Tag Archives: Attorney General

Reducing Truancy Makes Us Safer

Everyday, schools in California and across the nation are unable to educate far too many of our students for one simple reason: our youngest students aren’t in class. Some estimates say that approximately one million California elementary school students were truant during the 2012-13 school year.(1)

This week, my office released a major report summarizing the risks truancy poses, and presents several recommendations for what we can do to address these issues. Click here to read the report.

Truancy makes a profound difference in the safety of our communities. When our students drop out or fail to attend school, we spend additional billions in incarceration and lose productivity and tax revenues. One prominent study showed that for some chronically truant students, just one additional school day missed could reduce their chance of graduating by up to 7%.(2) Children who lack that educational foundation are more likely to end up at risk of becoming involved in crime, both as victims and as offenders.

I have long focused on combating truancy because I see a direct connection between public education and public safety. To really make the changes we need, all adults, – districts, law enforcement, schools, parents, communities – are accountable to find solutions. Only by working together can we find the solutions that our students need.

Click here to read my op-ed with Secretary of Education Arne Duncan in the Los Angeles Times, highlighting some of the ways that we can work together to fight truancy.(3)

Together, we can provide brighter futures for our children and safer communities for all Californians.

Kamala D. Harris is the Attorney General of California. If you know anybody that would like to sign up for our email list, please tell them to click here to sign up to get updates and future volunteer opportunities: tinyurl.com/KDHSignup

FTC’s Settlement With Google Fails To End Key Abuse

FTC-Google

Department of Justice, State Attorneys General Must Press To End Search Bias

The Federal Trade Commission’s settlement with Google fails to end its most anticompetitive practice, Consumer Watchdog said today and the public interest group called on the Department of Justice and state attorneys general to press forward to end the Internet giant’s monopolistic behavior in search results.

“Google clearly skews search results to favor its own products and services while portraying the results as unbiased. That undermines competition and hurts consumers,” said John M. Simpson, director of the group’s Privacy Project. “The FTC rolled over for Google.  They’ve accepted Google executives’ promises that they will change two practices without even requiring a consent agreement, but Google has a track record of broken promises.  Don’t forget, this fall the FTC fined Google $22.5 million for violating its most recent consent agreement. Why would the FTC take Google at its word?”

The new Assistant Attorney General for the Department of Justice Antitrust Division, William J. Baer, should make Google’s abuse of search a top priority, Consumer Watchdog said.

The FTC’s settlement does require a consent agreement regarding so-called Standards Essential Patents held by Google’s Motorola subsidiary.  Google is now required to license these patents to any company on “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory” terms – known as FRAND terms.

“This will help ensure competition in the manufacture of smartphones and tablets,” said Simpson, “but that was never the heart of the issue. Biased search and Google’s favoring its own properties do real consumer harm. Google is the gateway to the Internet for most people. When Google rigs the game, we all suffer. They need to be stopped.”

Consumer Watchdog expressed concern that FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz, who is expected to step down from the commission soon, may have rushed to finish the investigation so it could be concluded under his chairmanship.

The nonpartisan, nonprofit public interest group noted that Google’s monopolistic business practices are under investigation by a number of state attorneys general including Texas, California, New York and Ohio. European Union competition officials are also investigating Google.

You Really Can’t Trust Mercury

The Mercury Insurance initiative’s lawsuit to stop the Attorney General and us opponents from telling the truth about Proposition 33 – how it will raise auto insurance rates – got tossed out of Sacramento Superior Court last Thursday. The Mercury campaign asked the court to rewrite the Official Ballot Pamphlet, which is sent to every voter’s home, so it would contain only Mercury’s false claim that everyone will get “discounts” if Proposition 33 passes.  After an hour-long argument, the judge said no.

But the ink was hardly dry on Thursday’s court order when Mercury told yet another lie – this time about what we said in court.

In a press release issued Friday morning, Mercury said: “CONSUMER WATCHDOG ARGUES IN COURT THAT THE TRUTH IS ELASTIC.”

We never said that, of course. (The release also called us “corporate lawyers,” which the corporations we take on would no doubt find bewildering.)

I guess we shouldn’t be surprised that George Joseph, the multi-billionaire Chairman of Mercury Insurance who has contributed 99.1% of the $8.29 million received by Proposition 33, can’t stop lying about his proposition and the consumer, citizen, senior and patient’s organizations who vehemently oppose it.  After all, according to the California Department of Insurance:


“Mercury [has a] lengthy history of serious misconduct, and its attitude – contempt towards and/or abuse of its customers, the Commissioner, its competition, and the Superior Court….Among Department staff, consumer attorneys, and consumer victims of its bad faith, Mercury has a deserved reputation for abusing its customers and intentionally violating the law with arrogance and indifference….”

Mercury’s dirty propaganda campaign didn’t work back in 2010, when the company mounted a nearly identical proposition to deregulate auto insurance, also sued the Attorney General and us, spent $16 million, and still lost. Joseph and the pigs at the Mercury trough (an assortment of PR hacks, phony non-profit groups, insurance agents and bought-and-paid-for politicians) think the voters are stupid. But they are wrong. California voters can smell a dirty, self-serving initiative a mile away.

