Los Angeles Times

Assembly’s chief clerk will retire

After 27 years as chief clerk of the California Assembly, E. Dotson Wilson is set to retire.

- By John Myers

E. Dotson Wilson is “an institutio­n within the institutio­n.”

Tucked away under a small desk at the front of the California Assembly chamber is a book of parliament­ary procedure. Dozens of paperclips and bookmarks peek out from its edges, a quick reference system for any question that might arise in the course of a day’s legislativ­e session.

But the man who meticulous­ly arranged the bookmarks, Chief Clerk E. Dotson Wilson, rarely needs it. After 27 years and thousands of proceeding­s, he has mastered the arcane rules that govern the deliberati­ons and debate of the Assembly.

The distinctio­n is not just the result of repetition, but part of an ethos where the explanatio­n is just as important as the answer.

“I think you’re more effective when you’re not fumbling through books when you give members a response,” Wilson said. “You just want the elected officials to do a good job.”

No one has ever served more consecutiv­e years as chief clerk than Wilson, who had more than a decade of legislativ­e staff experience when he was tapped for the post in 1992. The 64- year- old parliament­arian will retire this month, having perfected the art of impartiali­ty in an era of hyper- partisan California politics.

“He makes us so much better,” said Assemblyma­n Kevin Mullin ( D- South San Francisco), who leads f loor sessions as Assembly speaker pro tempore. “Dotson is an institutio­n within the institutio­n.”

Wilson oversees a staff of 30 people, tasked with keeping track of some 3,000 pieces of legislatio­n every two- year session and as many as a quarter- million votes cast by each Assembly member.

But as chief clerk, he does much more. Wilson is legislativ­e historian, political referee and confidant for the 80 members of the Assembly. Advice is offered in quick whispers on the Assembly f loor or private meetings in his office adjacent to the historic chamber.

And he’s an equal opportunit­y strategist. Wilson freely gives advice on how the rules of the house can be used to advance a lawmaker’s agenda. Sometimes, he offers guidance to opposing sides of a debate. All times, he keeps the informatio­n to himself.

“My role is to make the process as equitable and balanced as possible,” Wilson said. “I’m going to give each one of them the best informatio­n so they do what they need to do.”

That he would be so widely trusted to do the right thing wasn’t clear to some lawmakers at the beginning. Wilson joined the staff of then- Assembly Speaker Willie Brown out of law school in 1979, and was his top aide when the powerful Democrat nominated him to be chief clerk. No Republican members voted for him to hold the job, many assuming he would be under the thumb of Brown.

Wilson, the f irst African American to hold the job of chief clerk, set out to change people’s minds from the beginning.

“Within three months of taking the job, I went and met with every single member,” he said. “Some of the members who voted against me, they were grilling me, asking me questions. And I was OK with that.”

When the Assembly voted on Wilson’s nomination for a full two- year session the following December, the decision was unanimous. It has remained so ever since.

But an early moment in his career threatened to upend his efforts at staying out of the political fray — one of the most closely watched events in the history of the California Legislatur­e, in which Wilson played a decisive role.

The national surge of Republican victories in the 1994 midterm election carried GOP candidates for the Assembly into winning a single- seat majority in the lower house for the first time in a quarter- century. It would mean the removal of Brown as speaker once new members cast their votes in the ceremonial f irst f loor session that December. But Republican­s were outmaneuve­red by Brown, who persuaded one Republican legislator to back him as speaker, extending his tenure. That left the Assembly in a 40- 40 partisan split.

Democrats insisted Richard Mountjoy, a Republican assemblyma­n who had won in a special state Senate election that November, shouldn’t be allowed to cast a vote in the Assembly for speaker if he was going to resign his seat in the house days later.

“I had to make the ruling that anyone looking at it objectivel­y would have made,” Wilson said.

Wilson refused to reject the Republican’s credential­s. A subsequent vote for speaker ended in a tie. Brown was able to work behind the scenes to keep partial control of the Assembly the following winter and spring, while Republican­s mounted recall elections against those who had defected. But Brown’s days as speaker were over.

“That was a challengin­g moment,” said former Assembly Speaker Curt Pringle, the Republican who ultimately led the house in the aftermath of the 1994 election, in a ceremony honoring Wilson last month. “What we did was we saw the integrity and commitment of the man.”

Few, if any, have questioned Wilson’s parliament­ary accuracy in the years that followed. On Wednesday, during a tense Assembly debate over high- profile legislatio­n to limit the use of independen­t contractor­s in California, Wilson rose from his chair as Assemblyma­n James Gallagher ( R- Nicolaus) demanded to amend the bill.

Wilson reminded Assemblywo­man Rebecca BauerKahan ( D- Orinda), the assistant speaker pro tempore, that an Assembly bill can’t be amended when it returns from the Senate for a final vote of concurrenc­e.

Gallagher’s effort to challenge the ruling was rejected on a party- line vote. Assembly members on both sides then politely returned to their work.

Politics was not Wilson’s aspiration, even though a close family friend was Byron Rumford — a legendary state lawmaker who championed housing rights for black California­ns in the 1950s and ’ 60s. The Wilson family had first- hand experience with the overt racism of the era’s real estate practices, f inding it impossible to buy the home they wanted from a white property owner.

“So they had a Caucasian friend they went to and they got her to purchase the house,” Wilson said of his parents. That friend then signed over the deed to his family.

Wilson’s clerkship has spanned three distinct eras in the history of the Legislatur­e: the period before the arrival of term limits in 1990, the dramatic change those restrictiv­e rules made on the process of governing and the era that began when voters loosened the limits in 2012, balancing the need for competitiv­e elections with experience­d legislatin­g.

A respect for rules and precedent has endeared Wilson to two generation­s of legislator­s. In a ceremony last month attended by current and former Assembly members, Assemblyma­n Mike Gipson ( D- Carson) recounted how Wilson admonished him on his first day on the job over his choice of footwear: Gipson had chosen red sneakers to go with his suit.

“Dotson came to me and said, ‘ Mr. Gipson, that is not appropriat­e for this f loor,’ ” he said to laughter during the ceremony. “I took that admonishme­nt because you cared. You value this institutio­n ... and I honor that.”

 ?? Robert Gourley Los Angeles Times ?? NO ONE has served more consecutiv­e years as chief clerk of the Assembly than E. Dotson Wilson. In his post, he has been a referee and a confidant for lawmakers.
Robert Gourley Los Angeles Times NO ONE has served more consecutiv­e years as chief clerk of the Assembly than E. Dotson Wilson. In his post, he has been a referee and a confidant for lawmakers.

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