Putting politics aside
A reporter I worked with in Washington D.C., an old-school
journalist who was smart, fair, tough and a heck of writer, used to
talk about the days when even the bitterest foes on Capitol Hill
would put aside their differences when the day was done, adjourn to a
bar or similar establishment and, essentially, be pals. They
disagreed vehemently on issues but didn’t hate each other.
In many ways, that dynamic changed when Newt Gingrich led his
revolution in the mid-’90s. Partisanship became a full-time job.
Or not.
When we at the Pilot heard that Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, about as
conservative as they come, and Rep. Barney Frank, who falls even
further to the liberal edge of the political spectrum, were teaming
up on an issue, it struck us as “odd†given the decade-long state of
affairs in Washington. The pairing seemed even more unusual given
that this summer Frank headlined a fund-raiser for Gerrie Schipske,
the Democrat challenging Rohrabacher this fall.
Not so, Frank told me in a quick -- he talks faster than most New
Englanders, even -- interview Wednesday.
“The way things work, if you can’t work across partisan lines or
ideological lines, you shouldn’t be in the government,†Frank said.
He and Rohrabacher do differ on “lots of issues,†he continued,
but “we differ in a civil way.†So when they agree, there is no
reason for them not to work together.
“A., we agree on some issues,†he said. “And we have respect for
each other.â€
Still, there is one difference that will not change: “I’d like the
Democrats to be in control of the House. He’d like the Republicans to
be.â€
All’s indeed fair.
INSIDE OUT
One of the oldest political paradigms appears to be in full effect
in Costa Mesa.
Incumbents are running on how good they say things are, while
challengers are -- actually, challenger is -- attacking the present
leadership for lacking the ability to lead.
At the Costa Mesa Senior Center on Tuesday, 75 or so people
watched as City Council candidate Allan Mansoor took aim at City
Hall, firing off that leaders are misspending money, ignoring the
growing crime rate and leaving the Westside to stagnate.
It’s a straight-forward formula for lesser-known outsider
candidates. And given that Mansoor is the only one of the five who
can lay legitimate claim to being a candidate of change, a degree, at
least, of this election could hinge on whether residents are unhappy
with how City Hall is doing its job. At the least, his chance for
winning is heavily reliant on an unhappy electorate.
What was interesting was who came to City Hall’s defense, given
that Mansoor’s opponents for the two seats up for grabs on Nov. 5 are
all City Hall insiders: Mayor Linda Dixon, Councilman Gary Monahan,
Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley and Planning
Commissioner Bill Perkins.
It was Dixon, who didn’t exactly dwell on Mansoor’s comments, but
clearly responded to them during her own answers to a trio of the
most asked questions from the seniors in the audience.
From here, the question is: Will their campaigns develop into a
battle against each other?
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He can be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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