The Mercury Insurance campaign might have gotten away with its Friday fabrication, except we were able to catch them red-handed.

Hours before Thursday’s hearing, I found out that Joseph’s lawyers had not requested a court reporter be there to take down everything that was said in court. (Thanks to severe budget cuts, state courts can no longer afford to pay for court reporters – the parties in a lawsuit have to pay.) It seemed odd that this mega-billionaire would not spring for someone to record the truth… and then I realized that the Mercury campaign might not want a transcript of what happened in court, so they could lie about it later.

So I pulled out my checkbook, went to a special window at the Sacramento Superior Court, and paid the $30 for the court reporter myself.

Good thing, as it turns out.

The court reporter’s transcript confirms that our lawyer, the highly respected James Harrison of Remcho, Johansen & Purcell, never uttered what Mercury quoted him as saying. Rather, citing the First Amendment and many legal decisions, he urged the court to reject Mercury’s attack on our conclusion that Proposition 33 will “deregulate” auto insurance premiums. Here are his words:

“Your Honor, as the Court noted, deregulation is an elastic and ideological concept. In the Huntington Beach case, for example, the Court refused to make a change to the argument that the measure requires AES, the electricity company, to pay its fair share. And the reason that the Court refused to intervene was that the term ‘fair share’ is a very elastic and ideological concept. What you understand to be a fair share might not be what I understand. The same is true of deregulation, your Honor. What I understand to be deregulation may have a very different meaning to someone else. It’s a very elastic concept.”

Mercury’s legal shenanigans wasted a lot of taxpayer money at a time when California courts are struggling to deliver justice fairly and efficiently despite a gaping hole that the Legislature has inflicted on the judicial branch budget. (Late Friday, Joseph’s lawyers filed an appeal, hoping to overturn the Superior Court’s decision.  It was summarily denied.)

Forcing the Attorney General to defend in court her summary of Proposition 33, which she is required by law to prepare for the ballot, was also an unnecessary drain on that law enforcement agency’s scarce resources. (Joseph was also furthering a strategy recently adopted by Wall Street and other corporate interests: Attacking Attorney General Kamala Harris in an attempt to intimidate and undermine her.)

The Mercury campaign’s public relations minions don’t care about the cost to taxpayers. To them, filing a lawsuit in court is just another gambit in their greed-driven, deceptive campaign to get the voters to pass a law allowing companies like Mercury Insurance to raise your auto insurance rates and make more money.

_______________________

Posted by Harvey Rosenfield, Founder of Consumer Watchdog and Author of California Proposition 103, the landmark Auto Insurance Regulation law in California.

Underwater Mortgages and 1 Million Jobs

Underwater Mortgages and 1 Million Jobs
Note: This is modified from a blog originally posted at http://www.newbottomline.com/underwater_mortgages_and_1_million_jobs   

Today, ACCE and the New Bottom Line released a report detailing a solution to the foreclosure crisis. “The Win-Win Solution: How Fixing The Housing Crisis Will Create 1 Million Jobs” details how we can fix the housing crisis and revitalize our communities and economy if the banks were to lower the principal balance on all underwater mortgages to current market value.  

One in five Americans owe more on their mortgage than their home is actually worth.  Collectively, underwater homeowners will have to pay down $709 billion in principal before they can start building equity in their homes.  Every effort to reboot the housing market to date has failed because it has not done the most essential thing: reduce the massive debt load carried by underwater homeowners.

The report reveals that if the banks stepped up and provided principal reduction on all underwater mortgages to current market value, we could:

•    Create 1 million jobs every year — This includes over 300,000 jobs in California, the state hit hardest by the financial crisis.  
•    Pump over $70 billion per year back into communities– This includes $12 billion dollars per year in Florida, the second of the two states hit hardest by the foreclosure crisis.
•    Save the average family over $500 per month on mortgage payment
•    Solve the foreclosure crisis once and for all

“Homeowners across the nation are struggling to pay their boom-era mortgages with their recession-era salaries and the economy is suffering for it,” notes the report. “Writing down the principals and interest rates on all underwater mortgages to market value would serve as the second stimulus that America so desperately needs, only without added costs to taxpayers.”

As the banks have been able to profit from millions of people losing their homes,”The Win/Win Solution” demonstrates that the banks can afford to execute this plan.  Last year, the nation’s top six banks paid out more than twice the cost of the plan ($71 billion per year) in bonuses and compensation alone ($146 billion in 2010).  Currently, the nation’s banks are sitting on a historically high level of cash reserves of $1.64 trillion.

This is an opportunity for California Attorney General Kamala Harris to step up and be a hero to Californians.  Standing up to Wall Street Banks is good policy and good politics.To help us prioritize our communities and our families and start rebuilding a working economy, join our call to Attorney General Harris to make principal reduction on underwater mortgages a key part of any foreclosure settlement with banks.

For more information on ACCE and this campaign, visit www.calorganize.org

California Race Chart 2010 (Part 1 of 3: Statewide Races)

Cross-posted at Swing State Project, Daily Kos, and Democracy for California.

