Alicia RobinsonAmong the beltway insiders scrambling to...
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Alicia Robinson
Among the beltway insiders scrambling to respond to the
recommendations of the 9/11 Commission is Rep. Chris Cox, who last
week announced a series of hearings into information analysis and
sharing, border protection, emergency response and other issues. Cox
chairs the House Homeland Security Committee.
The hearings will probe the intelligence failures that made the
terrorist attacks possible. They are unprecedented in August, when
Congress is normally not in session, Homeland Security Committee
spokeswoman Liz Tobias said.
Cox was traveling and could not be reached for comment Wednesday,
but he released a statement Monday praising President Bush’s response
to the 9/11 Commission report. This week, Bush announced his support
for the commission’s recommendation to create a new position of
national intelligence director. The director would head the nation’s
existing intelligence agencies and a new national terrorism center.
While Cox has lined up with the president on the issue, some
conservatives have criticized the creation of an “intelligence czar”
as useless bureaucracy that hasn’t worked in other situations.
“Who’s going to step forward and suggest that the drug czar has
made drug use any less?” Rep. Dana Rohrabacher said. “The drug czar
has been totally ineffective.”
An intelligence czar would duplicate what the White House National
Security Council already does, he said. Rohrabacher did support some
of the commission’s suggestions, such as not giving illegal
immigrants driver’s licenses, but he called others “just feel-good
proposals” that would have a detrimental effect on national security.
Winding down, winding
up for party conventions
Some Democrats’ hearts are still aflutter from the party’s
national convention, which wrapped up last weekend after John Kerry
officially accepted the presidential nomination Thursday night.
Democratic congressional candidate Jim Brandt, who is challenging
Republican Dana Rohrabacher in November, said Wednesday the trek to
Boston was worth it.
“The thing that struck me was this is the first one I went to that
everyone was so focused, everybody was so together,” he said.
“Unfortunately, I think a lot of it is anti-Bush sentiment.”
But it wasn’t all hugs and camaraderie. Brandt said he didn’t see
any of Orange County’s other Democratic candidates, possibly because
it was so hard to get credentials from the convention organizers to
attend.
‘I’m assuming [the other candidates] weren’t invited if they
weren’t even there,” he said.
Local attendance could be light at the Republican National
Convention in late August, too. Assemblyman John Campbell, who’s
running for the 35th District Senate seat this fall, said he’s
unlikely to attend the convention because the legislature is in
session until midnight on Aug. 31, so he’ll be in Sacramento at least
that long.
Rohrabacher said his family, which includes triplets born in
April, is a bigger priority than seeing the incumbent president get
the party’s nomination.
“I’ve got little babies here,” he said. “We know what the outcome
of the Republican convention is going to be.”
Republicans to sail with Crean
A flotilla of conservatives will hit Newport Harbor this evening
to party with television game show host Pat Sajak and Newport Beach
millionaire John Crean aboard Crean’s yacht.
The soiree will raise money for the National Conservative Campaign
Fund, a political action committee that donates to conservative
candidates.
The Newport cruise is the first time the group has organized a
fundraiser outside of the Washington, D.C., area, said Jeff
Hollingsworth, a volunteer with the National Conservative Campaign
Fund.
Expected guests at the booked event include potential fund
beneficiaries Reps. Chris Cox and Dana Rohrabacher as well as former
Orange County GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes. Tickets for the cruise cost
$1,000, but there’s no word on how much it will cost to buy a vowel.
O.C.-based intern awaits
chance for convention voice
It’s the waiting that’s the worst part.
An intern in Rep. Chris Cox’s Newport Beach office will find out
in about a week whether he gets to speak at the Republican National
Convention, scheduled for Aug. 30 to Sept. 2 in New York City.
Nathan Imperiale, 19, an Orange County native and a student at
George Washington University in Washington, D.C., is one of 10
finalists in an essay contest sponsored by the GOP and MTV.
“This could be a life-changing event if I win this contest,”
Imperiale said. His essay detailing his grandfather’s immigration to
America from Spain during World War II was chosen from about 1,000
entries, and he submitted a video to become a finalist in the
contest.
People can vote for the winner online at either
https://www.gopconvention.com or https://www.chooseorlose.com. The
winner will be announced Aug. 16 and will make a speech at the
convention at the end of the month.
Democrats aim to drum up support at local brewery
Orange County Democrats are holding a “meetup” Tuesday at the Karl
Strauss Brewery Restaurant in Costa Mesa.
The event focuses on organizing supporters for campaigning and
encouraging grass-roots support for the Democratic Party. The meetup
is set for 7 p.m. at Karl Strauss, 901-A South Coast Drive, Costa
Mesa. For information, call Sharon Toji at (949) 929-6512.
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