No clear future for Cox’s seat
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S.J. Cahn
NEWPORT BEACH -- Right now, they’re just rumors.
Rumors that Rep. Christopher Cox’s office is officially saying “no
comment” to.
But the word in Washington is that Newport Beach’s Cox is one of
President Bush’s choices to fill vacant -- not to mention highly
influential and prominent -- seats on the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals.
It is of course not the first time the 48-year-old Cox’s name has been
attached to high-level positions.
Beginning almost exactly a year ago, Cox, the fifth-ranking Republican
in the House, was mentioned as a possible vice presidential choice of
Bush. Three years ago he positioned himself unsuccessfully to become
Speaker when Newt Gingrich was forced out. He’s even toyed more than once
with running for the Senate.
But the deal has never been sealed. And until recent days, his name
has been remarkably absent from most speculative short lists for
positions in Bush’s administration. Following a December meeting, Cox and
Bush even appeared to put an end to the possibility of Cox leaving his
office.
Bush wanted high-ranking Republicans to hold their positions, Cox said
at the time.
“He made it clear that the time for campaigning is long since over,”
Cox said. “It’s time for governance and leadership.”
Now it looks like Cox’s time for campaigning is almost over, which
raises a complicated question: What does it all mean for Newport Beach
and pressing issues such as the proposed El Toro airport?
Right now, it’s almost impossible to say, city leaders suggested
Thursday.
“The question is: Where will the new district be?” said Councilman Tod
Ridgeway, referring to looming changes to Congressional boundaries
following the 2000 Census. “I don’t think you know until redistricting.”
Who will run, and how Newport Beach will be represented, is simply up
in the air until then, he added.
One possibility, Ridgeway suggested, is that Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
(R-Huntington Beach), whose district now includes West Newport and the
Balboa Peninsula, will pick up the rest of Newport Beach.
In the El Toro fight, Rohrabacher would be a strong representative for
Newport Beach, said Dave Ellis, a spokesman for the pro-airport Airport
Working Group.
“Dana was the original cheerleader and continues to be the cheerleader
of the Orange County legislators for El Toro,” Ellis said.
But there is no way now to say how redistricting, which is barely
underway, will change Cox’s 47th District, Ellis added.
“If it’s a Newport-north district, you have to be pro-El Toro,” Ellis
said. “If it’s Newport-south, you have to be against El Toro.”
Cox, who’s district mostly includes anti-airport cities in South
County, has sat on the fence in the El Toro debate, publicly saying that
one neighborhood should not force its wants onto another.
In the midst of all the rumors, the one thing that does seem certain
is that a number of hopefuls will think about filling the seat, which
county GOP Party Chairman Tom Fuentes called “an electoral prize of some
consequence.”
Already, he said, there has been a “surge” to draft former Glendale
Rep. Jim Rogin, who was among the Republican leaders during the
impeachment of President Clinton.
Other names being mentioned include Supervisor Todd Spitzer,
Assemblyman Bill Campbell (R-Villa Park) and state Sen. Ross Johnson
(R-Irvine). An election would come at least six weeks after Cox had
officially vacated his seat.
Wildcards could also jump into the race, especially from Newport Beach
where there are individuals who could finance their own campaigns,
Fuentes said.
However the rumors shake out, Cox would be a tough man to follow, said
Councilman Dennis O’Neil.
“He’s obviously been very accessible and very responsive to many of
the issues we have concerns with that require federal involvement,”
O’Neil said. “I think it would be a great loss.”
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