Here I will cover the eight constitutional offices, three State Supreme Court justice confirmations, and nine ballot measures. In the second diary, I will cover the U.S. Senate race and the House races, and in the third the state legislature. I will also combine my regular registration updates within the diaries.

Speaking of registration updates, as you will see in the layout of the statewide registration numbers, Democrats are more pumped up here, adding almost half a million voters to their rolls since 2008. The Republicans in comparison added just 13,000 in the same amount of time. So if you are looking for a lethargic Democratic base, look elsewhere because you won’t find it here!

More info can be found at the 2010 Race Tracker.

Here is the most recent registration data: http://www.sos.ca.gov/election…

Here is the list of candidates that will appear on the ballot: http://www.sos.ca.gov/election…

Statewide Layout

Democrats: 7,531,986 (44.32%)

Republicans: 5,257,669 (30.94%)

Decline to State: 3,427,395 (20.17%)

Others: 776,025 (4.56%)

Key: I will list the incumbent first, in boldface (in the case of open seats, the incumbent party first without boldface), and all minor parties after the two major parties.

D: Democratic

R: Republican

L: Libertarian

G: Green

AI: American Independent

PF: Peace and Freedom

NP: Nonpartisan

SW: Socialist Workers

Race Ratings

Toss-up: Margin by less than 5%

Lean: Margin by 5-10%

Likely: Margin by 10-15%

Strong: Margin by 15-20%

Solid: Margin by more than 20%

Governor: Ex-eBay CEO Meg Whitman (R) vs. Attorney General Jerry Brown (D), Laura Wells (G), Dale Ogden (L), Chelene Nightingale (AI), Carlos Alvarez (PF), and Lea Sherman (SW-W/I)

Profile: I see no way Whitman can win. Running as an outsider when the current governor, who also ran as an outsider, is leaving office with 20% approval ratings, is a surefire losing strategy. And pissing voters off by running ads nonstop and spending nine-figure sums of money while they’re forced to cut back is not going to help at all. Brown is leading by example, running on a shoestring budget and calling for everyone to sacrifice, meaning no sacred cows. Polls may not yet show it, but in my opinion I think Whitman is finished. In fact, I’ll be very surprised if she even manages to make it a low-teen loss.

Outlook: Likely to Strong Brown (D pickup)

Lieutenant Governor: Interim Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado (R) vs. S.F. Mayor Gavin Newsom (D), Jimi Castillo (G), Pamela Brown (L), Jim King (AI), and C.T. Weber (PF)

Profile: Here we have quasi-incumbent Abel Maldonado, appointed after John Garamendi went to Congress, running to be elected in his own right against Newsom. While Maldonado is moderate for a Republican (though that is not saying much), being closely associated with Arnold is going to be a huge liability, which I do not think he will overcome.

Outlook: Lean Newsom (D pickup)

Attorney General: S.F. DA Kamala Harris (D) vs. L.A. DA Steve Cooley (R), Peter Allen (G), Timothy Hannan (L), Dianne Beall Templin (AI), and Robert J. Evans (PF)

Profile: This is the only statewide race in California I am worried about, and where my theory (that California has just become too Democratic for even a moderate Republican to win barring unusual circumstances) will be put to the test. Cooley is not that bad for a Republican, having had the audacity to stand against popular opinion of issues such as three strikes and Jessica’s Law, though he is also against dispensaries for medical marijuana. Harris is a rising star in Democratic circles, and is a more formidable opponent than any of Cooley’s challengers in the past. The wild card is the big enchilada of L.A. County, where Harris’ name ID is low and she’d need to win by 18-20% to win statewide. I am of course pulling for Harris because I want our bench to stay nice and full for the inevitable retirements of DiFi probably in 2012, Boxer probably in 2016, and for the open governorship in 2014 or 2018; and also because she has courageously stood up to Prop 8, while Cooley pledges to defend it in court.

Outlook: Toss-Up

Secretary of State: SoS Debra Bowen (D) vs. businessman Damon Dunn (R), Ann Menasche (G), Christina Tobin (L), Merton D. Short (AI), and Marylou Cabral (PF)

Profile: Bowen is a lock for reelection.

Outlook: Solid Bowen

Treasurer: Treasurer Bill Lockyer (D) vs. State Senator Mimi Walters (R), Kit Crittenden (G), Edward Teyssier (L), Robert Lauten (AI), and Debra Reiger (PF)

Profile: Lockyer is a lock for reelection.

Outlook: Solid Lockyer

Controller: Controller John Chiang (D) vs. State Senator Tony Strickland (R), Ross Frankel (G), Andy Favor (L), Lawrence Beliz (AI), and Karen Martinez (PF)

Profile: A rematch from 2006, only with Democrats more pumped up, Chiang will win by a wider margin this time around.

Outlook: Strong to Solid Chiang

Insurance Commissioner: State Assemblyman Mike Villines (R) vs. State Assemblyman Dave Jones (D), William Balderston (G), Richard Bronstein (L), Clay Pedersen (AI), and Dina Padilla (PF)

Profile: In California, when a non-damaged Democrat is up against a generic Republican, the Democrat wins. Take it to the bank.

