Kevin Hanley's Common Sense: Memo to Congressional Applicants

To: Applicants to represent the people of the 4th Congressional District

Fr: The Voters

Re: Hiring a Citizen Statesman to represent us in Washington D.C.

With the retirement of Congressman Doolittle, we appreciate that you, as a candidate, have applied to be our federal representative.  We will be examining your record of public service and accomplishments carefully.  Given the poor performance of the U.S. Congress in recent years, we have upgraded our criteria for who should be hired for the job.  Over the next several months and before we vote for candidates in the June primary and the November general election, we will be closely monitoring your actions on four items:

1. Run a Clean, Issue-Oriented Campaign.  Your political consultants will tell you over and over again that only negative campaigning works.  People vote against someone, never for someone.  The consultants will write slick mail pieces and television ads that never tell the whole truth and thereby unfairly demonize your opponents.  Fire them.  Rise above and be nobler than our current gutter politics.  Before succumbing to the temptation to attack your opponent, ask whether our Founding Fathers pledged their “lives, fortunes and sacred honor” so that you could gain political office through dirty tactics and destroying the reputations of other candidates.  Ask whether our soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines buried in battlefield cemeteries across the globe and in oceans deep gave their lives so that you could degrade our civic discourse.  Simply tell us in a positive way why you are the best candidate to be our representative.

2.  Serve a Limited Number of Terms.  There is the old saying, “Some people run for office to be big, others run to do big things.”  The only way that we can be sure that you are running for the right reason – to thoughtfully craft national policy – and not just for the ego-trip, is if you make a promise now that if you’re elected that you will serve no more than four 2-year terms. Staying in Washington D.C. too long, buying a home there, hobnobbing with wealthy lobbyists, and becoming a career politician, is corrupting. You are human and it will gradually happen to you. You’re not indispensable so don’t treat the Congressional seat as your property. Start your term of office with the attitude of fighting everyday for 8 years for good national policy. Then, go on to do something else that is mission-based.

3.  Hold Town Meetings and Debates. As our federal representative, we expect that you will use your best judgment in how you vote and in what legislation that you introduce. But we also expect a statesman’s humility from you and that you will continually listen to what your home district is telling you. Listening only to the D.C. Beltway echo chamber will give you a false sense of what the public really thinks. By holding public meetings in your district, you will learn new things from your constituents. Talk to people from the other political party.  And by debating your opponents every two years, you will be expected to defend your votes and refine your positions on important public policies. That is a part of our republican form of government.

4.  Tackle Big Problems and Advance Reforms. We are not sending you to Washington D.C. as our federal representative to bring back pork projects. The earmark process in the U.S. Congress causes huge and wasteful spending and corruption. Take a “no earmark pledge.” Instead, spend your time crafting legislation that is important to your district and the nation. Conduct oversight of federal agencies to make sure our tax dollars are spent wisely. Work to improve our national security, balance the budget, strengthen the economy, provide cost-effective and high quality medical care, enhance fire protection, and protect our environment for future generations. This is a tall order. But we expect you to dive into it and give it your all for 8 years.

The voters should choose you based on your record of accomplishment in serving the broad public interest.  What are you seeking to accomplish in Washington D.C.? Do you have the proven skills and record to give the voters confidence that you will be serving America’s interests and not your own?

In a speech to the Illinois Legislature on January 11, 1837, a tall, lanky legislator named Abraham Lincoln told his colleagues, “Politicians are a set of men who have interests aside from the interests of the people, and who, to say the most of them, are, taken as a mass, at least one long step removed from honest men. I say this with the greater freedom because, being a politician myself, none can regard it as personal.” To the applicants who wish to represent the voters of the 4th Congressional District, don’t be a run-of-the-mill politician. Be a citizen statesman. The voters of this district deserve no less.

Kevin Hanley serves on the Auburn City Council and as Chief Consultant on health and insurance legislation with the California Legislature. Send your comments to Kevin at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Subscribe to the Sentinel and receive this weekly newspaper (the only general circulation newspaper in the area that is locally owned and operated) delivered right to your mailbox. Call the Sentinel at 530-823-2463 for more information.

Comments (2)Add Comment
...
written by Theodore Terbolizard, January 24, 2008
I especially like point number 3 above, "Hold Town Meetings and Debates." Old Town Auburn would be wonderful setting for a CA-04 GOP primary debate, and- for credibility- should be organized by a local media sponsor, such as the auburnbuzz/Auburn Sentinel.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0
...
written by Jason Hommel, January 29, 2008
I'm hosting a fundraising dinner for Theodore Terbolizard, candidate for the 4th district. At first, we planned to each give two speeches. Then, we decided to settle on a panel discussion format, so that we can directly address questions from everyone in attendance. The fundraiser is open to the public, this Friday, details in the link.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
Votes: +0

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy