JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
The death last week of John Schmitz -- former state senator and
congressman from this district -- deserves more perspective than it
received in the local press. Schmitz, more than any other public figure,
represented the political and philosophical excesses that have hung, like
the Ancient Mariner’s albatross, around the neck of Orange County for the
past four decades -- and still linger.
The local effect of his political life was poorly served by this quote
in the Los Angeles Times from Tom Fuentes, Orange County GOP chairman:
“His sense of humor, intelligence and enthusiasm will long be remembered
by his Orange County friends.”
So will a lot of other things, not quite so benign, by the rest of us.
I was covering Southern California for both the Christian Science
Monitor and the National Observer (the weekly Wall Street Journal) when
Schmitz first ran for public office in 1964. He was a former Marine Corps
pilot and information officer at the El Toro Air Station who became a
political science teacher at Santa Ana College. He was also an active
member of the John Birch Society, whose founder, Robert Welch, called
President Dwight Eisenhower “a conscious agent of the Communist
conspiracy.”
Orange County, although deeply conservative, was not always
politically predictable. This district, for example, was represented in
Congress for many years by James B. Utt, who once sent us a newsletter
describing the impending threat from “barefooted African hordes” training
in Cuba and regarded sex education and rock ‘n’ roll music as “part of a
Communist plot to destroy America.” But we also strongly supported such
moderate Republicans as Gov. Earl Warren, U.S. Sen. Thomas Kuchel and
Assemblyman Bruce Sumner.
Then in the mid-1960s, the Birchers split the California Republican
party asunder by running right-wing candidates in Republican primaries.
Kuchel was taken out by State School Supt. Max Rafferty. Richard Nixon
was almost taken out by Assemblyman Joe Schell for the gubernatorial
nomination. And Bruce Sumner -- considered a Republican star headed for
bigger things -- was defeated by Schmitz in the state Senate primary,
largely over Sumner’s refusal to abandon the principle of fair housing.
The Republican Right has been in charge around these parts ever since.
Early on, Schmitz was their poster child. When Utt died in 1970, state
Sen. Schmitz -- then a national director of the John Birch Society -- won
a Republican free-for-all for Utt’s seat. It was one of the great
political ironies of the time that for three years Schmitz was President
Richard Nixon’s congressman -- despite the president’s increasingly
frantic efforts to get rid of him.
Nixon had good reasons. Not only was the Birch Society far to the
right of the Nixon administration and regarded as a Republican liability,
but Schmitz, himself, was a caustic Nixon critic. On the eve on Nixon’s
departure to seek rapprochement with China, Schmitz told a Birch Society
audience that he wasn’t opposed to the president’s trip to China, “only
to his coming back.” He later called the visit “a surrendering to
international communism.”
These excesses cost him his seat in 1972, but he found a political
comfort zone by accepting the invitation of George Wallace’s American
Independent party -- somewhere to the right of King George III -- to run
for president against Nixon. None of this dismal history prevented local
Republicans from sending Schmitz back to Sacramento as their senator in
1978. There, a combination of character assassination in the guise of
humor and some serious personal problems finally ended his political
career.
His friends may have found Schmitz funny, but the objects of his
malice -- routinely Jews, Latinos, blacks and anyone who didn’t agree
with him -- weren’t amused. As we honor Martin Luther King Jr. this week,
some of us old-timers recall that Schmitz referred to him as a “notorious
liar” and told the California Senate: “I have other things to do than get
up on the floor and expose the real Martin Luther King, but I’m going to
do it if I have to” in killing a resolution honoring Dr. King after his
murder.
Schmitz’s arrogance -- which his friends described as principle
wrapped in humor -- was a considerable factor in creating the reactionary
image of what Newsweek columnist Stewart Alsop called “The Orange County
Bug.” That Schmitz legacy, over the years, has hardened into a stubbornly
archconservative Republican power structure that is causing growing
concern among local moderates who have seen Democrats picking up more and
more public offices from Republicans in California -- including several
in Orange County.
That’s why a blue chip group of local business executives calling
themselves the New Majority Committee -- and including such Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa heavyweights as Donald Bren, George Argyros and William
Lyon -- surfaced last year to push for more mainstream candidates,
particularly in the area of highly controversial social issues. The group
met instant and aggressive resistance from the long-entrenched
ideological conservatives led by Fuentes. The New Majority retired with a
bloody nose, but it will regroup and return.
Meanwhile the Friends of John will be digging in to turn back any new
attacks -- and the Democrats will gleefully continue picking off
Republicans in these parts. This may well be the final political legacy
of John Schmitz.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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