New Prince William Delegate Breaks 50th District's Mold

Jackson H. Miller wants state police and prison staff to receive immigration and customs enforcement training, which he says would help them expedite deportation proceedings for some illegal immigrants.
Jackson H. Miller wants state police and prison staff to receive immigration and customs enforcement training, which he says would help them expedite deportation proceedings for some illegal immigrants. (By Gerald Martineau -- The Washington Post)
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By Nick Miroff
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, January 8, 2007

When freshman Del. Jackson H. Miller (R) arrives in Richmond this week to fill out the term of the late Harry J. Parrish (R), he will bring with him a different approach for a district that has changed radically in the quarter-century since it last elected a new delegate.

Parrish, who died in March at age 84, won 13 consecutive elections in the state's 50th District -- a swath of Prince William County that also encompasses Manassas and Manassas Park. He is remembered as a moderate who could forge compromise with old-fashioned horse sense and gentlemanly charm.

And although Parrish is still treasured for his small-town sensibility, it is Miller, the new face of the 50th, who might be closer to the hearts of conservatives in the rapidly changing, Republican-leaning district.

"I can't fill his shoes," said Miller, 39, a part-time real estate agent, part-time police officer and former Manassas City Council member. "I'll create my own imprint."

Torrid growth has produced major changes in the 50th, and how the state should relieve the daily traffic jams so familiar to its residents is expected to be the central issue of the General Assembly session that starts Wednesday.

Miller opposes tax increases to fund transportation improvements, echoing the position of Republicans in the House of Delegates that the state should instead borrow the money it needs.

The area's sizzling housing market has also sent property values soaring in recent years, fueling a construction boom that attracted thousands of illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America.

Miller, who grew up in Fairfax County and moved to Manassas with his wife in 2000, didn't like what he saw and was stirred to run for City Council. "My wife and I loved our neighborhood," he said. "But we were dismayed at the number of our peers who were moving out of the city. And it all came back to overcrowding and [English as a Second Language courses] in the public school system."

Pledging to take action on illegal immigration, Miller was elected to the council in 2004, and since then, his efforts have crystallized into two signature issues: overcrowding and immigration enforcement training for police officers. Both draw upon Miller's experiences as a real estate agent and as a patrol officer with the Prince William County Police Department.

"As a real estate agent, you see the decline in housing stocks when there is trash in the street, cars parked on lawns or young men drinking on the sidewalk," he said. "It reduces the quality of life."

Broad-shouldered and built like a linebacker, Miller is not a typical glad-handing, back-slapping politician but a "law-and-order" legislator with a tough, no-nonsense approach that can come off as dour or defensive. But current and former colleagues praise him as a friendly, intelligent stand-up guy who follows through on his campaign pledges.

Miller's short tenure on the council was marked by controversial measures that could tie the town up in costly court battles for years. In 2005, Miller aggressively pushed for an "anti-crowding" ordinance to limit the number of extended family members who could share a dwelling, but the effort backfired.


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