Three babies and a congressman
Alicia Robinson
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher’s next legislative proposal may be for cheaper
diapers or day care. The Huntington Beach Republican lawmaker became
a father three times over Tuesday night when his wife, Rhonda
Carmony, gave birth to triplets at Saddleback Memorial Hospital in
Orange.
Though they were a month premature, the two girls and one boy are
reportedly healthy and will go home soon. Daughter Annika Brigit
Rohrabacher, 4 pounds 6 ounces, was born first around 5:15 p.m. Her
brother, Christian August Rohrabacher, 3 pounds 15 ounces, and her
sister, Tristen Francis Rohrabacher, 3 pounds 7 ounces, followed.
“The only prerequisite I have is that all of them have got to at
least try to be surfers,” the jubilant father quipped Wednesday.
“Trying to be Republicans will be their own choice.”
He was on his way to the Los Angeles airport to fly back to
Washington, D.C., when he got a call to come back.
“Usually it’s bumper-to-bumper traffic at 4 o’clock [p.m.] and
there was no traffic on the road at all, so I got there just in
time,” Rohrabacher said.
The congressman expects to spend more time in the district to be
with his family. He’ll still devote his energies to his job, but he
said the rewards of fatherhood will be much greater.
“What you’re doing in Congress is for the whole country and for
everybody else’s kids,” he said. “It’s a lot easier when you’re doing
it for your own kids.”
Land-use bill moves on to next stage
A bill introduced by 68th District Assemblyman Ken Maddox to
prohibit discrimination against religious groups in land-use matters
completed the first leg of its legislative journey Wednesday when the
local government committee approved it.
The bill would prevent communities from treating religious and
nonreligious uses differently in zoning decisions. It would also
prohibit excluding churches from particular areas.
Maddox has been working for more than two years on the bill, which
moves next to the judiciary committee for a May 4 hearing.
Campbell attacks lawsuit-friendly law
A statement from 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell’s office
said he is asking for the repeal of a law that allows employees to
bring civil suits against employers for any labor code violation even
without proof of harm to the employee.
Campbell’s bill to repeal the law, which he was pushing with the
backing of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, was voted down in the Assembly
labor committee last week. But Campbell is still urging action to
repeal the law, which he said could expose the state to frivolous
lawsuits costing hundreds of millions of dollars.
Campbell’s colleagues also killed another of his legislative
proposals last week. The “holiday bill,” which would have reduced
state workers’ annual paid holidays from 14 to 12, was voted down by
the public employees safety and retirement committee. But Campbell
never expected the bill to be popular, though he said it could save
the cash-strapped state more than $21 million a year.
“Every public employee union in the state came up and said how it
would end life as we know it,” Campbell said. “[The committee
members] were all afraid to vote for it. The public employee unions
are an extremely powerful money donating group. They wield an
enormous influence -- an enormous abusive influence, in my opinion --
in the capital.”
Tricks to running and endorsing runners
It’s that time again, or rather, it always seems to be the time to
talk about campaigning for some politicos.
Women who are interested in seeking elected office or helping
someone else run can learn more about fundraising, how to spend
campaign cash and how to round up volunteers at a seminar Saturday at
UC Irvine in room 1100 of the Social Sciences Plaza A.
Sponsored by the nonpartisan National Women’s Political Caucus,
the event also welcomes men. For more information, call (714)
638-2755 or e-mail [email protected].
Parties for president held all over O.C.
While the president may have sworn off drinking, that doesn’t mean
his supporters have to.
Orange County residents can hoist a pint for Dubya at one of
several “Parties for the President” being held around the county
tonight. More than 60 people are expected for a Costa Mesa
celebration at the Harp Inn, an Irish pub and restaurant. The Orange
County Young Republicans are organizing the event.
A news release from the Bush campaign touts the parties as a way
to strengthen the President’s grass roots support and counts 5,021
parties to be held nationwide today. The Costa Mesa party is
scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Harp Inn, 130 E. 17th St.
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