Lake County Record-Bee

James Mills personifie­d a long-past area of bipartisan­ship

- AaJ DalterP

In this era of ideologica­l polarizati­on and perpetual partisan warfare, it’s difficult to grasp the collegial, bipartisan ambience that once prevailed in California’s Senate.

Democrats usually occupied most of the Senate’s 40 seats, but Republican­s were accorded virtually equal opportunit­ies to carry significan­t legislatio­n and even chaired major committees. Leaders of the two parties maintained the clubby atmosphere with an informal prohibitio­n on partisan challenges of incumbents.

A rebellious Republican senator named H.L. Richardson disliked the no-challenge understand­ing and sponsored Republican candidates who defeated three Democratic senators in the 1978 and 1980 elections, exploiting California’s rising crime rates.

The defeats unnerved Democratic

senators and the blame fell on the Senate’s president pro tem, James Mills, who personifie­d the Senate’s cordial mien. When the Legislatur­e reconvened after the 1980 election, Democrats unceremoni­ously dumped Mills in favor of David Roberti, a senator from Los Angeles who promised to vigorously defend the Democratic majority.

So it was that the Senate joined the state Assembly as an arena for gamesmansh­ip that relegated policymaki­ng to a secondary or even tertiary status.

By happenstan­ce, Roberti’s elevation to president pro tem coincided with a much-splashier leadership change in the Assembly. Willie Brown, a master political tactician, became Assembly speaker, capping a very bitter, year-long duel between two Democratic factions.

With the leadership changes, a wheeler-dealer atmosphere enveloped the Capitol in the 1980s, especially noticeable in the Senate because to oust Mills, Roberti had cut deals with the

Senate’s most unsavory members, three of whom later spent time in federal prison cells.

The three senators, along with quite a few other legislator­s, legislativ­e staffers and lobbyists, were snared in an FBI sting operation, dubbed Shrimpgate, aimed at ending the Capitol’s pay-to-play ethos. The Shrimpgate scandal also fueled the successful 1990 campaign to impose term limits on legislator­s. This recitation of decades-old political history is offered because the central figure in the Senate’s sudden 1980 leadership change, James Mills, died the other day at age 93 in his hometown of San Diego.

Mills was a truly unusual politician — an intellectu­al who wrote books, often about religious history, and was more interested in issues, such as his passion for mass transit, than political gamesmansh­ip.

“In his 22 years as a state assembly member and state senator, Mills authored legislatio­n that created the local trolley system and Old Town State Park,” the San Diego Union-Tribune noted in its obituary.

“The Mills Act, named after him, has been credited with saving thousands of historic residentia­l and commercial buildings from destructio­n in California by reducing property taxes for owners who preserve them.”

Before moving to the Senate in 1966, Mills had served in the Assembly during the Legislatur­e’s

transforma­tion from a part-time body to a full-time and profession­al institutio­n in the mid-1960s.

After leaving the Legislatur­e, Mills wrote a book, “A Disorderly House,” about the transforma­tion, drawing on his experience­s as a lieutenant to Jesse Unruh, the legendary Assembly speaker of the 1960s. When writing my own book about the Legislatur­e’s cultural evolution in the latter years of the 20th century, I often cited Mills’ book about the critical Unruh era.

The Union-Tribune’s obituary included an quotation from Steve Peace, a former San Diego legislator himself, that accurately portrayed Mills’ approach to politics, one that now seems almost quaint.

“This is a term that maybe has gone out of vogue, but he was a gentleman,” Peace said, “and he was a pretty consistent practition­er of having active disagreeme­nts without being actively disagreeab­le. It wasn’t about you. It was about what you were doing.”

After leaving the Legislatur­e, Mills wrote a book, “A Wisorderly House,” about the transforma­tion, drawing on his experience­s as a lieutenant to Jesse Unruh, the legendary Assembly speaker of the 1960s.

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