Catch a wave with your Rep.
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Judging by reaction to a story in last week’s Independent, people are
none too impressed by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher’s bill to cut off foreign
aid to Ethiopia. The reason for the congressman’s -- who has been
more focused on Afghanistan, Qatar and Saudi Arabia -- sudden
interest in this African nation? He met Petros Berhane, who lives in
Huntington Beach and whose father, Gebremedhin Berhane lost an
alcohol factory in the 1970s to the Communist Ethiopia government of
Mengistu Haile Mariam.
Today’s Ethiopian government has refused to repay the elder
Berhane the amount of money he thinks he’s owed. That’s not fair,
Rohrabacher argues, and the U.S. government shouldn’t be dealing with
countries that don’t act in good faith with U.S. citizens. “You have
to send a message to corrupt governments that you can’t trust them
with aid,” Rohrabacher said.
Of course, it was hard to miss another key piece to this story:
“He’s a surfer, like I am, and we did a lot of surfing together,”
Rohrabacher said of the younger Berhane.
Readers, rightly, picked up on this piece of the puzzle and many
have suggested that Berhane may not be the most needy person living
in Rohrabacher’s district. Combining those two facts together
produces, for many, a tale of rich special interests getting a cozy
seat next to a U.S. Congressman -- no shock there, right? And no
shock either that reaction from Ethiopia and members of the
Ethiopian-American community has been critical, with officials saying
Rohrabacher’s bill threatens the safety and well-being of Ethiopians.
But there’s another picture easily painted here. Petros Berhane
lives in Downtown Huntington Beach, surfs and has managed to parlay
some sessions in the water with his representative into a bill that
helps his family. Isn’t that exactly the kind of responsive
government we want, especially from our members of Congress who are
supposed to be most closely tied to their constituents? Is
Rohrabacher’s bill much different from his getting money for cleanup
of the Ascon waste site or protection of the Bolsa Chica? Isn’t it
Rohrabacher’s job to act in the interest of those people he
represents?
It is, and Rohrabacher shouldn’t be lambasted for coming to the
Berhane’s aid.
But his responsiveness to the family’s need does raise a precedent
that Rohrabacher now must live with: He ought to begin announcing
when and where he’ll be surfing so the rest of his constituents will
know where they can find him. Otherwise he does leave himself open to
charges of playing in the surf with special interests.
Separately, if Rohrabacher’s bill really isn’t in the best
interest of America and its relations with the rest of the world, the
Senate has the chance to shoot it down. Having such a wider view of
the world, after all, is exactly their mandate in Washington.
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
Do you think Rep. Dana Rohrabacher was wrong to write a bill that
helps one specific family? Call our Readers Hotline at (714) 966-4691
or send e-mail to [email protected]. Please spell your name
and include your hometown and phone number for verification purposes.
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