of looked around and said, ‘Well, I
could support other candidates but I’m kind of tired of letting [the
other guy] do it,’” he said.
One of his abiding interests is economics, which he considers a
social science that all legislators should know.
“I wish that everybody had to take an economics course,” he said.
“I wish there was a better understanding of economics because there
is a result, a consequence to every action [legislators] do, every
fee they raise, every law they enact.”
His interest in politics dates back to high school, when his
civics class put aside their textbooks and instead studied a live
political lesson: Watergate.
“Although I think it would have been very easy for me to have
gotten very cynical about politics and government because of that, I
was very challenged by that and saw an opportunity to get involved
and make it better, make it more honest,” Leyes said.
Working for 60th District Assemblyman Bob Pacheco (R-City of
Industry), Leyes gets to deal with the business of government every
day, talking to constituents and doing casework on legislative
issues.
Even in former positions he was involved with the government. In
his job with the Orange County Water District he worked on
groundwater policy issues and helped draft bills that served as state
models for groundwater management, he said.
In 2000 he worked on a Republican voter registration drive and
he’s served on Garden Grove City Council for 14 years.
The city has come a long way during his tenure on council, he
said. The council expanded the city’s tax base without raising tax
rates, attracted new businesses and increased the efficiency of the
water department and sanitary district, he said.
“I’m very pleased with the fact that the city is in much healthier
financial shape than when I started,” Leyes said.
He has enjoyed serving on council, but he’s ready for the Assembly
now, he said.
“There’s other people that can do this job ... I can move on and
let somebody else have a chance,” he said.
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