FILE - This Sept. 3, 2014 file photo shows California state Sen. Rod Wright in a Los Angeles dourtroom during a hearing on voter fraud charges. Proposition 50 on the June primary ballot would amend the state constitution to allow legislators to suspend their peers without pay. Wright, one of three lawmakers put on leave in 2014 while facing felony charges, continued to receive paychecks while suspended. (AP Photo/Nick Ut, File) ORG XMIT: LA946
In summary
The Legislature has now made it quasi- legal for state legislators to live outside their districts and one who had been prosecuted has been pardoned by Gov. Jerry Brown
Equity and logic would seem to dictate that state legislators should live in the districts they represent and thereby share their constituents’ daily experiences.
State law has said as much for many decades, and from time to time, individual lawmakers have been caught registering to vote in their districts but actually living somewhere else, either by their opponents or reporters.
Five years ago, for instance, a Sacramento Bee reporter shadowed Richard Pan, a Sacramento legislator, and found that after the boundaries of his Assembly district were altered by post-2010 census redistricting, he claimed a condo inside the new boundaries as his “legal domicile” but actually lived with his family outside the district.
As with most other such revelations, nothing happened to Pan. He went on to win a seat in the state Senate.
However, Rod Wright, a state senator from Los Angeles, was not so lucky. In 2010, a grand jury indicted Wright on eight counts of filing a false declaration of candidacy, voter fraud and perjury, alleging that he didn’t live where he was registered to vote in his district. Four years later, he was convicted, sentenced to 90 days in jail (he spent just 71 minutes behind bars) and forced to resign.
Last August, in the dying moments of the 2018 legislative session, the Legislature approved a bill that would make future prosecutions of politicians for misstating their true places of residence almost impossible.
Building on a 1984 law with the same goal, the new legislation, Senate Bill 1250, basically said that wherever a politician registered to vote would be conclusively deemed to be his or her domicile. It specified a long list of factors, such as claiming a homeowner’s tax exemption for another home, that could not be cited to prove otherwise.
“This bill is about allowing all legislators, who must travel and live in our state capital, to be effective leaders for our representative districts without the fear of being targeted by overzealous prosecutors or political adversaries,” the measure’s author, Sen. Steven Bradford, a Los Angeles Democrat, wrote in a letter supporting the measure.
Gov. Jerry Brown not only signed SB 1250 but on the day before Thanksgiving included Wright in a long list of convicted felons granted gubernatorial pardons. Brown also pardoned Wright for a 1972 felony conviction for auto theft when he was 19.
“I’m elated,” Wright said. “It truly is a day of Thanksgiving for me.” He had contended that the old law under which he was prosecuted was ambiguous.
Although he had to resign from the Senate, Wright is off the legal hook, joining other legislators, such as Pan, who have flouted the residency law without penalty.
It should be noted that while Democrats, including Brown, enacted SB 1250, their party’s leaders tried this year to make residency an issue against Tom McClintock, a Republican congressman from the Sacramento area who lives outside his district, even though members of Congress are free to live outside their districts.
“In 10 years, Tom McClintock has never voted for himself, because he doesn’t live in our district,” the narrator of an anti-McClintock video said as pictures of the congressman flashed on the screen.
The Legislature could have gone the other way, eliminating any ambiguity about residence in the previous law by making the requirement to live in one’s district absolute.
Instead, Senate Bill 1250 is a virtual invitation for politicians to claim bogus residences as their official domiciles – effectively gaining the same dubious privilege that McClintock and other members of Congress enjoy.
*This column was updated 12/2/18 to correct the time former Sen. Wright was incarcerated.
Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times...
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Legislators spared from living in their districts
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In summary
The Legislature has now made it quasi- legal for state legislators to live outside their districts and one who had been prosecuted has been pardoned by Gov. Jerry Brown
Equity and logic would seem to dictate that state legislators should live in the districts they represent and thereby share their constituents’ daily experiences.
State law has said as much for many decades, and from time to time, individual lawmakers have been caught registering to vote in their districts but actually living somewhere else, either by their opponents or reporters.
Five years ago, for instance, a Sacramento Bee reporter shadowed Richard Pan, a Sacramento legislator, and found that after the boundaries of his Assembly district were altered by post-2010 census redistricting, he claimed a condo inside the new boundaries as his “legal domicile” but actually lived with his family outside the district.
As with most other such revelations, nothing happened to Pan. He went on to win a seat in the state Senate.
However, Rod Wright, a state senator from Los Angeles, was not so lucky. In 2010, a grand jury indicted Wright on eight counts of filing a false declaration of candidacy, voter fraud and perjury, alleging that he didn’t live where he was registered to vote in his district. Four years later, he was convicted, sentenced to 90 days in jail (he spent just 71 minutes behind bars) and forced to resign.
Last August, in the dying moments of the 2018 legislative session, the Legislature approved a bill that would make future prosecutions of politicians for misstating their true places of residence almost impossible.
Building on a 1984 law with the same goal, the new legislation, Senate Bill 1250, basically said that wherever a politician registered to vote would be conclusively deemed to be his or her domicile. It specified a long list of factors, such as claiming a homeowner’s tax exemption for another home, that could not be cited to prove otherwise.
“This bill is about allowing all legislators, who must travel and live in our state capital, to be effective leaders for our representative districts without the fear of being targeted by overzealous prosecutors or political adversaries,” the measure’s author, Sen. Steven Bradford, a Los Angeles Democrat, wrote in a letter supporting the measure.
Gov. Jerry Brown not only signed SB 1250 but on the day before Thanksgiving included Wright in a long list of convicted felons granted gubernatorial pardons. Brown also pardoned Wright for a 1972 felony conviction for auto theft when he was 19.
“I’m elated,” Wright said. “It truly is a day of Thanksgiving for me.” He had contended that the old law under which he was prosecuted was ambiguous.
Although he had to resign from the Senate, Wright is off the legal hook, joining other legislators, such as Pan, who have flouted the residency law without penalty.
It should be noted that while Democrats, including Brown, enacted SB 1250, their party’s leaders tried this year to make residency an issue against Tom McClintock, a Republican congressman from the Sacramento area who lives outside his district, even though members of Congress are free to live outside their districts.
“In 10 years, Tom McClintock has never voted for himself, because he doesn’t live in our district,” the narrator of an anti-McClintock video said as pictures of the congressman flashed on the screen.
The Legislature could have gone the other way, eliminating any ambiguity about residence in the previous law by making the requirement to live in one’s district absolute.
Instead, Senate Bill 1250 is a virtual invitation for politicians to claim bogus residences as their official domiciles – effectively gaining the same dubious privilege that McClintock and other members of Congress enjoy.
*This column was updated 12/2/18 to correct the time former Sen. Wright was incarcerated.
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Dan WaltersOpinion Columnist
Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times... More by Dan Walters