California Capitol, home of the Assembly and Senate. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters
In summary
H.L Richardson championed gun rights and tough anti-crime laws and single-handedly changed the tenor of California’s Capitol.
As strange as it may seem now, California’s state Senate was once a bastion of bipartisan — almost nonpartisan — comity.
Although Democrats were in the majority, they willingly
shared power with Republicans. A bipartisan rules committee gently controlled the
flow of legislation and committees were just as likely to have GOP chairmen
(there were no women in the Senate until 1976) as Democrats.
The genteel nature of the house was bolstered by an
unwritten rule that neither party would try to unseat an incumbent of the other
party, confining partisan contests to vacant seats.
A feisty Republican senator from Southern California named Hubert L. Richardson ended that era. Richardson preferred to be called “Bill” and was widely known as “Wild Bill.” He championed rights for gun owners and tough anti-crime laws. And he decided to blow up the no-compete rule.
Richardson, an avid hunter, had been a senator for a decade
when a legislative effort to curb handgun sales in the mid-1970s led him to
found Gun Owners of California, the first of several political groups, and
mount challenges to sitting Democratic senators.
A pioneer in direct mail fundraising and using technology in
political campaigns, Richardson
employed those skills to unseat three Democratic senators in three successive
elections, beginning in 1976.
It so unnerved the Democrats that they ousted their
long-time leader, Senate President Pro Tem James Mills, after their third loss
in 1980, the defeat of Sacramento Sen. Al Rodda by a little-known Richardson
aide, John Doolittle.
The Democrats elevated David Roberti to the top position on
his pledge to protect Democratic incumbents from further challenges. Simultaneously,
a year-long battle over the state Assembly’s speakership ended with the
elevation of Willie Brown.
Those two events completely and radically changed the tenor
of the Capitol, deemphasizing legislative accomplishment in favor of raising
lots of money from special interest groups to fight partisan wars.
The Capitol’s pay-to-play, dog-eat-dog atmosphere continued
for two decades, until Democrats achieved unquestioned dominance. It also
sparked a federal corruption investigation that sent a number of legislators
and other figures to prison.
After unseating those three senators, Richardson continued to push his causes, with
notable success.
He helped elect Republican George Deukmejian as governor in
1982 by a very narrow margin, mobilizing gun owners to oppose an anti-gun
ballot measure that was also on the 1982 ballot. He founded a national gun
owners organization and, perhaps most importantly, spearheaded the successful
1986 campaign to stop the re-election of Rose Bird, the state Supreme Court
chief justice, and two other liberal justices deemed to oppose the state’s
death penalty.
Richardson’s take-no-prisoners approach to politics was framed in one of the several books he authored, “Confrontational Politics.” Another book, “What Makes You Think We Read the Bills?” was an insider look — from a very personal standpoint — at the foibles of the Legislature.
Richardson, who continued to live in the Sacramento area after leaving the Legislature in 1988, died last week at age 92. His death was announced by Gun Owners of California, now headed by his son-in-law, Sam Paredes.
Obviously, Wild Bill Richardson was a very controversial
figure in his day. Obviously, too, he single-handedly changed the nature of the
Capitol, pioneered political techniques that continue to be used and altered
the course of California
history by playing key roles in the election of Deukmejian as governor and the
defeat of Chief Justice Bird.
Very few political figures past or present could claim to
have had such impact.
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
The man who changed the Capitol
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In summary
H.L Richardson championed gun rights and tough anti-crime laws and single-handedly changed the tenor of California’s Capitol.
As strange as it may seem now, California’s state Senate was once a bastion of bipartisan — almost nonpartisan — comity.
Although Democrats were in the majority, they willingly shared power with Republicans. A bipartisan rules committee gently controlled the flow of legislation and committees were just as likely to have GOP chairmen (there were no women in the Senate until 1976) as Democrats.
The genteel nature of the house was bolstered by an unwritten rule that neither party would try to unseat an incumbent of the other party, confining partisan contests to vacant seats.
A feisty Republican senator from Southern California named Hubert L. Richardson ended that era. Richardson preferred to be called “Bill” and was widely known as “Wild Bill.” He championed rights for gun owners and tough anti-crime laws. And he decided to blow up the no-compete rule.
Richardson, an avid hunter, had been a senator for a decade when a legislative effort to curb handgun sales in the mid-1970s led him to found Gun Owners of California, the first of several political groups, and mount challenges to sitting Democratic senators.
A pioneer in direct mail fundraising and using technology in political campaigns, Richardson employed those skills to unseat three Democratic senators in three successive elections, beginning in 1976.
It so unnerved the Democrats that they ousted their long-time leader, Senate President Pro Tem James Mills, after their third loss in 1980, the defeat of Sacramento Sen. Al Rodda by a little-known Richardson aide, John Doolittle.
The Democrats elevated David Roberti to the top position on his pledge to protect Democratic incumbents from further challenges. Simultaneously, a year-long battle over the state Assembly’s speakership ended with the elevation of Willie Brown.
Those two events completely and radically changed the tenor of the Capitol, deemphasizing legislative accomplishment in favor of raising lots of money from special interest groups to fight partisan wars.
The Capitol’s pay-to-play, dog-eat-dog atmosphere continued for two decades, until Democrats achieved unquestioned dominance. It also sparked a federal corruption investigation that sent a number of legislators and other figures to prison.
After unseating those three senators, Richardson continued to push his causes, with notable success.
He helped elect Republican George Deukmejian as governor in 1982 by a very narrow margin, mobilizing gun owners to oppose an anti-gun ballot measure that was also on the 1982 ballot. He founded a national gun owners organization and, perhaps most importantly, spearheaded the successful 1986 campaign to stop the re-election of Rose Bird, the state Supreme Court chief justice, and two other liberal justices deemed to oppose the state’s death penalty.
Richardson’s take-no-prisoners approach to politics was framed in one of the several books he authored, “Confrontational Politics.” Another book, “What Makes You Think We Read the Bills?” was an insider look — from a very personal standpoint — at the foibles of the Legislature.
Richardson, who continued to live in the Sacramento area after leaving the Legislature in 1988, died last week at age 92. His death was announced by Gun Owners of California, now headed by his son-in-law, Sam Paredes.
Obviously, Wild Bill Richardson was a very controversial figure in his day. Obviously, too, he single-handedly changed the nature of the Capitol, pioneered political techniques that continue to be used and altered the course of California history by playing key roles in the election of Deukmejian as governor and the defeat of Chief Justice Bird.
Very few political figures past or present could claim to have had such impact.
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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