Perspectives from Crazyville: What are they saying about the Bonds Tour

In my very long post over the weekend, I said that that the Democrats of the Legislature should be very careful about campaigning with Arnold Schwarzenegger for the bond measures.  I just think that the bonds will likely pass without joint campaign events, and we don’t need to give Schwarzenegger his patina of bipartisanship back.

Over at FlashReport, they agree with me.  Huh?  Well yes, they feel that the Democrats shouldn’t be campaigning with the Governator.  First, well, Jon is skeptical of any government spending at all.  He would prefer the levees continue to age, the roads continue to be unmanageable, and are schools continue to have poor physical plants.  But to the more political aspect of why Jon doesn’t want them on the tour:

In my humble opinion, inviting enemies of freedom and liberty to fly on his airplane is not the best start.  Especially given that Perata and Nunez probably don’t believe that any single person should be morally allowed to accumulate enough wealth to own their own plane(FR 5/8/06)

Ah, yes, those enemies of liberty.  On my list of enemies of liberty, I have Osama, Zarqawi, Hamas, Colombian drug runners, and Don Perata.  Huh?  Fleischman needs to grow up and knock it off with this kind of bullshit rhetoric.  There are only a few true enemies of liberty and freedom and none of them are in the California Legislature.  This trash talk is beneficial to nobody and creates an even more hostile atmosphere.

CA-11: The Ball is Rolling for McNerney

Jerry McNerney picked up the San Jose Mercury News endorsement (Hat tip to Jerry’s Blog).  The Mercury News also endorsed Pete McCloskey over Pombo in the Republican Primary.  It’s not particularly hard to see how the editorial board feels about Pombo: Any of the candidates, even Republican McCloskey is better than Pombo.

Even before he became associated with the sleaze surrounding disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, even before he was accused of taking a family vacation on the government’s dime and even before a watchdog group called him one of the 13 most corrupt members of Congress, it was clear that Richard Pombo had to go.

The conservative seven-term Republican congressman from Tracy has a record of radical anti-environmentalism that has imperiled the nation’s natural resources, is wrong for the country and is out of step with a state that’s known for its environmental leadership.
***
On the Democratic side, two good candidates have emerged as leading contenders. Neither Jerry McNerney, 54, an engineer and wind-energy consultant from Pleasanton, nor Steve Filson, 59, a United Airlines pilot and retired U.S. Navy commander from Danville, has held elected office. But both bring good ideas and have energized various Democratic Party constituencies. Of the two, we find McNerney’s message more compelling.(SJ Mercury News 5/8/06)

The editorial gives good reviews and descriptions of all three competitors to Pombo.  The choice is a bit muddled now, but we know what needs to happen.  Richard Pombo must go.

As, I’ve written here, I think McNerney will be a better candidate because of his connections to the grassroots.  The national party will support him this time if he wins the primary. They have to, they smell blood in the water all around Pombo.  McNerney will bring the assets of the grassroots to bear against Pombo.  This year it will be enough to take that seat back from the radical anti-environmentalist Richard Pombo.

And in a complete rejection to the “You’ve had your chance” line of “thinking”, the Mercury News touts the fact that McNerney has run against Pombo before:

McNerney ran against Pombo in 2004 and got 39 percent of the vote, despite receiving no support from the state or national Democratic Party and being massively outspent by Pombo. That experience should come in handy in November.

CA-50: Roach not running

It’s a sad day over at FlashReport.  Eric Roach has announced that he will not be running against Brian Bilbray in the June Primary for the CA-50 congressional seat.

This morning I spoke with Eric Roach, the top-vote getting conservative in last month’s special election in the 50th Congressional District.  So let me be the first to share some unfortunate news (unless you are a big-spending Republican).

It is with great sadness that I share with you the news that after much consideration, Eric Roach has decided not to actively campaign for Congress in the regular GOP primary in the 50th Congressional District.  Eric would have been an outstanding candidate who I personally think could have cleaned liberal/moderate GOPer Brian Bilbray’s clock in that GOP only primary and gone on to win election to the full two-year term in November.(FlashReport 5/8/06)

Aww, poor Jon is upset.  Sorry, I have to keep the Schadenfreude out of this.  Fleischman was, shall we say, the loudest and proudest of the Run,Eric, Run crowd.  He believed that Bilbray was some sort of a moderate/liberal. (Uh…yeah, compared to Roach’s channeling of James Dobson and Grover Norquist). 