Outlook: Likely to Strong Jones (D pickup)

Superintendent of Public Instruction: Retired Superintendent Larry Aceves (NP) vs. State Assemblyman Tom Torlakson (NP)

Profile: Torlakson voted against Race to the Top and believes parents, teachers, students, and communities alike all need to come together to improve our schools, while Aceves believes that the problem with public schools is the teachers and hedge funds and billionaires should have more control over K-12 education. This will be a close one.

Outlook: Toss-Up

State Supreme Court confirmation – Tani Cantil-Sakauye: Voters are being asked whether to confirm Tani Cantil-Sakauye, Arnold’s pick to replace Chief Justice Ron George. She is seen as uncontroversial, but likely to share Arnold’s views on corporate power.

Outlook: Lean Confirm

State Supreme Court retention – Ming Chin: Chin was in the minority that voted to uphold the state’s ban on marriage equality in 2008, and is one of the most right-wing justices on the state Supreme Court. I want to see him go, but it doesn’t look likely.

Outlook: Likely Retention

State Supreme Court retention – Carlos Moreno: Moreno was the only justice who courageously voted to overturn Prop 8 at the State Supreme Court last year, and has been a reliable vote for equality and so should be voted to be retained.

Outlook: Likely Retention

Ballot Measures: Nine measures will be on the California ballot this fall. Information can be found here: http://www.smartvoter.org/2010… Field has released polls on 19, 23, and 25. http://www.field.com/fieldpoll…

Prop. 19 (Marijuana): If passed, this proposition would legalize the possession and growing of marijuana for personal use of adults 21 years and older, and allow state and local governments to regulate and tax related commercial activities. This proposition winning may make Washington reexamine its own policy towards marijuana, since what happens in California often makes it way to the other side of the country. Polls have shown Yes leading by single digits, so I’ll call 19 a passing proposition.

My recommendation: YES!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Lean Pass

Prop. 20 (Redistricting Congressional Districts): This proposition would amend the state Constitution be amended to have the Citizens Redistricting Commission (prop 11 from 2008) redistrict for the U.S. House of Representatives seats. This initiative calls for each district being composed of people of the same income level and people with the same work opportunities, which to me feels like a backdoor to the old bygone Jim Crow ways. And passing this prop while giving free passes to Republican-controlled legislatures in Texas and Florida to gerrymander the hell out of those states is likely to put California at a disadvantage when competing for federal dollars. In addition, there is no way this commission can be held accountable.

My recommendation: NO!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-up/Lean Fail

Prop. 21 (Vehicle License Surcharge): Establishes an $18 annual vehicle license surcharge to provide funds for maintaining the state parks and wildlife programs, and grants surcharged vehicles free admission to the state parks. Our cash-starved state parks could use the extra funds. In addition, the governor can’t take funds from this coffer when other coffers are low. The tough economy may dampen the chances of this prop passing, though.

My recommendation: YES!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Prop. 22 (Local Government Funds): Prohibits the state from taking funds used for local government services. It is well-intentioned but flawed. The cities and counties would get an immediate payment of over $1 billion, forcing further cuts to vital public services.

My recommendation: NO!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up/Lean Fail

Prop. 23 (Suspension of AB 32): Backed by Texas oil interests, this prop would suspend AB 32 until unemployment dropped to an unrealistic 5.5% for a whole year and hurt the state’s fledgling green jobs industry, doing the exact opposite of what its backers claim: it would actually kill more jobs than create more jobs. (Here in “business-friendly” Texas, the economic situation is also pretty bad, with unemployment here at its highest level since the late ’80s [and me being unable to find a job to save my life] and an $18 billion deficit for the 2011 budget session, which will make 2003 look like the good old days.) Polls have shown a low double-digit lead for the No side.

My recommendation: NO! NO! NO!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Likely Fail

Prop. 24 (Corporate Loopholes): A long-overdue measure that would close corporate tax loopholes, reducing the budget deficit by $2 billion.

My recommendation: YES!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Prop. 25 (Majority Vote on Budget): Another very long-overdue measure that eliminates the ridiculous 2/3rds rule to pass a budget in the state legislature. This prop is passing by double-digits in the polls.

My recommendation: YES! YES! YES!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Likely Pass

Prop. 26 (Two-Thirds Vote on Fees): Would require two-thirds vote approval for the imposition of certain state and local fees, including those on businesses that adversely impact the local community and environment. The last thing we need is higher vote thresholds.

My recommendation: NO! NO! NO!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Prop. 27 (Redistricting Commission): This proposition eliminates the Citizens Redistricting Commission from Prop 11, which barely passed, suggesting some voters have some doubts about its effectiveness. This commission also gives Republicans much more power than their current share of the population.

My recommendation: YES!

10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

What Every Woman Needs to Know About the Office of State Attorney General

Until recently there were a lot of things I didn’t know about the role of the state Attorney General (AG).  In particular I had no idea how much control that office has over my uterus. 

For example, the AG plays a key part in framing and enforcing laws concerning reproductive rights, including responsibility for enforcing the F.A.C.E (Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances) Act, for privacy protection and for bringing or not bringing lawsuits against those involved with reproductive rights. 

