Campbell, Maddox kicked off several committees
Alicia Robinson
Two local assemblymen are farther down the totem pole in the
lawmaking process since being booted from several committees on which
they served.
Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez (D-Los Angeles) on Friday announced
changes to the makeup of Assembly committees that included reducing
70th District Assemblyman John Campbell’s committee memberships from
three to two and 68th District Assemblyman Ken Maddox’s committee
seats from five to one.
Nunez planned the move to reduce the size of committees that had
grown unwieldy and increase their efficiency, said Nunez spokesman
Gabriel Sanchez. But local Republican legislators disagreed.
“What happened is he reduced a lot of Republican members and made
the partisan breakdown even more slanted toward Democratic members,”
Campbell spokesman Matt Back said. Campbell was on vacation and
unavailable for comment.
Campbell served on the budget, utilities and commerce, and
insurance committees, but was kicked off the budget and insurance
committees and was added to the public employees retirement system
committee, Back said.
Maddox said he was taken off the insurance, utilities and
commerce, environmental safety and toxics and agriculture committees
and he kept his place on the governmental organization committee.
Maddox said he’s not surprised to be taken off some committees
because he’s termed out and will leave the Assembly at the end of the
year, but he hoped to keep at least two seats.
The Assembly’s 29 committees were reduced by 52 members, according
to information from Nunez’s office. The committees have been growing
since term limits were enacted in 1996 and Nunez’s goal was to
counteract that, Sanchez said.
Assembly members from both parties had complained about the
committee sizes and Nunez asked them which memberships they would be
willing to give up, Sanchez said. He denied that it was a political
move to give Democrats the upper hand.
“If you look at the numbers, more Democrats were taken off
committee assignments than Republicans,” he said. “This is something
that was done in the best interests of the house, period.”
While Campbell will continue to work closely with the governor on
the budget and other issues, Back said, he’ll no longer have a vote
in committee on the budget. Back did not expect the changes to have a
major effect on Campbell’s ability to funnel state dollars to his
district.
But not being on committees will affect the legislators’ influence
on state policy because committees are where bills live or die and
where amendments are added, Maddox said.
“We have very little say in the formation of public policy as a
result of the changes,” he said.
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