Before he leaves, Cox has work to do
In the next few days, as the rest of his congressional colleagues are
settling into their summer breaks, Rep. Chris Cox will be taking
final exams, in a manner of speaking.
He has tons of letters to write and papers to sign before Tuesday
evening, when he’ll leave the office he’s held for 17 years.
“This is like finals week for me,” the Newport Beach congressman
said during a phone interview Saturday.
The Senate on Friday confirmed Cox as the new chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission.
He’ll officially resign at 6 p.m. Pacific time Tuesday, after
which Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has two weeks to call a special
election to fill the open U.S. House seat. If the election is called
immediately, a special primary election could be held Oct. 4, and if
no candidate wins more than 50% of the vote, a general election will
follow, possibly on Nov. 29.
Cox’s SEC appointment lasts for about 4 1/2 years. He will start
his new job Wednesday, but first he must respond to letters from his
constituents and sign paychecks for the Homeland Security
Department’s 80-person staff.
He’s looking forward to taking up the SEC post, where he’ll be
able to focus completely on one set of issues -- a change from the
job in the U.S. House, which required him to be a generalist, he
said.
The SEC is important because most Americans have a stake in the
country’s financial markets, whether they choose their own
investments or put their money in a savings account, which the bank
then invests, Cox said.
“The entire question of the safety and soundness of our markets is
the responsibility of the SEC,” he said.
One of the many things he’ll miss about his old job is meeting so
many people from around Orange County and getting to help them in
ways that matter, he said.
What he won’t miss, he said, is “having to negotiate with 534
other people in order to pass a law, or having to listen to sometimes
seemingly endless speeches about topics only faintly related to the
business at hand.”
Cox said passing legislation to get the Ronald Reagan Federal
Building and Courthouse built in Santa Ana was one of the high points
of his congressional career. Another unforgettable experience was
leading the congressional delegation to Mother Teresa’s funeral in
1997.
“It was striking to see presidents, prime ministers, kings and
queens intermingled with the people of Calcutta, and it was a
beautiful ceremony,” he said.
Cox may not be traveling the world so much as SEC chairman, but
he’ll still be a frequent flier between Washington, D.C., and
California -- and other states. The SEC has 11 regional offices, and
when he works out of its Los Angeles office, he’ll be sleeping in his
own bed in Newport Beach.
But he won’t have a presence in the political scene, and he won’t
be endorsing a replacement or even giving money to candidates, he
said.
“As the head of an independent regulatory agency, I am completely
removed from politics,” he said.
For now, he has no plans to run for elected office again -- though
he doesn’t know what he’ll be doing when his SEC term is up.
“It is nearly five years, and so it’s a little bit like asking
someone who’s starting high school this fall where they’re going to
college,” Cox said.
“I just really have no idea. I didn’t have any idea that I was
going to run for congress until the day I did it.”
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