 Think Phil Kline, past AG of Kansas, who obtained 90 client records from abortion provider Dr. Tiller-the doctor who was later gunned down and killed in his church by an anti-abortionist-before charging Dr. Tiller with 30 misdemeanor counts.  Several of these patient files were later leaked to Bill O’Reilly. 

 Or the Oklahoma law, defended by Attorney General Drew Edmonson, forcing women to have ultrasounds (an exam not normally done that early in a pregnancy) explained to them in great detail before they are allowed to have an abortion.  

  In short, the Attorney General has the power to harass (or protect) abortion providers, enact laws forcing us to have procedures we may not want and to invade (or protect) our privacy.  

  Amy Everitt, State  Director of NARAL Pro-Choice California was kind enough to explain to me  that, “The AG is the single most important office for women’s privacy  and reproductive health.”

 I also learned from Everitt that the  Attorney General is responsible for hospital mergers, a critical issue  for hospital based reproductive rights.  If religion-based hospitals  like the ever-growing Catholic Healthcare West (CHW) are allowed to  merge or take over local hospitals, they can refuse to provide  reproductive health care services-including emergency contraception.

 Imagine being raped and then being denied emergency contraception in the hospital.  

 Or imagine you, or if you are a  man-your wife-, your sister or your daughter is rushed to the nearest  hospital for a life threatening pregnancy complication and refused  options based on religious doctrine.  

 These seemingly outrageous scenarios  could easily become the norm if we don’t have an AG who is pro-choice or  even if we have an AG who just doesn’t care about women’s issues.

 The fact that religious based  hospitals (or even religious doctors) can remove hospital based  reproductive health from women’s lives is a real threat, one that that  the AG’s office is directly responsible for.  

 Right now in California 41% of  counties have no abortion provider, while 91% have deceptively named,  non-medical, pro-life Crisis Pregnancy Centers.

 In learning all this shocking  information I became very curious about the upcoming race for California  Attorney General and I emailed both candidates – Democrat Kamala Harris  and Republican Steve Cooley some questions about their stance on these  key issues.  (Feel free to use my letter and email your AG if you live  outside of CA)

 I posted Kamala Harris’ responses in bold below.  Steve Cooley however, was less responsive. 

 I emailed his office the letter, then  I called his campaign office twice to make sure they received it. Both  times no one answered and both times I left voicemails.  I emailed again  several days later. 

 Finally, after 4 days of no response I  left yet another message, this time casually mentioning that I’m  married to Phil Bronstein, Editor-at-large for Hearst newspapers,  including the San Francisco Chronicle. 

 Within a half hour I had a missed  call from Steve Cooley’s office.  When I called back a Cooley  representative picked up immediately and told me Cooley’s office would  “get back to me by tonight.” And that they were a small office and the  email must have, “slipped through.”

  That was Friday morning.  Still no word.  Does Cooley just not care or is his office just that disorganized? 

 Given his silence, it’s hard for me to believe these issues are important to him.

 When NARAL called and wrote to him  about his stance on abortion they also could not get a response from  Cooley, according to a recent NARAL press release that announced the  group’s endorsement of Harris. 

 Considering that it’s Harris – not  Cooley — who has steadfastly supported a woman’s right to choose, and  women’s rights in general, as do most Californians, why is she the  underdog in the latest poll in a state where 31 percent of registered  voters are Republicans and 45 percent are Democrats?

 Especially since you can’t even find Cooley’s stance on these issues (or many others including the environment) on his website.

I was able to find out that Cooley opposes  the federal health care reform, and that the individual states’ AGs will  have the power to either protect or limit women’s rights with the  handling of these reforms.

 On Kamala Harris’ website you can  easily find her position and historical record on these key issues and  others like environmental preservation, violent crime, financial fraud,  and sex offenses.   If you think Kamala is not tough on crime than you  need to read her statistics on violent crime.   She has increased the felony conviction rate, secured an 85%  conviction rate for homicides, took more gun cases to trial and doubled  the conviction rate in felony gun trials, from 43% in 2003 to 90% in  2006 to name a few.

 We need to get it together come  November or we’ll only have ourselves to blame when a new Attorney  General turns his back on us, or worse, takes away our freedom, privacy  and choices.  

 This means not only getting out to  vote for Kamala, but also spreading the word. Facebook and twitter this  info and please pass this link to 10 people and urge them to pass it to  10 more.  

http://christinebronstein.com/

Letter to Kamala Harris’ office:

 I’m Christine Bronstein, the founder of A Band of Wives (www.abandofwives.com),  a non-partisan social network for women with nearly 1200 members, many  of whom are influential businesswomen and highly successful  entrepreneurs. The vast majority of members are California voters. 

 We’re working to highlight  candidates in the upcoming election who are pursuing offices with a  significant influence on issues important to women.  

I was hopeful that I could get your position  on a few of the issues that you’d be responsible for if you were  elected Attorney General of California.  

  Your responses will be  published on our site for all our members to read and may be picked up  by our members and others who have extensive social networking web  presences.  

 The AG plays a key part in  framing and enforcing laws concerning abortion, including enforcing the  F.A.C.E (Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances) Act and for bringing or  not bringing lawsuits against those involved with abortion and other  reproductive services. As Attorney General, would you work towards  increasing women’s access to those services, limiting it, or continuing  the status quo? 

