Blog Roundup: March 22, 2006

Today’s CaliBlogger roundup below the fold:

  • Daddy, Papa & Me notes that the San Francisco Archdiocese is looking at preventing SF Catholic Charities from placing children for adoption with GLBT couples. In related news, the SF Chronicle tells us that a new Field Poll finds a significant positive shift in Californian’s views of same-sex marriage, relationships, military service, and adoption. Can’t happen fast enough.
  • Left I on The News draws a contrast between the amount that the proposed Santa Clara County sales tax bump would raise, and the amount of money already spent in Iraq. Bottom Line: Santa Clara County residents have spent way more on Iraq.
  • Santa Cruz for Change notes that Christine Pelosi (Nancy Pelosi’s daughter) will be offering her perspective tomorrow night on the Reid / Pelosi plan for the 2006 mid-terms. I look forward to hearing that. Perhaps Ms. Pelosi can explain where regulating bloggers, coming out against Feingold’s censure resolution, and enforcing an ethics truce in the House play into that plan.
  • On that note, one should read Robert Shaw’s piece in BeyondChron, and the resulting letters.
  • Say No To Pombo has two good posts. First, Richard Pombo gets new House Ag Committee leadership role, no doubt to show that some good Pombo pork will come to the Central Valley should he be relected. Second, VPO suggests that some Dems switch their registration to Decline to State for the primary in order to vote for McCloskey in the Republican primary.
  • The BradBlog (the place to go for all your voting machine news) points us to a great summary of the suit against Secretary of State Bruce McPherson to prevent him from certifying the Diebold voting machines for the upcoming elections. The summary, unsurprisingly, comes from State Sen. Debra Bowen, herself a candidate for Secretary of State.
  • The California Observer points us to this handy list of the contributors who ponied up at the Schwarzenegger / McCain Corporate Interest Festival earlier this week.
  • The Left Coaster’s paradox rips into Carolyn Lochhead of the Chron for failing to call Bush out on a flat-out lie. Note as well, toward the end of the article, the verbatim reprint of Bush’s Luntz-approved “Democrat Party” sneer, without even a [sic]. Maybe Lochhead and the Chron don’t know that the name of the party is the Democratic Party, now matter how many times the Republicans call it something else.

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Tax Kabuki in Santa Clara County

I lived and worked in Santa Clara County for years, so I have a soft spot for its politics. For the last month or so, I’ve been following the attempt by the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors to levy a half-cent sales tax in order to finance new public transit . . . though that’s not and can’t be the official reason. The strictures of California tax law imposed by Proposition 13 and its progeny require a particularly ridiculous form of kabuki.

[More on the flip]

Santa Clara County’s supervisors say they’ve made no deal to spend part of a proposed new half-cent sales tax on the planned BART extension to Silicon Valley, but the first formal message by the campaign promoting the tax places BART squarely before voters.

The ballot argument, filed last week by the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, includes “BART, Caltrain, Light Rail and transit service for seniors and the disabled” among the “high-priority local needs” worthy of being funded by the proposed county tax increase.
But just how much would go to those specific projects — or any others — is something the supervisors who will control the money can’t tell voters before the June 6 election without opening themselves to a legal challenge. The result looks likely to be a campaign of hints but no promises, carefully crafted to imply popular projects will be favored, but without committing to them.

“The conundrum for us is that this is a general tax,” said Palo Alto Mayor Judy Kleinberg, who is trying to decide whether voters in her city should support the measure. “So when we ask questions about what this will do for our community or even for the region . . . we can’t get an answer. We’re told, `We can’t tell you, but trust us because in the past we’ve done right by you.’ ”

The uncertainty about the ballot measure — and the mixed messages voters probably will hear — are rooted in the supervisors’ decision Feb. 28 to pursue a 30-year “general purpose tax,” which needs only a simple majority to pass. If supervisors had specified where the money would go, the ballot measure would have become a “special tax” and require two-thirds approval from voters.

What’s happening here is that under SB566, (October 2003), counties (and cities) can put a general revenue sales tax increase before the voters, in a sort of mini-referendum. But, a simple majority of the vote in favor is adequate to enact the tax. I’m not a huge fan of this model (that’s why you elect representatives, after all), but it makes far more sense than the Proposition-mandated counterpart for special taxes, which requires a 2/3 vote to approve a sales tax which would fund a specific project or program. This requirement was imposed on SB566 by Proposition 13 (See CA Const. Article 13A, Sec. 4), Proposition 62, and again by Proposition 218.

Although the general consensus is that public transit is in need of more funding in Santa Clara County, it would be almost impossible to fund public transit specifically, thanks to the series of anti-tax propositions. So, everyone involved has to go along with a general tax, with the tacit understanding (and ultimately, the hope) that it will be used for additional transit.

