City Council In 1957 Corman, supported by labor and Democratic votes, was elected to a four-year term represent
Los Angeles City Council District 7, over Kay Bogendorfer, a Republican. In that year, this newly established
San Fernando Valley district was bounded on the south by
Riverside Drive on the east by
Coldwater Canyon and Woodman avenues and on the west generally by
Balboa Boulevard. It had been moved from
Downtown Los Angeles after Councilman
Don A. Allen was elected to the State Assembly. Corman did not finish his term, being elected to Congress in 1960.
Congress on March 9, 1962, to gather first-hand information of the nation's space exploration program. "In with President
Kennedy and out with President
Carter," he would say after he left the
United States Congress. He served in the House of Representatives from 1961 to 1981. Corman served as the chair of the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee from 1976 to 1981. Until
Sean Patrick Maloney’s defeat in
2022, Corman was the most recent chairman of the DCCC to lose re-election. Corman voted in favor of the
24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, the
Medicare program, the
Civil Rights Act of 1968, and alongside fellow Democrat
Martha Griffiths and Republicans
Charles Adams Mosher and
Ogden Reid, was one of the main co-sponsors of the House version of
Ted Kennedy's Health Security Act universal healthcare bill in 1971. In 1980, Corman was narrowly defeated for re-election by Los Angeles School Board member
Bobbi Fiedler.
Later career After his Congressional service, he opened a
lobbying firm, Corman Law Offices, in Washington, D.C., with a partner, William Kirk. Their clients included
MCA Inc.,
American Newspaper Publishers Association and National
Structured Settlements Trade Association. The firm merged with Silverstein & Mullens in January 1990. Corman represented
Texas Air Corporation president
Frank Lorenzo in his contested
takeover of
Continental Airlines. He stopped representing the
National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare because of its "high-pressure fund-raising methods and alarmist pronouncements." In 1985 he was elected president of
Americans United for Separation of Church and State. == Personal life ==