But, he does make a compelling argument for Busby defeating Bilbray in the special runoff in June. His argument: turnout.  If Roach doesn’t run, then conservatives stay home.  (“Without Roach on the ballot, Bilbray has a big challenge ahead of him in turning out conservative voters.”)  His argument comes from national numbers that conservatives are disapproving of Bush and other federal Republicans.  Uhh…duh!  People are mad at Bush because his administration is incompetent, not because they aren’t throwing them the bone.  I think the common voter on the street, even the conservative ones, value competence over ideology.

And Francine Busby fits the bill of competence to a tee.  She did a wonderful job as a school board member.  She will be an excellent Congressman.  And in another endorsement of Busby, Jon Says:

If I lived in this Congressional District, I would go to the polls and vote for Bilbray over Busby.  She is awful.  But that said, given that I have traveled to every part of California, it seems, to help candidates in important special elections, but I am so frustrated at what moderate GOPers have done to hijack our majority and imperil its very existence, that I am not to motivate to get myself to San Diego anytime soon.

Well, anytime Jon Fleischman calls you awful,  you know you’ve done something right.

[From NCP] No on Proposition 77: Reason #3

[Originally posted on Norcal Politics, November 7, 2005]

This is the last installment in my No on 77 series.  It was supposed to have been completed long ago, but the day job and a virus conspired against that timeline. 

Bottom Line #3:   Why are Republicans and their Big Business allies funding the campaign for Proposition 77?  Why are they pushing Proposition 77 now, in a special election when turnout will be low?  The short answer is that there’s something in it for them, and they want to ram it through as soon as they can.  It’s not about principle — that’s a flat out lie.  As described before, it’s all about Republican power.

Continue reading [From NCP] No on Proposition 77: Reason #3

[From NCP] The Liberty Platform in Northern California

[Originally posted at Norcal Politics on November 2, 2005]

Hullabaloo is not, as far as I know, a Northern California blog.  But there’s a great post by digby that resonates with the envisioned project of NorCal Politics.  digby describes a platform that the Democratic Party could use in the Western and Southwestern states, and discussed the cross-community conversation that could and should take place.

In a nutshell, I believe that Northern California is a microcosm of the larger west, and that the Liberty Platform, as digby calls it, is a conversation that we should have right here inside Northern California.  That’s at least part of my goal in starting NorCal Politics.

[From NCP] No on Proposition 77: Reason #2

[Originally posted at NorCal Politics, October 25, 2005]

Bottom Line #2:  Even if you support nonpartisan redistricting (and I do), Proposition 77 is not the way to do it.  It is (a) procedurally flawed, (b)  is unrepresentative of the voters of the State of California, and (c) likely to reduce legislative representation of Democrats and minorities.  Proposition 77 changes the California Constitution, and it will be difficult to change it again.  Even if the Republicans were willing to adopt a similar model in Texas (which is unlikely) to balance California’s choices, we have to get the solution to this problem right the first time, and Proposition 77 does not get it right.

Procedural Flaws 

The clearest criticism of this problem comes from the California League of Women Voters:

County elections officials are concerned that a redrawing of the lines immediately after the November election could not be done properly in time for the 2006 elections. If the process is rushed through, public input may be compromised.

[…]

Proposition 77 requires that the redistricting plan adopted by the three-judge panel must be placed on the ballot and voted upon by the people of California. On that same ballot we would elect representatives from those same new districts! And, if the plan is rejected, the entire redistricting process would be repeated, including a vote on the new lines at the next general election.

The concerns of county election officials can be found in this document published by the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials.  Long story short, it would be almost impossible to implement the redistricting in time for the 2006 elections. 

Just for a start, the redistricting commission envisioned by Proposition 77 would have to take place in the two weeks between the official certification of the election results on 12/17/05 and the primary election filing deadline of 12/30/05.  Otherwise, the candidates and the voters would have no idea what districts they are in when they file.  And then what happens if the new districts are rejected in a 2006 election?  Which districts do the winning candidates represent?

Not Representative of Californians

Again, the California League of Women Voters has a succinct description of the problem:

Responsibility for redistricting should be vested in a bipartisan special commission that includes citizens at large, representatives of public interest groups, and minority group interests. This proposition establishes a commission of just three retired judges. In the near term, such a panel almost certainly will not be diverse in background or ethnicity.

