Settling in to Sacramento
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Alex Coolman
For John Campbell, the hard part is just beginning.
The 45-year-old Republican auto dealer who recently captured the 70th
Assembly District seat didn’t have much trouble getting elected; his
platform of lowering taxes, protecting the environment and encouraging
high-tech business was an easy sell with his conservative constituents.
But bringing those same positions to a Democrat-dominated Capitol, he
knows, means he’s asking for trouble.
Republicans “don’t have a lot of real power” in Sacramento, he said in
a telephone interview. “If [Democrats] get too crazy, then there’s some
things we can do,” such as pushing for referendums. “Other than that, all
we can do is talk with them and negotiate with them.”
Some of the issues that probably made Campbell most attractive as a
candidate -- such as his emphasis on income tax reform -- stand, by his
own admission, an extremely slim chance of seeing the light of day in the
Assembly.
Campbell has argued that the state’s income tax system is cumbersome,
and he ran for office on the position that a radically simpler and less
bureaucratic approach on taxation should be adopted.
But does he think that position will be difficult to sell at the
Capitol?
“It certainly will,” he said.
On at least some of his core positions, Campbell said, he thinks he’ll
be able to reach consensus. He wants to emphasize environmental
protection, for example, and thinks Democrats do too.
His support for keeping technology firms free from bureaucratic
restrictions also may be greeted well from the left, he said.
“The high-tech industries have not aligned themselves with one party
or another,” so legislation relating to the businesses may not be as
partisan as debates over issues such as education or labor tend to be, he
added.
The trick, Campbell said, will be to get something done without
watering down his conservative convictions too much. On tax reform, for
example, he worries that all the changes Democrats may be willing to pass
are “mild reforms that make the process simpler but that don’t save
anybody any money.”
In some cases, he thinks it’s probably better to lose with ideals
intact than to muddle toward a more wishy-washy outcome.
“You will see me put up some bills that I know will not even get
through committee,” he said. “I think part of our duty as the minority is
to put up things knowing that they’ll get shot out of the sky, and to use
that to explain what we would do if we were in charge.”
For now, these challenges remain distant. Campbell is spending his
days not worrying about bills but about getting furniture for his new
digs in Sacramento.
“I bought a house,” Campbell said. “In fact, I’m standing there now.
“Relative to Orange County, and especially to the Newport Beach and
Irvine area, stuff up here is really cheap.”
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