Congressman’s brain wins bronze
Alicia Robinson
If they gave Olympic medals for smarts, Rep. Chris Cox would have won
the bronze this week, according to an annual survey by Washingtonian
magazine.
Cox ranked as the third-brainiest member of Congress, trailing
California Rep. Bill Thomas and Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank.
The magazine surveys staff members on Capitol Hill every year to
determine who’s a hard worker, who’s a windbag, and who looks good in
a bathing suit, among other things. Sen. Barbara Boxer was also named
in the survey, but it’s nothing she’ll want to brag about -- she
earned second among senators who are “no rocket scientist.”
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher didn’t get a mention, possibly because there
were no surfing-related categories.
Representing Newport-Mesa at the national convention
The several Orange County Republicans who will serve as delegates
at their party’s national convention, which begins Sunday in New York
City, will include two Newport Beach women.
Elaine Park, president of the Newport Harbor Republican Women, and
Jo Ellen Allen, a member of the Orange County GOP’s central
committee, will be delegates for the 48th Congressional District.
Both women said they’re excited about the event even though the
party’s presidential nominee will be no surprise.
“Basically, what we always do at conventions like that is to
network,” said Allen, who served as a delegate from San Diego in
1996. “The larger point is it’s the culmination of a national
process, where every state has its own method of selecting who they
want to be the standard bearer of the party.”
The delegates attend meetings every day and evening, but Park is
most looking forward to “seeing and hearing our wonderful president,
who is such a great leader,” she said.
The convention has traditionally been the kickoff of more
hard-core campaigning, but this year things started much earlier
because the Democratic nominee emerged early. Allen said a lengthy
election season can make people sick of all things political, but she
thinks they’ll pay attention to the Republican convention.
She would like to see a shift of focus away from what the
candidates did or didn’t do 30 years ago, she said.
“I think most people would really like to talk about what’s going
to happen in the next five years,” Allen said.
Assembly term limits
bring bad with the good
When the state legislative session ends in the next few days, term
limits will sweep out a number of experienced lawmakers, including
Sen. Ross Johnson, who served more than 16 years in the Assembly and
has been in the Senate since 1995.
“Everyone up here on both sides of the aisle respects Ross Johnson
and his thorough understanding of the way this sausage factory
works,” said 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell, whose bid to
replace Johnson in November is considered a fait accompli. “No
question that Ross is a loss.”
Campbell, with two of the three Assembly terms allowed under his
belt, is not a victim of term limits and said he believes in them.
But there are two sides to the coin, he said. Limiting a person’s
service makes them less likely to be susceptible to special
interests, but it also means they have no institutional memory of
laws that have or haven’t worked, he said.
Both Campbell’s seat and that of his colleague, 68th District
Assemblyman Ken Maddox, will be filled by newcomers in November.
Maddox is termed out and lost a primary bid for Johnson’s Senate seat
to Campbell.
Giving old legislators the heave-ho isn’t necessarily a bad thing,
because it can spread that experience to other areas of public life,
UC Irvine political science professor Mark Petracca said. The best
local example is Curt Pringle, who probably wouldn’t be mayor of
Santa Ana if he hadn’t been termed out of the legislature, Petracca
said.
And another thing: There’s scant proof that experience makes
better legislators, he said.
“Show me the evidence that longevity results in better
government,” he said.
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