I’m on record already (and will be much more often) as disliking earmarked taxes and expenditures (as is proposed, for example, in Proposition 82). I believe that we elect representatives to manage those things, and earmarking specific revenue flows breaks that process badly, removing flexibility, denying the possibility of expertise, and reducing political accountability. In this case, however, the anti-tax crusaders have created a painfully stupid situation for the county. The supervisors can’t even make a political promise that they’ll use the funds from the general tax a certain way. They have to say “We can’t promise anything.”

Proposition 13 and its stepchildren mandate wink and nod politics of the worst sort. And maybe that’s what their sponsors intended. Or maybe it’s the law of unintended consequences (a conservative mainstay, at least for conservatives of the Burkean sort) rearing its head yet again. Structural reform is clearly in order, on this and a host of other issues.

Taking sides is important

I have heard a lot from people I have talked to about the June primary that it really doesn’t matter who wins and goes on to challenge Schwarzenegger in the fall.

I have tried to smile and be polite to these people. Up until now. It’s time to take sides. Seriously.

Nevermind what we’ve already gleaned about Steve Westly from his ads and just from a good solid google search. Please stop telling me “he’s fine,” or “I can’t tell the difference between him and Angelides.”

I will tell you the difference right now.

When Phil Angelides says something, he actually believes it. I heard that Steve recently told a group at the Emeryville Chamber of Commerce that he’s pretty much a Republican but is running as a Democrat because that’s the only way to get elected in California. This guy will tell a group of lefty activists that he’s as left as the day is long. He’ll tell anyone anything to get elected.

Phil Angelides will not. If he were even invited to the Emeryville Chamber of Commerce, he would spend his time explaining why his values tell him that in the wealthiest state in the wealthiest country in the history of the world, 1 in 3 people should not be living in poverty.

That is what makes Phil stand out as the true progressive. That is what makes him worthy of our support now, in the primary, when he needs it the most. I am so tired of people wimping out on this fight. Can you imagine what it would be like to have a truly progressive Governor of California? Someone who actually thinks for himself and knows how to govern? The people of this state are so ready to be bold, out on the front of the policy debates on economics and taxes and health care and education. We just haven’t had a Governor who was willing to lead for DECADES.

Now is our opportunity. It’s Phil Angelides. And it’s time to get serious.

What the GOP’s $120 million buys them and why the Unions protest

Arnold plans to raise anywhere between $75 and $120 million for his re-election:

A former top Schwarzenegger advisor has told business leaders that the governor is trying to raise $120 million for the November election, much of it for the state Republican Party. Schwarzenegger has refuted that figure, and aides now say his goal for the year is $75 million.

Whatever the target, his schedule in the weeks ahead includes a long roster of events to gather campaign money from donors, many of whom have a stake in decisions he makes as governor.(LA Times March 21, 2006)

The unions have already started their protests at the prospect of Ahnold spending all summer raising cash. Go Unions!

In Beverly Hills on Monday, unions held their first major protest of the year against the Republican governor’s collection of campaign money. About 200 nurses, bus drivers, school clerks and other union members marched outside a private Schwarzenegger reception and dinner for donors, who paid up to $100,000 for seats near the governor and his guest speaker, U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).

As Schwarzenegger was ensconced with top supporters inside the Beverly Hilton, sign-waving protesters shouted from the sidewalks outside at rush-hour traffic on Wilshire and Santa Monica boulevards.

***

The scenes were similar to the dozens of protests that organized labor held last year during its successful battle to kill Schwarzenegger’s November ballot initiatives. This year, of course, the target is his reelection.

The unions’ core message on Monday — that Schwarzenegger broke his campaign pledge to shun special-interest money — is part of a broader effort by labor and its Democratic allies to cast the governor as a standard politician who fails to keep his word.

“He said he wasn’t going to take special-interest money, and then this fundraiser flies in the face of everything he said he would be,” said Robin Swanson, a spokeswoman for the Alliance for a Better California, the union coalition formed last year to fight Schwarzenegger’s ballot measures.

Good work Alliance for a Better CA!  I also just thought it would be nice to point out what the GOP donors are getting for that money (on the flip).  He spent over $140 million out of his campaign funds so far!

The fact remains that Arnold claimed he was going to be a governor who would reject special interest money, yet he revels in it and what it can buy him.  The fundraising binge that he is now pursuing is both disheartening for our state and an embarassment for our electoral system that we need $100million campaigns.

Big spender

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has spent more than $142.5 million in campaign donations since entering politics about four years ago.

A sampling:

























































TV commercials ($69.3 million)
Campaign consultants ($14.7 million)
Mail to voters ($10.9 million)
Travel & hotels for Schwarzenegger and entourage ($4.9 million)
Public event production ($4.9 million)
Polling ($2.2 million)
Jet ($1.9 million)
Extra security paid to two firms ( $308914 )
Speech coach ($222577)
Personal videographer ($62476)
Jackets T-shirts ($69000)
Commemorative pens ($37293)
Wolfgang Puck catering ($18631)
Valet parking ($9384)

Sources: California Secretary of State, Times research LA Times