Bill Burton, son-in-law of Representative Lois Capps and, oh yeah, one of the nation’s most-respected communications strategists, recalls the first time he met Barack Obama.
It was January 2007 when he was ushered in to interview with then-senator Obama for a spot in the future president’s nascent campaign. The 29-year-old son of an African-American father and Polish-American mother, Burton knew of Obama’s biracial parents, so he contrived an ice breaker he imagined segueing into a cozy chat about similar backgrounds.
Jerry Roberts
However, “When I broached the subject of our shared biracial ethnicity,” Burton remembers, “he was more interested in whether I thought we were going to win Iowa.
“I wouldn’t say I exactly nailed the interview, but I did get the job, which counts for something,” he adds.
Burton’s self-effacing account reflects the Midwestern modesty of a guy raised in Buffalo and schooled in Minnesota, and the gumption and resolve of a blue-collar kid whose dad was a union foundry worker and who bootstrapped himself into becoming press secretary of Obama’s historic 2008 campaign and, later, deputy White House spokesperson.
Now 37, Burton is married to Laura Capps, the congressmember’s daughter, and he recently gave up his bicoastal life to live fulltime in Santa Barbara, while establishing West Coast operations for SKDKnickerbocker, a prominent and progressive Washington firm.
Over grilled prawn salad at Café Stella, and in a follow-up email interview, Burton recently discussed how Santa Barbara’s youngest power couple came to be, his entry into California politics, and the buzz and speculation about the future of the House of Capps.
“It’s rare in life that you get to work so hard, with people who are true friends, and feel so good about the outcome,” he says of his Washington years. “But for all that, I’m pretty happy to be living with my family in paradise now.”
Burton and 42-year-old Laura Capps, who also has an extensive national politics and policy résumé, got together in what sounds like a corny rom-com. In 2003, he worked in Iowa for Representative Dick Gephardt, then competing for the Democratic presidential nomination against Senator John Kerry, in whose campaign Capps labored.
“Rivalry soon gave way to friendship, group outings, and a sort-of movie date,” the New York Times reported in a gauzy feature on their 2007 wedding. “One Sunday, he asked her to walk with him around Saylorville Lake near Des Moines. ‘I remember thinking, “He’s going to kiss me,” and he didn’t,’” she said.
When Gephardt withdrew, Burton moved to Kerry’s campaign, working at the desk next to Capps; today their kid is 3.
Among the first California clients Burton landed was ex-Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. “My mission is to have a presence here in California,” he says. “I intend to spend my time fighting alongside candidates and causes I believe in and helping corporations, foundations, and nonprofit enterprises manage crisis and their reputations.”
Whether those candidates include his wife, should her mother quit the House, is the subject of much gossip among the local cognoscenti.
At 77, Rep. Capps knows retiring in 2016 from her 24th Congressional District, where Democrats hold only a 3 percent registration edge, would benefit her party, because turnout is higher in presidential elections, and an open seat would attract heavy spending by national interests on all sides.
Like any son-in-law with a brain, Burton makes only the most suck-up pronouncements when asked about his wife’s mom’s future: “Lois is an awesome mother-in-law and Nana, and the best member of Congress I have ever known. The Central Coast would be well served for her to serve as many terms as she has in her.”
Oy.
As for Laura, Burton at first expresses great annoyance about an errant story in another newspaper reporting rumors that Lois secretly plans to resign before her term is upt so Governor Brown can appoint Laura in her place.
The U.S. Constitution “requires that elections fill any vacancy in a House seat,” he wryly notes. “The rumor was fabricated by people with an agenda who are not particularly sophisticated in things like law.”
We name no names.
Yet Burton doesn’t exactly slam the door with Shermanesque statements when asked directly about a Laura Capps candidacy.
“She has had a pretty amazing run as an activist in Santa Barbara, a fighter for the oceans in Washington, Senator Ted Kennedy’s communications director, President Bill Clinton’s speechwriter, and Oscar Burton’s mom,” he says. “Whatever Laura does, she does amazingly — we’ll just have to wait and see what the next amazing thing is.”
Hmm.
Comments
I...I don't know what to say.
dolphinpod14 (anonymous profile)
March 19, 2015 at 6:59 p.m. (Suggest removal)
All You Can Eat at the Bling Dynasty
loonpt (anonymous profile)
March 19, 2015 at 8:59 p.m. (Suggest removal)
So Bill since you were early in Barry Soetoro's 2008 run, can you explain why you let him get away with his bogus fainting lady stunts, now caught incriminatingly on tape, over and over and over and over again - same stunt, same word, same charlatan fraud? Was it the same bottle of water he tossed to "heal her" or did you have new ones ready at each rally.