  Kamala  Harris has always supported and will always support a woman’s right to  choose.    As San Francisco District Attorney she has campaigned against  the repeated attempts to restrict access to abortion here in  California.  She served as the No on Prop 73 campaign chair in San  Francisco, and also campaigned aggressively against Props 85 and 4, all  of which would have limited a woman’s right to choose. 

As AG, Kamala will make choice a priority in her administration.    

 A campaign of violence, intimidation, and harassment continues to be waged against reproductive health care providers, their patients, and their families.  The California Freedom of Access to Clinic and Church Entrances (FACE) Act, protects reproductive health care staff, volunteers, and our clients from physical threats and intimidation and prohibits anyone from damaging or destroying property.   Kamala support s the FACE Act, and believes that the law is only effective when it is fully enforced. She would also believes law enforcement should be trained in the law to ensure that the FACE Act is enforced, regardless of one’s views on abortion.  Kamala would also ensure that socioeconomic status or geographic location should not preclude women from equal access to abortion services.  And would oppose any bills that would restrict a woman’s access to a safe, legal abortion.

 

  

The AG also  plays a key role in assuring women have confidential health services.  What is your stance on maintaining confidentiality for adult women who  seek abortions or other reproductive services? What about minors? 

 

As a career prosecutor, Kamala has  seen firsthand horrific cases involving child sexual assault and she  believes that confidential access is a matter of safety.  Teenagers, as  well as adults, should have confidential access to reproductive health  services, including family planning, disease prevention and abortion.   

  

What is your  stance on the federal health care reform plan passed by Congress?  What health care reform you would support, if any? 

Through the historic health care  reform law passed this year, our nation made major progress in reducing  the number of uninsured Americans.  This is an accomplished to be lauded  and as California’s AG, Kamala Harris would support the implementation  of the federal health care reform law to ensure more Californians had  access to healthcare. 

 

As the individual states’ AGs will have the  power to either protect or limit women’s access to abortion and other  reproductive services with the handling of these reforms (should they  take place), what are your intentions — increasing women’s access to  those services, limiting it, or continuing the status quo?

 As California’s AG,  Kamala would ensure women in our state had access to safe reproductive  healthcare services.   She would protect the reforms provided to women  under the Federal healthcare law for increased access to reproductive  healthcare services.  

 

 The AG is also responsible  for hospital mergers. With the growing numbers of faith-affiliated  hospitals like Catholic Healthcare West (CHW), it appears there is an  opportunity for these groups to merge or take over local hospitals,  therefore changing the access women or minors might have to abortion or  other reproductive services. In fact, some of these faith-affiliated  hospitals have stated that limiting access to these services is a  specific part of their business agenda.  Is that aspect of their agenda  something you would support?  

 

 As community  hospitals merge with religiously affiliated hospitals, many women are  faced with reduced access to reproductive health care services because  the religiously affiliated hospitals refuse to provide those services  saying they go against church doctrine.  In many areas, lack of access  to reproductive health services is acute in areas where the only  hospital has a religious affiliation.    Kamala would support requiring  all health facilities that accept public funds to provide and/or refer  for comprehensive reproductive health care services.  Furthermore, the  Attorney General can use the antitrust powers of her office to ensure  that when hospital mergers are proposed, access to reproductive care is  not eliminated.

 

 

Would you make a concerted effort to ensure  that hospital mergers would not limit women’s access to hospital  based reproductive rights, including emergency contraception?  If so,  how?

 All women should have  emergency contraception available to them, especially rape survivors  being treated at hospital emergency rooms.  California lawmakers  approved legislation, which would ensure timely access all prescriptions  including Emergency Contraception.  But sadly, pharmacists have refused  women who have sought access to EC and ER staff based on the health  professional’s personal beliefs despite state law that protects access  to EC.  As Attorney General, Kamala would uphold and enforce  California’s laws ensuring timely access to EC.  As California’s  Attorney General, Kamala would work with Planned Parenthood,  NARALPro-Choice California and other providers of contraceptive services  to use both the statutory and bully pulpit powers of the AG’s office to  ensure that women seeking EC access are not denied based on a  provider’s personal beliefs. 

 

 

What are some of your past accomplishments in the areas of women’s rights, protections and privacy?

  As District Attorney, Kamala has sponsored and spearheaded the following significant reforms in California:

 

·      California’s landmark law against human trafficking and comprehensive protections for its victims (AB 22, 2005).

 

·      Wrote  San Francisco ’s law banning discriminatory evictions of domestic  violence victims, which is now statewide legislation (SB 782, 2009).

 

·      New state services and support for immigrant women who report their abusers to law enforcement (SB 1569, 2006).

 

·      State funding for California children who witness violent crime to receive mental health services (AB 2809, 2008).

 

·      Stricter criminal penalties for adults who pay children to engage in commercial sex (AB 3042, 2004).

 

·      First  major reform of California ’s Witness Relocation and Assistance Program  to assist crime victims who have been threatened for testifying against  gang members (SB 594, 2007)

 

·      Doubled state funding for witness relocation and protection by working with Governor and states’ district attorneys.

