The “Leap Day” in California politics

Gov. Bartlett

It only arrives every four years, but the unique date of February 29th has played an interesting role in California politics over the years. Governor Washington Bartlett and Assemblyman William T. Coleman were both “leaplings”, born on February 29, 1824. They were both members of the Committee on Vigilance during San Francisco’s lawless days during the Gold Rush. Bartlett would also serve as Mayor of San Francisco in the 1880s. Other legislators born on Leap Days were Assemblyman Gordon A. Fleury (1916) and Ken Maddox (1964).

Assembly Speaker Paul Peek resigned on that date in 1940, and Assemblyman Delbert Morris resigned on that date in 1956. Peek resigned in order to be appointed Secretary of State (an office he held for two years) while Morris resigned in a prison cell after being convicted of bribery and graft charges. Peek would later serve as a California Supreme Court Justice becoming “the only Californian to serve as a top-level official in the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government.”) while Morris would spend two years in prison, followed by an eventual pardon by Governor Pat Brown in 1961.

As far as I could tell from my research, only one legislator has ever died on a leap day; State Senator William W. Pendegast in 1876. Pendegast, a brilliant attorney, is best remembered for successfully defending the famous photographer Eadweard Muybridge against charges that he had murdered his wife’s lover. Muybridge had definitely committed the murder, but Pendegast was just that good an attorney.

Dreier not running for reelection

Congressman David Dreier announced today that he will not seek another term in Congress. The surprising announcement, less than two weeks before the filing deadline, throws into doubt who will run for his seat. Currently, only two candidates (Norma Macias and Roger Hernandez) have filed to run for the District 32 seat.

JoinCalifornia Correction

A correction: H. B. Ream, a four-term Assemblyman from northern California in the 1910s, was elected as a Democrat in each of his terms. Although he did win the nomination of both the Republican and Democratic parties, an error on JoinCalifornia.com had made it appear that he was elected as a Republican in 1918.

Thank you to Tim Morland of the Office of the Chief Clerk for the correction!

The “Last Rancher” has died

Former Assemblyman Norman S. Waters, who served in the legislature from 1976 to 1990, died last weekend in Plymouth, CA. In addition to his legislative service, Waters (nicknamed “the Last Rancher”) had previously served as an Amador County Supervisor and a boardmember of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.

LINK: TSPNTV.com article

Sharon Runner receives lungs transplant

Sharon Runner

Senator Sharon Runner today became California’s first state legislator with a lung transplant. Runner had been on an organ recipient list for more than a year. When Runner returns to the Senate, she will join Senator Tom Berryhill, who was the first heart-transplant survivor to serve in California’s state legislature.

Although lung transplants are uncommon, there have been a number of officeholders nationally who have received the surgery. Congressman Floyd Spence (R-South Carolina) had a double-lung transplant in May of 1988 and Charlie Norwood (R-Georgia) had a single lung transplant in 2004.

We wish Runner a fast and easy recovery.

LINK: SacBee Article

Primary Candidate Tracking Report (2/14/2012)

There are currently 176 candidates for Congress and 299 candidates for the State Legislature in the 2012 Primary Election who are currently being tracked in preparation for updating the JoinCalifornia database.

Congress (53 Seats; 176 Candidates)
89 Democrats
79 Republicans
3 Libertarians
2 Greens
3 Independents/No Party Preference

State Senate (20 Seats; 47 Candidates)
30 Democrats
14 Republicans
1 Libertarians
2 Independents/No Party Preference

State Assembly (80 Seats; 252 Candidates)
150 Democrats
82 Republicans
1 Green
1 Peace and Freedom
17 Independents/No Party Preference

Of the 299 state legislative candidates, 115 have appeared previously on General Election ballots, 75 are current legislators, and 13 are former legislators.

DYK

Q: How often do Lt. Governors become Governor through the resignation or death of the incumbent?

A: It has happened three times in the last century, following the resignations of Earl Warren (1953) and Hiram Johnson (1917) and the death of James Rolph (1934).

DYK

The only post-Statehood Presidents who don’t have California schools named after them are Andrew Johnson, Rutherford B. Hayes, Chester A. Arthur, Richard M. Nixon, and George H. W. Bush.

DYK

My favorite “California History” books are; The California Legislature by Joseph Allan Beek, California’s Legislature by E. Dotson Wilson and Brian S. Ebbert and A Disorderly House by James R. Mills. The California Blue Book is undoubtedly the best series on our state government.

DYK

Q: Who was the first Governor of California to be born in in the State of California (after it became a state).

A: George C. Pardee (born 1857 in San Francisco)