Posted on 01/31/2010 4:48:01 AM PST by Kaslin
Nearly 65 years after his famous grandfather was first asked to run as a Republican candidate for the U.S. House of Representative from that states 12th district, 30-year old Christopher Cox has put his hat in the ring for the seat in New Yorks first district on Long Island. Cox, the son of Edward and Tricia Cox, and grandson of the 37th President of the United States, Richard M. Nixon, is a fiscal conservative who champions limited government and lower taxes.
He also has politics in his blood.
And like his grandfather, who was swept into office as part of a Republican landslide in the 1946 off-year elections in the aftermath of World War II and too many years of New and Fair Democratic deals, he hopes to ride the current wave of discontent and frustration all the way to Capitol Hill. In doing so, he could make a little bit of history, as well. Cox graduated from Princeton and New York University Law School, and served as a John McCain delegate and was the New York State Executive Director of McCain's 2008 Presidential run.
New Yorks first district encompasses Suffolk County, the eastern part of Long Island, with its signature north and south forks and places such as Brookhaven, Smithtown, and the Hamptons. The region is picturesquestill pastoral in part. Richard Nixon loved it out there, even writing his 1968 Republican nomination acceptance speech at Gurneys Inn in Montauk.
Edward Cox, Christophers father, is the current chairman of the New York Republican State Committee. His ancestors were well known in state and local politics, business and jurisprudenceand his own political resume includes experience as an attorney in the Reagan administration.
Of course, those of us old enough to remember recall the images of a beautiful White House wedding back on June 12, 1971, as Ed took Tricia Nixon as his wife.
Should Christopher Cox get the GOP nomination, hell face an uphill race against the Democrat incumbentTim Bishop, who has held the seat since 2003. Interestingly, in spite of the fact that Bishop trounced his opponent in 2008 by 16 points, Barack Obama only garnered 51% of the districts vote in 2008a rare case that year of a local Democrat out-polling the Yes, We Can national juggernaut. So, to many observers, certainly Chris Cox among them, the seat is very much in play.
Its been said that history doesnt repeat itself, but it does rhyme. The year was 1945, and a young Naval officer was transferred that January to a post in Philadelphia after his tour in the South Pacific. He and his wife contemplated their post-war future. Richard and Pat Nixon also awaited the arrival of their first child.
In September of 1945, while still on the east coast, Richard Nixon received a letter from Herman Perry, a Whittier, California banker, inquiring: Would you like to be a candidate for Congress on the Republican ticket in 1946? Jerry Voorhis expects to run. Registration is about fifty-fifty. The Republicans are gaining. Please air mail me your response if you are interested.
The rest, as they say, is historybut none of it was a foregone conclusion.
The seat had been held since 1936 by Jerry Voorhis, a sometimes-New Dealsometimes further left Democrat, who had long been covered by Franklin Roosevelts electoral coattails. He had made a career attacking insurance companies, oil companies and bankseven going so far as to advocate the funneling of all profits from the Federal Reserve System into the Federal Governments general revenues.
Nixon quickly sized up the situation and the offer and replied: I feel very strongly that Jerry Voorhis can be beaten, and Id welcome the opportunity to take a crack at him, promising an aggressive, vigorous campaign.
In fact, Nixon made good on his word and took the fight to Voorhis in 1946. Facing a tough and effective speaker and campaigner, Voorhis was put on the defensive right from the start and never really figured out what to do. During debates with Nixon, one observer said that Voorhis, pauses, breathes heavily, adjusts his glasses nervously with both hands, etc.,this was contrasted with Richard Nixons bold style and manner.
Of course, down through the years, the story of the 1946 campaign, as told by many Nixon detractors, has been that it was dirty and underhanded. But, as one biographer has written:
Politics is a rough occupation, and Voorhis had led a sheltered life. He should have seen Nixon coming and responded more effectively and promptly to his attacks It was not an edifying example of clarity of political debate at its best, but it wasnt the infamous prostitution of the political process that Nixon-haters have sold to a drooling posterity either.
