Universal Health Care bill passes legislature, Arnold to veto.

The Assembly just passed this bill that would ensure 7 million uninsured Californians, and of course Arnold is planning on vetoing the bill without offering any solutions.

The bill would eliminate private medical insurance plans and establish a statewide health insurance system for all state residents, reports The San Francisco Chronicle. The state senate is expected to approve changes to plan and send it the Republican governor, who has expressed his opposition to a single-payer plan.

The Chronicle said the governor, however, has not offered an alternative for the state’s 7 million people who are uninsured. His office has said the governor would propose solutions in his State of the State address in January if he is re-elected.

please! I really hope nobody falls for that line, that sounds like the old bait and switch to me. Fool me once… shame on you…

I wish there was a candidate that actually believed in covering everybody, oh wait there is, his name is Phil Angelides.

And if you’d like to help him win, you can donate here on the ActBlue GovernorPhil page… let’s try to get to 100 donors!

-C.

Flood Protection, Health Care, Deregulation and Big Money

(The Money Comes in, The Favors Go Out. It’s time to stop this cycle. So many issues would get a better crack at the apple if we didn’t have all this money flowing into Sacramento. Think about recommending this on Daily Kos. – promoted by SFBrianCL)

Cross-posted at Daily Kos

With the Katrina anniversary, there has been lots of talk about what government needs to do to protect citizens from another disaster. The other day, California Assemblymember John Laird told the Capitol Weekly, “We have less flood protection than they had in New Orleans. Sacramento is really not protected and the thousands of people who live here are at risk.” But this wasn’t a story about the anniversary, this was a report on how flood protection in California died a suspicious death in the legislature:

This week, just as Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata put on hold an eight-bill package of flood-protection legislation, one of his political committees received a $500,000 donation from the California Building Industry Association (CBIA), one of the package’s biggest opponents.

The donation is the single largest that a Perata committee has received since he became Senate leader in 2004.

In response, the California Majority Report noted, “As is the case with many policy areas that the legislature deals with, especially this time of year, eyebrows were raised about the timing of all of this.” In addition being a policy disaster that risks lives, these scandals harm people’s faith in government, decreasing participation in a vicious cycle that gives even more power to the special interests who run Sacramento.

In May, the Public Policy Institute of California polled on the issue (May 14-21, 2000 adult residents, +/- 2% MOE):

 

Do you think that campaign contributions are currently having a good effect or a bad effect on the public policy decisions made by state elected officials in Sacramento, or are campaign contributions making no difference?”

Good Effect 12%
Bad Effect 56%

The big money that controls Sacramento is so excessive, that it is easy to see why the polls show people realize how it is harming policy. If you check out yesterday’s San Francisco Chronicle, you’ll see an editorial blasting the “nasty moves” that special interests used to kill flood control. It is easy to see why people who pay attention are disgusted by the way Sacramento operates like an auction.

Special Interests Killing Universal Health Care Legislation

Yesterday, the California Assembly passed historic Universal Health Care legislation. This bill would save $8 billion a year and at the same time provide insurance for 6 million Californians. Sounds too good to be true? Well here comes the but…

Insurers have spent $3.7 million in campaign contributions in California since 2005.  Governor Schwarzenegger, who alone has received $765,000 from health insurers, has said he will veto the bill.

The big money has a proven ability to stop sound policy, and so California will waste $8 billion a year so that 6 million less people will have health insurance.

Special Interests New Deregulation

Public safety and health care aren’t the only areas where big money dominates in Sacramento. While lawmakers are holding dozens of fundraisers as they wrap up the legislative session, AT&T lobbyists are hitting the jackpot:

The Public Utilities Commission (PUC) gave AT&T and smaller Verizon permission to raise telephone rates at will, even as a telecommunications deregulation bill — a bonanza for AT&T and a bane to consumers — sped toward passage in the state Senate, jammed with last-minute amendments. […]

AT&T, while publicly billing the deregulation as beneficial competition in the video market, has not promised any rate reductions or other specific consumer benefits. It has poured nearly $18 million into lobbying efforts over the last few months, and $500,000 into direct political contributions during this election cycle, noted FTCR. That does not include contribution pledges made during legislators’ mad dash of fund-raising during the last three weeks of the legislative session, which ends next Thursday. These contributions will not be known until after the hundreds of measures still coming to a vote are passed or killed.

