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Del. Abbott Fulfilling Promise to 'Give Back'

GA-Robin-Abbott
Delegate Robin Abbott (Photo courtesy VCU Capital News Service).
RICHMOND – In 1992, Robin Abbott contracted a severe illness and spent several months in a hospital in Richmond.

“I wasn’t expected to live and made some promises if I did, that I would give back to my community,” Abbott recalled.

After she recovered, she returned to college, earned a law degree and last fall ran for political office for the first time. She challenged Phil Hamilton, who had held his legislative seat for more than 20 years – and Abbott won.

Now she is the new delegate representing the 93rd House District, which includes parts of James City County and the City of Newport News.
Abbott prepared for her venture into politics by attending the Thomas C. Sorensen Institute for Political Leadership at the University of Virginia.

“I went to the Sorenson Institute for political candidates, and that was a four-day crash course on campaigning. I learned a great deal,” she said. Afterward, Abbott said, “I had a much better idea and my expectations kind of flowed from the institute. It pretty much ran true to form.”

Hamilton had been running unopposed for more than a decade, and Abbott wanted to give voters a choice. She also wanted to serve the people who had taken care of her through her life-threatening illness in 1992.
Abbott said that ordeal “had a profound impact” on her. She said she was somewhat disappointed in herself for not trying to accomplish her childhood dreams.

Her illness and recovery sparked her return to college. She set out to become an attorney. She attended Thomas Nelson Community College, Christopher Newport University and, finally, the Marshall Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary, earning her law degree in 2001.
For the past several years, Abbott has served as a consumer advocate, representing plaintiffs in consumer matters, in Newport News.

Del. Robin Abbott

Born: Jan. 20, 1953
Occupation: Attorney and consumer rights advocate
Party: Democratic
District: 93rd House District, which includes parts of James City County and the City of Newport News
Contact information: DelRAbbott@house.virginia.gov
Phone number in Richmond: 804-698-1093
Address of district office: 12515 Warwick Blvd., Suite 100, Newport News, VA 23606
Phone number for district office: 757-256-7722

Abbott moved to Virginia from Florida in 1970 when she was 17 years old. She worked for the FBI while taking one class a semester at college to complete general education requirements. Because her husband Gary was in the military, she moved around a lot and didn’t attend college regularly until the mid-1980s.

Abbott served in several leadership positions in school, beginning with the civics club in grade school. She was also president of the girls’ athletics and pep squad. At Thomas Nelson Community College, Abbott was vice president of the Phi Theta Kappa Honors Society, and she started the government club at Christopher Newport University and served as its president for a few years.

Still, it was a big jump from heading a college government club to challenging Hamilton, a member of the powerful House Appropriations Committee. The 93rd House District had never elected a Democrat before, and some people said Abbott didn’t stand a chance.

But Hamilton was dogged by a scandal for taking a state-funded $40,000-a-year job at a teacher training center that he helped create at Old Dominion University. In her campaign, Abbott stressed the need for ethics reform – and that seemed to resonate with voters: She won the election with 54 percent of vote.

Abbott has had to endure sniping from some newspapers and bloggers who supported Hamilton. They latched on to a remark Abbott made in Hampton Roads in support of federal health care reform. “Most of the time, I’m very proud to be an American,” Abbott said at the outdoor event before her election.

The author of the Virginia Conservative blog questioned Abbott’s credentials. That blogger said Abbott’s campaign lacked a focus, “other than her life story, which I heard multiple times in debates, campaign literature, and at rallies.”

Status Report on Abbott's Bills

As the legislative session enters its final week, here is a status report on bills filed by Del. Robin Abbott.
Abbott sponsored four bills concerning ethics reform. The House Rules Committee killed two of the measures: House Bill 813, requiring an annual review of each legislator’s statements of economic interest; and HB 815, prohibiting legislators from accepting gifts of more than $100 except from family members.
Abbott’s HB 814, creating a panel to investigate ethics complaints against lawmakers, was folded into other legislation (HB 655, by Delegate Ward Armstrong, D-Martinsville). HB 655 has passed the House and is now before the Senate.
Abbott also filed HB 816, which says an ethics investigation must be completed even if the target resigns or dies. (The investigation against Delegate Phil Hamilton was dropped after Abbott defeated him in November’s election.) This bill was folded into HB 617, by Delegate Matthew Lohr, R-Harrisonburg. HB 617 has passed the House but is stuck in the Senate Rules Committee.
HB 811, sponsored by Abbott, would clarify legal cases involving zoning appeals boards. It was incorporated into HB 1063, which has been approved by both the House and the Senate.
Abbott also was the chief sponsor of HB 812, prohibiting condominium associations from restricting motor vehicles, and HB 817, involving garnishment of wages. Those bills died in House committees.
Abbott also sponsored HB 1259, requiring the last four digits of criminals’ Social Security numbers to be displayed in court records. Displaying these numbers would prevent confusion during background checks for employment, Abbott said. The House Courts of Justice Committee postponed consideration of that bill until 2011.

Abbott said such remarks do not faze her.

“Does it bother me what’s being said? No,” she said. “I think that the people spoke on Nov. 3. And they were aware of all of the facts, and they made their choice … it’s clear to me that all the people in the 93rd have a seat at the table.”

Abbott plans to run for re-election in 2011, to see if the voters think she did a good job. She learned from her campaign that there is a lot of work to be done – whether in her district or in Richmond.

“There’s a lot of work you can do to make the quality of people’s lives better,” Abbott said. “Wherever I am, I do know that my focus will be in that direction.”

To succeed at the General Assembly, Abbott has learned she must have the ability to laugh at herself.

“There’s a process known as hazing of the new delegates,” Abbott said. “When a new delegate brings forth their first bill is when the hazing occurs. All the delegates will ask the speaker if the new delegate will yield for a question, and they just bombard them with questions.”

Besides deploying humor, Abbott can turn serious and use her personal narrative to make a point.

Abbott has four sons: Bradford, 35; Nicholas, 30; Tony, 28; and Michael, 27. Nicholas was born with cerebral palsy. He learned to walk when he was 5 years old, and he cannot speak.

Abbott spoke about Nicholas and the need to help disabled Virginians in a House floor speech. She was responding to comments by Delegate Robert Marshall, who suggested that disabled children were a punishment for women who aborted a previous pregnancy.

“I was disturbed to learn this week that a member of this body believes that disabled children are somehow punishment or deserved by the parents,” Abbott told her colleagues on Nicholas’ 30th birthday. “I hope this view is not supported by other members in this chamber.”

Comments  

 
0 #1 Guest 2010-03-09 10:11
I keep wondering each time this illness is mentioned why it doesn't have a name and cannot apparently be told exactly what"it" was.
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