A new generation of politicians are ready to take over
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Jenny Marder
Brooke Adams has come a long way since she reigned as Huntington
Beach High School’s homecoming queen. Now, seven years later, she’s
hoping to be elected to a much higher office.
Adams, 25, hopes that voters will oust Gov. Gray Davis and elect
her, making her California’s youngest governor.
“Experience in conjunction with a younger generation who has fresh
ideas and who brings them to life would create a movement of change
and action and difference,” the Huntington Beach native said. “I want
to make a difference. I want to bring leadership back.”
Sleek, sophisticated and sharply dressed in a knee-length business
skirt, stiff button-down blouse, designer high heels and small
crystal earrings, Adams is exactly what you’d expect from the
quintessential popular-girl-turned-politician. She is poised and
articulate, with a firm handshake and a bright smile.
Adams does not balk at the field of 133 candidates running for
governor of California. In the end, the serious ones will rise to the
top, she believes.
The three main tenets of her platform are individual freedom,
personal responsibility and smaller government.
“Individual freedom entails the right to succeed or fail without
an overabundance of government interference,” Adams said. “Personal
responsibility is about taking responsibility for yourself -- for
your obligations and commitments, both socially and economically.”
She hopes that an era of personal responsibility will replace the
“me first” mentality of her parents’ generation, which she sees as
largely responsible for the current fiscal crisis.
“The older generation hasn’t provided leadership,” Adams said.
“They’ve had a $38-billion party and they’re sticking our generation
with the bill.”
She also advocates a flat-rate income tax, fewer regulations on
businesses and decreased government spending. If elected, she will
roll back the car tax, put an end to programs she considers wasteful
and limit government services to illegal immigrants.
She doesn’t see her age as an obstacle, but rather the reason she
is suited for the job.
“In California, our ship is sinking, we’re totally in debt, it’s
exhausting and Democrats, Republicans, different parties, they’re
arguing over who did it,” Adams said. “We’re sinking, guys, and our
generation’s going to go under. We’re inheriting this. When the older
generations die off, we’re the ones who are going to move into
office, so why not sooner.”
Adams’ political career actually began her sophomore year in high
school, when she was elected vice president of the student body.
She was also heavily involved in her father’s 2002 campaign in the
recall of Judge Ronald Kline, who was accused of possession of child
pornography and molestation. Her father, John Adams, replaced Kline
as an Orange County Superior Court judge.
“I’m living, I’m working, I’m paying taxes like everyone else, so
why is it fair to say I’m not experienced enough,” Brooke Adams
asked.
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