Yes, it sounds exactly like what went on during electrical deregulation, but as with flood protection, government can’t learn from past mistakes when special interests are running the show.

Solution: Proposition 89

Proposition 89 is the Clean Money and Fair Elections initiative that California will vote on this November. Put on the ballot by the California Nurses Association of anti-Arnold fame, the proposal addresses that systematic problems that are holding back good policy on a wide array of issues. Here are the details of Proposition 89.

Strict contribution and expenditure limits
Prop. 89 ends the fundraising madness with constitutional limits so regular voters aren’t drowned out by big money.
* Proposition 89 bans contributions from lobbyists and state contractors
* Proposition 89 limits contributions from corporations, unions, and individuals to state candidates
* Proposition 89 limits corporation donations to initiatives to $10,000

Clean Money public financing of political campaigns
Prop. 89 levels the playing field so new candidates can win on their ideas, not
because of the money they raise.
* With Proposition 89, candidates who agree to spending limits and to take no private contributions qualify for public funding
* Under Proposition 89, $5 contributions from voters required to prove viability
* With Proposition 89, lean candidates receive enough to run competitive campaigns. They can’t raise money beyond public funds

Tough disclosure and enforcement for politicians
Prop. 89 stops candidates from hiding behind negative ads and punishes politicians who violate the law.
* Proposition 89 makes wealthy self-funded candidates disclose the amount of personal funds they will spend
* Under Proposition 89, publicly financed candidates must engage in debates
* Proposition 89 imposes mandatory jail time and provides for removal from office of candidates who break the law.

The Challenge

Of course, the special interests who dominate Sacramento are spending at least as much money to stop Proposition 89 as they spend for each issue where they want to dominate the debate. While we won’t have as much money as the opposition, what we do have is a great initiative, a reality-based argument, lots of supporters, and trusted organizations like the League of Women Voters, Common Cause, California Nurses, the Consumer Federation of California and the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights all aggressively and creatively working to pass the initiative.

We would also like to have your support. We have started a campaign blog to keep supporters up-to-date and would appreciate it if supporters would sign up for email updates. Thanks for reading all the way down.

SUSA CA-Gov: Arnold gaining ground

Arnold’s lead is growing in the S-USA poll.  (H/t to Julia, Taegan): (First poll b/w 2 nominees)

Arnold Schwarzenegger 52%
Phil Angelides 38%
Other 1%
Undecided 8%

As Juls pointed out, and I can confirm, thanks to the handy Poll HQ, this is the first time Arnold has polled over 50%.  It’s a very, very bad poll for Angelides.  Julia also points out all the cross-overs to Arnold from Democrats in the state.  Those numbers are actually somewhat encouraging.  It’s easier to win those people over because we have a message for them.  It’s worrying to see all those Dems support Arnold, but not yet time to waive any colorless rags.

(CA-45) GOP pushes the panic button

(I’m thinking of doing my hair like that. – promoted by SFBrianCL)

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Yesterday’s Desert Sun gave Republican Mary Bono’s panic attack a nice spin today.  Bono: Campaign fundraising easier this time

Bono campaign chairman Marc Troast said Friday that the campaign hopes to raise an additional $300,000 between now and election day, which would put it near $1.2 million – nearly double the $600,000 Bono raised for her last campaign, two years ago.

Pure Rovian absurdity:  I have to raise double the usual amount to hang on to my seat this year, so I couldn’t be more serene and upbeat!  