 

·      New  protections for victims of elder abuse who are too sick or injured to  make it to court, by allowing them testify by video and help convict  their abusers (AB 1158, 2007).

 

This is cross-posted from ChristineBronstein.com.  Christine Bronstein is the founder of www.abandofwives.com a social  network and information website for women.  She was CEO of one of the  few women run, venture backed health and fitness companies in the nation  for 8 years and president of a child-welfare foundation for 3 years.   She is a graduate of Columbia/UC-Berkeley executive MBA program and a  member of the honor society Beta Gamma Sigma. 

Chris is married to Hearst/San Francisco Chronicle's Editor-at-Large Phil Bronstein and mother of three. 

Kamala Harris’ Personal Attacks Can’t Mask Her Record

More than six weeks after the Department of Justice released disturbing statistics about the increase in San Francisco’s crime rates during SF DA Kamala Harris’ tenure as District Attorney, Harris continues to run scared from her record. With Friday’s release of a video comprised of TV news footage showing local outrage at Harris’ revolving door system of justice, her failure to pursue the death penalty against a hardened cop-killer, and her dropping of prosecutions related to the San Francisco crime lab scandal, Harris still has provided no answers to the people of San Francisco or to California voters.

In the video, one police officer expresses his anger and disappointment about Kamala Harris’ refusal to seek the death penalty against a convicted cop killer:

“The people of San Francisco should be outraged by this. These…criminals know in San Francisco if you want to commit a crime, you come here, you do it, you plead it down. The next thing you know you do three months when you should be doing 12 years in state prison for it.”

Those aren’t the Kelly campaign’s words. They are the words of a San Francisco police officer on the evening news.

Instead of responding to these damaging news reports, Harris’ campaign has again resorted to personally attacking Attorney General candidate Chris Kelly and manipulating statistics to hide her abysmal record on crime.

Harris fails to acknowledge that the video itself is a compilation of actual news reports from Bay Area television stations, including responses from law enforcement and regular citizens about the rising crime rates in San Francisco. And their effect is devastating.

Watch this short web video of recent news media reports about Kamala Harris’ job performance as District Attorney.

Kamala Harris video

Harris can’t dispute and in fact hasn’t disputed the numbers from the DOJ, which show that violent crime and homicides have indisputably and tragically increased in San Francisco during her tenure, while crime fell statewide.

Instead she relies on faulty data comparisons to try and paint her record as something other than what it is. In March, when they were first confronted with these statistics, the Harris campaign tried to obfuscate the truth by quoting statistics from a six month period in 2009 and compared them to statistics from 6 months in 2008. The problem is that Kamala Harris hasn’t been D.A. for 6 months. She’s been D.A. for 6 years.

This time the campaign is choosing to compare San Francisco’s crime rates to individual cities, ignoring the methodology of the California Department of Justice, the very department she says she wants to lead as Attorney General, in order to make her numbers look better. This is a distortion of the facts, plain and simple.

Here is what the DOJ statistics show. In the period of time that Kamala Harris has been District Attorney in San Francisco:

  • The homicide rate in San Francisco County in 2003 was 8.8 per 100,000 population. The homicide rate in San Francisco County in 2008 was 11.6 per 100,000. That’s a 32% increase.
  • The violent crime rate in San Francisco County in 2003 was 732.5 per 100,000 population. The violent crime rate in San Francisco County in 2008 was 808.0 per 100,000. That’s a 10% increase.
  • The robbery rate in San Francisco County in 2003 was 392.3 per 100,000 population. The robbery rate in San Francisco County in 2008 was 493.7 per 100,000. That’s a 26% increase.

Watch the video. Look at the DOJ stats. Those are the facts.

Another fact. Kamala Harris’ track record proves that she is simply not up to the job.

— Brent Blackaby
Kelly for Attorney General

Don’t Sue President Obama

This week we celebrate President Obama’s signing of landmark health care reform legislation into law. Thanks to this historic bill, 32 million Americans will gain access to health insurance, health care will become more affordable, and no American will ever again be denied coverage when they get sick or because of pre-existing conditions.

But before the ink was even dry on President Obama’s signature, the attorneys general of 13 states — led by Florida Republican AG Bill McCollum, trying to score political points in his campaign for governor — immediately filed a lawsuit to try to block the new law in the courts. One of my Republican opponents, Tom Harman, is even encouraging current California Attorney General Jerry Brown to join them.

This is the ultimate frivolous lawsuit, brought to you by the GOP — the party of “NO” — and we can’t let them stand in the way of progress.



Sign my petition to Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum and these 12 other AGs today — and urge them to drop their lawsuit against the historic health care reform bill!

As California’s next Attorney General, I will always fight to put the people’s interests first, not the special interests or any narrow partisan political interest.

California stands to gain tremendously from health care reform. Of the 32 million Americans who will get health coverage under the bill, as many of 7 million of them will be Californians, and everyone in our state will gain more security and stability in their health insurance coverage.

That’s why I will do everything in my power as California Attorney General to defeat efforts to repeal or overturn this critical health care legislation.

And we can start, today, by urging these Republican attorneys general to drop their frivolous lawsuit against the new health care bill.



