Just like going back to school
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Alicia Robinson
For freshman state Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, starting his first term
has been a flashback to starting college.
But for his colleague Van Tran, the first week has been a
commuter’s nightmare.
After winning election Nov. 2, Republicans DeVore and Tran have
flown to Sacramento for a week of orientation and they’ve requested
the committees they’d like to serve on.
“It’s almost like putting together a class schedule,” DeVore said.
“I think the main thing was not only meeting the eight other freshman
Republicans, but the dozen or so freshman Democratic members and
beginning to build some relationships.”
With Tran still serving on the Garden Grove City Council, his
schedule has been more grueling. From Nov. 3 to Nov. 10 he flew back
and forth to Sacramento multiple times, and by Thursday, he thought
he was coming down with a cold.
“I don’t mind the hours, but flying up and down the state in an
airplane, it gets to you,” he said.
They’ll be sworn in Dec. 6, and both men have a list of priorities
they plan to address once the legislative session begins in January.
DeVore will represent the 70th Assembly District, which includes
Newport Beach. As a staunch conservative, he wants to stop the
expansion of government and prevent tax increases, he said. The best
way he sees of doing that is to attack the district reapportionment
system that has guaranteed most legislative districts for either a
Republican or a Democrat regardless of who’s running.
He’s already working on his first bill, which he calls a “common
sense reform” to the probate tax code that will allow people to place
their homes into a beneficial trust without using a lawyer.
Tran holds the 68th Assembly District seat, which includes Costa
Mesa. He wants to see how the state can get better tools and
resources to public safety providers such as police and fire
agencies, he said.
He’ll also push for more state funding for road improvements, he
said, but he has more ambitious goals of cutting bureaucracy and
balancing a projected $8-million budget deficit without tax
increases.
Because so many legislators are new after each election cycle,
DeVore and Tran aren’t likely to be hampered by their freshman
status, UC Irvine political science professor Mark Petracca said.
“I think in the world of term limits, being a freshman legislator
is not the graveyard of irrelevance that it used to be because this
year’s freshman legislator is next year’s legislative leader,
potentially,” he said.
But being on the conservative end of the minority party could get
in the legislators’ way, if they let it. How effective DeVore and
Tran will be depends on how well they can cooperate with Democrats
and pick when to compromise, said former state Assemblywoman and
Senator Marian Bergeson.
“It’s a total picture to be able to get significant legislation
through,” she said. “It means working with people, and I think that’s
the most important thing to learn.”
Tran said he plans to be a problem solver and not an
obstructionist. DeVore, on the other hand, takes a pragmatic view of
how Republican legislators should approach the next term.
“Our leverage in the legislature is the fact that the governor may
always use his veto on legislation that is not friendly to the
formation of business and new jobs,” DeVore said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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