CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RUNNING SCARED MAKES DARRELL ISSA LOOK DIFFERENT”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RUNNING SCARED MAKES DARRELL ISSA LOOK DIFFERENT”
Think of Congressman Darrel Issa, the
former car alarm magnate who made a fortune off the Viper system, and you
picture the ultimate Republican loyalist, the former chairman of the House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee who bedeviled ex-President Barack
Obama over everything from his birth certificate to conduct of the Food and
Drug Administration.
But these days, it is Issa who is
bedeviled, with a target on his back in his San Diego County district, which
stretches north into Orange County’s Dana Point.
The target comes courtesy of the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which has named Issa as one of
seven California Republicans in Congress it considers vulnerable in next year’s
voting. Not only did Issa barely win reelection last year, by about a
1,600-vote margin, but the outcome of that race wasn’t known until weeks after
the election. And his 2016 opponent, retired Marine Col. Doug Applegate, is
coming after him again next year, while Democrat Hillary Clinton actually
carried the district narrowly in 2016 presidential voting.
One result is that Issa is now
focusing much more on his district rather than spending most of his time on
investigations that went nowhere and were mostly designed to harass Obama and
his aides. Not a single person was indicted or removed from office because of
any Issa-inspired probe and Bakersfield’s Kevin McCarthy, the second-ranking
House Republican, admitted their prime purpose was to harass Obama and his
aides.
Calvin Moore, his energetic deputy,
insists Issa – one of the wealthiest members of Congress and perhaps best known
around California for funding the petition drive that led to the recall of
former Gov. Gray Davis – has always maintained a strong focus on his district.
“He’s working on the same stuff he
always has,” Moore said. “He wants the nuclear waste issue at San Onofre
settled, he wants veterans to be able to get jobs more easily and he wants
immigration reform.”
Those are staple issues in a district
which includes the huge Camp Pendleton Marine base and hosts the shut-down
nuclear power plant whose spent fuel will be stored just yards from the beach
under current plans.
But although Issa insists he’s visited
the spent fuel site frequently since San Onofre shut down in 2012, few in his
district recall such visits prior to one staged with much publicity last
winter, when he brought fellow Republican Rep. John Shimkus of Illinois there
to plump for a bill setting up new nuclear waste disposal sites.
Issa clearly hopes the retirement of
former Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid of Nevada will open the way for a
storage site at Yucca Mountain not far from the gambling Mecca of Laughlin, a
project Reid resisted for years because of reported danger to aquifers that
form much of souternh Nevada’s underground water supply.
Meanwhile, Issa has still not taken a
position on the San Onofre cost settlement that is now under reconsideration by
the state Public Utilities Commission because of evidence it was a sweetheart
deal between former PUC president Michael Peevey and executives of Southern California
Edison Co. That settlement saddled consumers with about 70 percent of the cost
of decommissioning the plant, which failed largely because of an Edison
blunder. It’s a major issue for consumers in his district. Issa has had five
years to consider a stance, but taken none.
Issa also submitted his own plan to
replace Obamacare, the Affordable Care Act, seeking to open all government
employee health insurance plans to the general public and contending this could
bring rates down so far that current federal premium subsidies would not be
needed. Such subsides were not in his plan, which differs greatly from others
put forward by fellow GOP House members. His plan has gone nowhere.
Issa also staked out a position far
from other Republicans on possible investigation of Russian intelligence links
to President Trump’s 2016 campaign. He’s called for an independent prosecutor,
contending Trump’s Attorney General Jeff Sessions cannot do the job objectively
enough for most Americans to trust conclusions he might reach.
The upshot is that constituents in the
49th Congressional District shared by Issa and Applegate are seeing
more of their representative than most can ever remember. He’s also seeing more
of his constituents, one positive aspect of a close vote in a district that
formerly was one-sided.
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Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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