I was standing behind him when he pulled this stunt in Santa Barbara and I saw a man cold as ice when he turned his back on the crowd he had just whipped up into a chanting frenzy.
My blood also ran cold when I saw what for all the world looked like a man who hated what he was doing, just to get elected for God knows what ulterior purposes at that time. And SEIU ain't talking. I never looked back from that original, instantaneous gut feeling the guy was a complete fraud and front man for some other agenda.
Lois Capps has been such disappointment locally for someone who has been in office for so long. Longevity has not brought leadership or becoming a power player. Instead she is viewed by her colleagues as one of Congress least effective players, failed miserably on health care which was allegedly her one area of potential influence and shines only when Barry needs a sure vote or to demonstrate a proper snit when his own nose is out of joint.
Hey, welcome to Santa Barbara. This is not "paradise" so I suggest you roll you sleeves up and muck around with the many issues that plague this town, such as too many years of Democrat Central Committee control and city staff union dominance that created well over a half billion dollar city unfunded liability we are not at crunch time to face as our "paradise" crumbles beneath us. Yet every extra dollar now has to plug up the massive city staff pension hole.
Lois Capps additionally has failed veterans and many of them pile up at night in doorways and alleys all over this town. Please do some outreach and get them the federal help they earned. There should not be a single veteran out on the streets in Lois Capps home town.
So cut the campaign hyperbole talk. We know better and we don't like what you are selling. This is not J Street here by the sea. This is down-home and you need to walk the walk if you are going to talk the talk.
And no, we don't want Laura Capps taking over Lois's seat but default or by over-managed election. We badly need fresh air in this town politically and from the other end of the political spectrum. It will be impossible for a carpetbagger to sell more of the same. Decompress a bit. Get to know this town thoroughly, and then come back and try again to say a real hello next time after you are sober.
JarvisJarvis (anonymous profile)
March 19, 2015 at 9:25 p.m. (Suggest removal)
C'mon Jar, get with the program. We have a Bush/Clinton dynasty percolating, so why not a Capps dynasty locally?
billclausen (anonymous profile)
March 19, 2015 at 9:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Well the one benefit of more of the same ineffective congressional leadership for this area is perhaps this keeps the feds out of our hair. Benign neglect has its virtues. Gray, colorless and impotent could be a workable governance model after all.
JarvisJarvis (anonymous profile)
March 19, 2015 at 10:11 p.m. (Suggest removal)
That's all we need, another liberal whiner on our voter registration rolls. Both Burton and Obama can return to wherever they came from!
whatsinsb (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2015 at 7:29 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Power couple? Oh brother. That should get you a ticket to all the local A-List parties along with Cathy Murillo and David Pritchett. Don't look for 93108 on any of your RSVP envelopes.
JarvisJarvis (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2015 at 8:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Nepotism is the new political norm for both parties, a ruling class, if you will, until we get mad as hell and decide to not take it anymore, this quasi-royalty will keep feeding, like the pigs they are, at the public trough. Time to throw the Bums OUT. The beltway is littered with relatives of the elected, both parties, playing us like the fools we have shown ourselves to be.
howgreenwasmyvalley (anonymous profile)
March 21, 2015 at 8:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)
hey, nepotism was always around, look at the scandal in the LA Fire Dept!
DrDan (anonymous profile)
March 21, 2015 at 8:49 p.m. (Suggest removal)
DrDan - As it has been said repeatedly, "Time to throw the Bums OUT." We especially don't need another incompetent, ineffective, lying obama lapdog making decisions on our behalf.
whatsinsb (anonymous profile)
March 23, 2015 at 6:46 a.m. (Suggest removal)
If this is the type of objective reporting Jerry Roberts is known for, no wonder why he was fired from the News-Press.
lousegal (anonymous profile)
March 27, 2015 at 6:45 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The funny thing is former N-P writers still don't get it. They still remain perplexed anyone found bias in their writing. Or that they had any policy obligations to their new owner/boss. Roberts came from the SFChron don't forget, so what can you say.
All of them should be glad they found a compatible home with the Independent. A much better fit for all concerned. Readers know what they are getting and the writers won't have to "compromise" their subjective version of journalistic ethics.
JarvisJarvis (anonymous profile)
March 27, 2015 at 8:45 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I never wonder why Lou Segal has never been elected.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
March 27, 2015 at 10:11 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Lou Segal ran for the SB School Board only once and did surprisingly well for a first time, non-teacher-union backed candidate. One would hope he runs again and gets a few more sharp, clear thinking minds like his on board too.
Volok, we need more keen independents who know to ask the right questions in elected office. Segal is definitely one of them.
JarvisJarvis (anonymous profile)
March 27, 2015 at 12:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)