Bono evidently plans to hide in her bunker and throw money at the voters this year, and hope that the big mean Democrat, David Roth, just goes away.  Sadly enough, as we all well know, that can work for Republicans.  But voters in the CA-45th aren’t necessarily buying it this year.  They want a debate.  Mary’s got the bankers, David Roth needs the rest of us to win this one.  Contribute  here

Crossposted from DailyKos

(CA-45) Maxine Waters and David Roth

Photobucket - Video and Image HostingLatest update from the David Roth campaign (CA-45):

Last Friday eight-term Los Angeles Congresswoman Maxine Waters joined David Roth to campaign and meet voters in Moreno Valley.  The day began with a spirited Q&A with several hundred students and soon-to-be voters at Moreno Valley High School. …..There were gasps from the students when Roth told them that the Iraq Conflict had already cost Riverside County over $1.6 billion, enough to send all high-school students in the County to college and to pay for health insurance for them and their families.

“…enough to send all high-school students in the County to college and to pay for health insurance for them and their families.”  Kind of puts it all in perspective, doesn’t he?  Wonder why Mary Bono is terrified to debate Roth?

Baby protester photo and more highlights on the flip, and to enjoy the whole Roth August 27th Newsletter, click here

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Rally Pushes Bono To Debate Roth
Labor and community organizers take demands to Bono’s office

Concerned Coachella Valley citizens came together last Wednesday evening outside the district office of Mary Bono to demand a debate from the Congresswoman.  Organized by Communication Workers of America Chief Stewart Stan Steffan, the group demanded that Mary Bono confront the issues, step up to the plate and debate David Roth.  
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Despite multiple invitations, Mary Bono has yet to agree to engage David Roth on the issues facing the country and the district.  Community members of all ages gathered together with signs and loud speakers to remind the Bono campaign that the voters are “all ears”and that debate is the American way.

Even if changing Washington weren’t reason enough, the CA-45th needs David Roth because he’s an education expert.  Our kids in Riverside County have the lowest rates of college attendance.  Students of all ages are currently underserved.   These kids loved what David had to say:
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Read all about it!  Get onboard with David Roth for Congress!  If David didn’t have a great chance to turn this red California district blue, Mary Bono wouldn’t be scrambling to raise another $300,000 (in addition to the 2 to 1 funding advantage she currently has.)

Crossposted from DailyKos

Rasmussen CA-Gov: Holding Steady

Rasmussen Reports has Schwarzenegger’s lead holding steady from last month. The numbers are essentially unchanged

As BigDog noted before, the somewhat questionable Zogby poll has Angelides down by four points. 

There are two things to note from this poll, other than the fact that there was essentially no movement.

1) Schwarzenegger is inching towards that dangerous 50% line.  Incumbents below 50% are considered in risk.  Schwarzenegger’s massive advantage in television ads seems to be paying off in terms of people forgetting about the special election.  We can’t let people forget about the special.

2) The fact that Angelides isn’t losing ground is good. At this point, people aren’t really paying attention to the race.  There will be a narrowing after Labor Day as the press and the public begin to pay attention to Phil in addition to the movie star incumbent.

Villaraigosa’s Education Bill passes the Senate

The Senate passed the “Gloria Romero Educational Reform Act” with only one vote to spare (22-14).  The bill will go to the assembly, where some Dems have announced opposition to the plan.  Asm. Dymally (D-Compton) has announced his opposition to the plan based on a lack of communication with the African-American community.

Assemblyman Mervyn Dymally (D-Compton), who heads the state Legislature’s black caucus, said Sunday that he opposes Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s plan to gain substantial authority over the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Dymally’s announcement, made to The Times through a spokeswoman, came the day after an “emergency” meeting of the caucus at the Renaissance Montura Hotel Los Angeles near the airport. … Participants interviewed for this article said they were worried that the plan would diminish African American influence in a school district that educates tens of thousands of African Americans.

“African Americans were silent because they were not included on issues that directly affect African American children,” said Dymally spokeswoman Jasmyne Cannick.

The group, which also included Assemblymen Jerome Horton of Inglewood and Mark Ridley-Thomas of Los Angeles, and state Sen. Ed Vincent of Inglewood, discussed whether to take a united stand against the bill, but it was unclear Sunday whether all of the participants were persuaded to oppose it. (LA Times 8/28/06)

The Assembly could yield some interesting results.