And, as we saw yesterday, by way of PowerPAC Blog, retired judges are not remotely representative of Californians as a group:

The 2000 Census found the ethnic breakdown of the state’s 33 million people to be about 47 percent white, 32 percent Latino, 11 percent Asian/Pacific Islander, 7 percent black and 3 percent other. Slightly more than half the state’s residents were women and about 11 percent were ages 65 or older.

Retired judges have a very different look. Statistics maintained by the state Judicial Council show that nearly 90 percent of the retired judges are men. There’s no ethnic breakdown for them, but a study for the Assembly elections committee showed that about 4 percent of the judges had Spanish surnames and 2 percent had Asian surnames.

Superior Court judges now make $143,000 a year, so even a retired judge living on his pension is making far more than the $53,025 that was the average income for a California family in 2000.

As a side note, I find it fascinating that Proposition 77, being pushed by the Republicans (I just got my Republican Party slate mailer today) relies upon a limited number of unelected judges to make decisions affecting all of us.  Apparently the Republicans only hate "unelected judges" when they’re likely to do something the Republicans don’t like.

Effect on Democrats and Minorities

A survey of a number of different sources concerning redistricting methods turns up some startling consistencies.  First, the primary methods used to gerrymander out-of-power groups are simple to understand.  You pack them into a few highly concentrated districts.  Those you can’t or won’t pack, you crack and stack into districts so that they are reliably in the minority.  And finally, you try to ensure that the redistricting pairs incumbents of the other party in new districts, while keeping your incumbents in new, safe districts.  This has gotten much easier in recent years, thanks to increasing processor power and affordable software.

Now, Proposition 77 doesn’t, as a formal matter, allow pairing.  The judges who make up the commission are supposed to not take into account the address of any incumbents.  But, the combination of (a) Proposition 77’s focus on compactness and adherence to city and county boundaries as criteria for redistricting and (b) the absence of any consideration of what are called "communities of interest", will combine to pack Democrats into fewer urban districts and crack and stack minorities into majority-majority districts. 

For example, Arizona has a redistricting commission that uses compactness and contiguity as the criteria for district boundaries.  In 2004, Arizona went for Bush 55% to 44%, but 6 of 8 of its House Members are Republicans.  None of the House races were remotely competitive. The districts in which the Democrats won encompassed, respectively, Phoenix and Tuscon + Nogales.

Or take Iowa, with a redistricting commission that uses the same criteria as Proposition 77:  compactness, contiguity, and political boundaries.  In 2004, Iowa went for Bush 50% to 49%, but 4 of 5 House Members are Republicans.  Only one of those races was within ten percent, and that was the race in which the Democrat won.  Unsurprisingly, this district includes Des Moines.

Proposition 77 is not the solution to the problem of politicized redistricting.  As I’ve written, it amounts to unilateral disarmament by California Democrats in the face of Republican gerrymandering in other states, substituting a "rules-based" anti-Democrat gerrymander.

Vote No on Proposition 77.

What makes a Poll worthwhile: Angelides by 10 over Westly

Randy Bayne at The Bayne of Blog has a post about a SurveyUSA poll conducted for SF’s KPIX-TV (local CBS affilliate).  It has him with a 10 point lead:

Here’s the question and the exact breakdown.

  Question:If the Democratic Primary were today, and you were standing in the voting booth right now, who would you vote for? Phil Angelides? Steve Westly? Or some other candidate?

  41% Angelides
  31% Westly
  17% Other
  11% Undecided

The margin of error is a little high, 4.9%, and I’m not sure how this poll should be viewed. As most people know, I don’t look to closely at polls as predictors. But the tread is moving away, big time, from Westly toward Angelides. It should also be noted that undecided is way down when compared to previous polls.

Now, the LA-Times poll just before the Convention had Westly up 13 with 45% undecided.  Perhaps the party endorsement made a big difference.  Perhaps the fact that Angelides now has some ads. 

Or perhaps polling in this state sucks.  There are just too many people and too many distinct interests.  4.9% MoE…ya…right.  I’m waiting for the next Field Poll.  At this point, that’s the only polling operation I have any trust in to do work in California.

But, at any rate, this will put an end to the incessant “momentum Marketing”.  A poll is no reason for me to vote for you, especially not a primary poll.  I know some people love the electability card, but at this point Arnold has so much more name ID than either Angelides or Westly, that any poll is going to pick that up.  Now, once we have a nominee and the hoopla surrounding the primary, then I’ll pay attention to those polls.