Sign my petition to Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum and these 12 other AGs today — and urge them to drop their lawsuit against the historic health care reform bill!

Do you want the attorneys general from Florida, South Carolina, Nebraska, Texas, Utah, Alabama, Colorado, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Washington, Idaho, Louisiana, and South Dakota telling Californians that they can’t have health care reform?

I don’t.

The people of California want and deserve the benefits of health care reform. Please join me in speaking out today, and urging these attorneys general to drop their frivolous lawsuit.

Thanks.

LA’s BEST

On Thursday, I had an opportunity to visit with young students solving problems, sharing ideas and diligently working on a science project together with their teachers. The students were doing this during an after-school program, at Politi Elementary School, in the Pico Union neighborhood of Los Angeles. Politi Elementary is one of many elementary schools participating in LA’s BEST, an after school education, enrichment and recreation program serving more than 28,000 children in economically challenged neighborhoods of Los Angeles. I was fortunate to see first hand the positive impact this type of program has on young students during a program tour, led by LA’s BEST Executive Director Carla Sanger.

This tour highlighted the significance of engaging kids at an early age in academic, physical, and cultural activities that keep them off the streets and out of California’s criminal justice system. The LA’s BEST After School program at Politi Elementary School is a shining and innovative example of how young people can thrive in a constructive learning environment instead of turning to drugs, gang activity or other delinquent behaviors. To date, more than 212,000 children have gone through LA’s BEST and many are now lawyers, police officers, educators, artists and small business owners.

Though they also haven’t been spared from the state’s budget cuts, after-school programs keep children occupied during the hours when violent juvenile crime is most likely to occur. Recent statewide and local evaluations of California’s after-school programs found consistently positive results for students enrolled in these programs, including improved student achievement, increased school attendance and improved personal behavior. In fact, studies show that kids in LA’s BEST are 30 % less likely to commit juvenile crime and 20% less likely to drop out of school. With public school funding being decimated statewide and many after-school programs being cut, I believe it is essential to preserve and expand programs like LA’s BEST, in order to keep kids safe, engaged and off the streets.

As Attorney General, expanding educational and after-school programs for young people is a major component of my crime prevention plan. I will work to increase educational and economic opportunities for all Californians, reduce gang activity, strengthen effective rehabilitation programs, and improve community-police relations. By implementing these crime prevention initiatives, we can make California a safer and stronger place for our families and kids. When our children are actively engaged in school-through effective teachers, supportive administrations and afterschool programs-they do not turn to gangs and crime as a means to find a supportive community.

I will also work alongside educators and organizations like LA’s BEST to help young people create a path to success. I will work to improve educational opportunities and expand after-school programs that result in greater productivity and reduced crime in our communities. I will also work to prevent crime through smart, effective policies that address the roots of criminal activity and help keep our communities safe. As the next Attorney General, I will bring an innovative and results-oriented approach to fighting crime and protecting the citizens of California.

For more information about my campaign, please visit www.kelly2010.com.

Don’t Play Politics with Our Kids’ Safety

Protecting kids from online predators has always been one of my highest priorities.

While serving as chief counsel for Facebook, I worked with Attorneys General across the nation to help build a safer internet — and I’ve seen some of the ideas I’ve championed enacted into law.

One of those ideas I championed was requiring convicted sex offenders to provide their online identifiers as part of their registrations, and as a result, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo was able to announce that more than 3,500 registered New York sex offenders were removed from MySpace and Facebook under the state’s “e-STOP” law that we crafted together.

On Tuesday, San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris held a public media event to introduce a bill she is sponsoring in the legislature that purports to keep online predators off social networking sites, including Facebook and MySpace.  

But here’s the problem: Her bill doesn’t do anything that the big sites haven’t already done, and there is no real way to enforce its provisions — which KGO-TV reported on Tuesday. Click here to watch KGO’s report on Kamala Harris’ flawed plan.

As I called for last year, we must implement the full “e-STOP” solution here in California — not feel-good half-measures. We can’t afford to play political games with our kids’ safety.

Click here to watch a video clip about my efforts to make the Internet safer — and then urge your legislators to pass “e-STOP” right here in California!

The success of “e-STOP” in New York demonstrates that effective, 21st century law enforcement must embrace new technology, working hand-in-hand with online social networks and other websites to enhance safety.

Under “e-STOP,” convicted sex offenders in New York must now share email addresses, screen names, and other Internet identifiers with the state, which the state in turn shares with social networking sites for removal — going beyond Kamala Harris’ inadequate proposal, which does not proactively remove registered sex offenders from the membership rolls of these sites.

We can and should do more. Our “e-STOP” measure worked in New York, and it can work here. I hope you’ll join me in getting this important legislation passed.

In order to protect California citizens, it’s critical that our next Attorney General understands 21st century public safety issues — and knows how to apply new technologies and solutions to solve them. Catchy slogans and half-measures aren’t enough. I believe I’m the right person for the job, with the the right mix of experience in public policy, technology and law to fight traditional, violent crime as well as “today’s crimes” like identity theft and corporate fraud.  

To learn more about my ideas as a candidate for Attorney General, or to share your own ideas, please visit my website at www.kelly2010.com.