On election night, Nixon basked in the glow of victory after winning 57% of the vote. He would regularly say over the remaining years of his life that every election win was specialbut that first one always remained the most vivid and rewarding. He, Pat and their nine-month old little baby girl, Tricia, were on their way to Washington, where theyd all (joined by little sister, Julie, less than two years later) live for 20 of the next 28 years.
In early 1947, as Richard Nixon began serving in Congress, he made his way to a debate in McKeesport, Pennsylvania. The subject was American labor, particularly the merits of the Taft-Hartley Bill. His opponent was also a former Naval officer, who had also been elected in November of 1946one of the few bright spots for the Democrats during that otherwise discouraging night. His name was John F. Kennedy.
JFK would later concede that Nixon bested him that night. They left the stage, had dinner, and then shared a compartment on a train back to Washington talking into the morning hours about life, politics, the past and the future. In fact, those two young men on a train, Nixon at 34 years of age, Kennedy not yet 30, would figure significantly in the future of the nation. They were young men in a hurrypart of a new generation of leaders.
These days we watch another class of young politicians testing the waters. John F. Kennedy, Jr. died tragically, long before we could ever see him run for office. His big sister, Caroline, made an awkward attempt to get Hillary Clintons vacated Senate seat, but never seemed to catch onor up. Now the torch has been past to an even newer generation as Tricias son, Christopher, runs this year.
It will be very interesting to watchand remember.
The media will smear him with Nixon’s past. Count on it. Hopefully he’s got a thick skin.
Kinda like royalty.
...and the ruling class rolls on.
My impression is that he is far too cherubic looking to be a factor. He lacks the hardness necessary to win
I don’t think we’re too much at risk of a Nixon dynasty.
Anyone half normal who is willing to run as Republican in NY should be welcomed. (I don’t know anything about Chris Cox.)
I don’t know much about Chris Cox but his father, the attorney Edward Cox, is an executive with the National Rife Association. As a life member of the NRA, I will follow Chris’s campaign with great interest.
Tea Party activists who lifted Hoffman in NY 23 are supporting businessman Randy Altschuler:
Team Hoffman Takes On NY-1
http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/dailypolitics/2010/01/team-hoffman-takes-on-ny-1.html
NY GOP bigs are trying to get their guy (Cox) in. Sound familiar?
Bishop Town Halls were a disaster for him this summer:
“Congressman Tim Bishop Encounters Angry Citizens at Townhall Meeting” - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eq5mWkF5zuo
Polls in the district are close - Bishop 47 Altschuler 45
“The media will smear him with Nixon’s past.”
Notice that the media never smear any Kennedy with
Kennedy’s past.
IMHO
I agree with you. Parentage is not a qualification for office in this country. If anything, it should be treated with suspicion.
“Kinda like royalty...and the ruling class rolls on.”
Bingo. F incumbents, and their families too. This is the kind of suckup article that will be written with the next member of the Bush, Rockefeller, Bayh, Quayle, Kennedy, Daley, Gore & Taft firm simply because of their influential friends. Screw the Hamptons set.
And no, it’s not an appeal to poverty—it’s that these families’ track record is every bit as bad for America as the other well-known Family’s.
Regrettably, you are mistaken.
Chris W. Cox is the chief lobbyist of the National Rifle Association since 2002, the executive director of the NRA Institute for Legislative Action.
He is no relation to the men under discussion, Edward Ridley Finch Cox, Nixon's son-in-law, or Christopher Nixon Cox, Nixon's grandson, two NYC lawyers more comfortable with the CFR than the NRA.
I wish you were right.
Thank you for the correction. I’d been misinformed.
BTTT
I went to school with Chris and have known him since he was 7. He’s smart and does have a tough hide. However, I’m not sure that a Manhattanite is the best choice for this district.
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