The Calitics Show: Monday 2/4 at 7:30 Open Thread

We haven’t done a Calitics show in quite a while, but we haven’t forgotten about it. On Monday, we will have a show at 7:30, featuring myself and David Dayen, and, hopefully, some special guests. We’ll update if and when guests are confirmed. We’re also going to try to get in a song or two from the Grateful Dead show in San Francisco, but we’re still working on the technology aspect of that. We’ll be talking about the presidential race, and, if you care to join us, you can call in at (718) 664-9561.

At the Calitics BlogTalkRadio page, you can check out the first Calitics Show, way back when, set a reminder for yourself, or download a podcast.

Got any other thoughts?

My Closing Arguments for Hillary

(A great diary about Senator Clinton. – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Cross posted from my dKos diary with my permission.

New material and lots of stuff I need to say again.  This is my final argument for Hillary.

I think Democrats are good people.  I have friends in every campaign and we treat each other with respect.  The Democrats here are no different.  

You are good people and respectful.  Those tr's who frequent every candidate's diary's are trolls.  They are tr's sent by the right, maybe employed by the right.  They are here to do what they do.  Disrupt discourse and direct our conversations away from where they should be.  I don't have time to waste trying to convince the republican tr's here.  

I'm am working hard for Hillary just as she has worked hard for us for 35 years.

Please join me now in my final argument.

From one of my previous diaries:

Does anyone think our Hillary was foolish to call them what they were and are, “The Vast Right Wing Conspiracy”?

I believed it then and after Cleland, Gore and Kerry I believe it even more.

Can a thinking person believe that they've packed up their bags like Karl, gone home and said, “it was fun for 35 years, let's relax and leave the Democrats alone this hunting season”.

I too was and in many ways I am still idealistic.  My first campaign work was for George McGovern, when the rethugs were just trying out some new hunting tools.  They were still amateurs back then.

They are no longer amateurs.

The wrong wing wants this election more than any other, ever.  

They can smell the scent of 3 maybe 4 Supreme Court seats.  They are hard on the trail of a Court majority that may last until the last ice melts on Mt. Everest.

Those in the pin stripe camouflage have barely begun the privatization of the U.S. Government.  Blackwater is just the beginning.  The God Reagan wanted to tear down the government from the inside and his plans have only partially been implemented.  We only see the lack of toy safety inspectors and meat inspectors.  Unless you've broken a law you don't see the private prisons, the next step being a private FBI.  A private and profitable IRS.  A privately run FAA accepting real time bids for priority landing rights at La Guardia.

They are building the Fascist Corporate State with a cunning twist.  This time around it isn't based on anti-religious Nazi thugs.  This time the front is Christianity itself.  

I do not want to live in a Christian version of Iran.  

The only Democrat who will fight them tooth and nail is Hillary.  The only Democrat with the thick skin of 20 years is Hillary.

The Democrat I trust to do right by us once elected is Hillary.

In our representative democracy trust is what matters.  We hire those we trust then send them to DC to do the job.  

I trust Hillary Rodham Clinton with my future and my children's future.

Qouted from my previous diary with my permission:

The Hillary I know went straight from Law School to Fall River, Mass. to work for the Children's Defense Fund.  Not to the high paying corporate jobs she was offered, but to where she could help the most helpless of our society.

As a law student, Hillary represented foster children and parents in family court and worked on some of the earliest studies creating legal standards for identifying and protecting abused children. Following graduation, she became a staff attorney for the Children's Defense Fund.

The Hillary I know worked to bring down the most corrupt presidency in American history.  She was still young and may have made a mistake or two, but she was on the side of the good guys.

 

After serving as only one of two women lawyers on the staff of the House Judiciary Committee considering the impeachment of Richard Nixon, Hillary chose not to pursue offers from major law firms. Instead she followed her heart and a man named Bill Clinton to Arkansas. They married in 1975 and their daughter Chelsea was born in 1980.

The Hillary I know continued to work for children after her marriage.

Hillary ran a legal aid clinic for the poor when she first got to Arkansas and handled cases of foster care and child abuse. Years later, she organized a group called Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. When she was just 30, President Carter appointed her to the board of the United States Legal Services Corporation, a federal nonprofit program that funds legal assistance for the poor.

The Hillary I know took on the mantle of the Woman's movement and worked tirelessly around the world to bring the horrible treatment of women into public awareness.

When her husband was elected President in 1992, Hillary's work as a champion for women was recognized and admired around the world. She traveled the globe speaking out against the degradation and abuse of women and standing up for the powerful idea that women's rights are human rights.

The Hillary I know spoke in 1995 to The UN Fourth World Conference On Women, Beijing, China

I want to speak up for mothers who are fighting for good schools, safe neighborhoods, clean air and clean airwaves . . . for older women, some of them widows, who have raised their families and now find that their skills and life experiences are not valued in the workplace . . . for women who are working all night as nurses, hotel clerks, and fast food chefs so that they can be at home during the day with their kids . . . and for women everywhere who simply don't have enough time to do everything they are called upon to do each day.

If there is one message that echoes forth from this conference, it is that human rights are women's rights . . . And women's rights are human rights.

The Hillary I know spoke once again at the 5 year follow-up to the Beijing meeting.  When she finished her speech the 1000's of women at the U.N. began to hold hands and sing the anthem of freedom, “We shall overcome”. This is an inspiring woman and republican's don't like that.

The Hillary I know is in it to win.  She's in it to win the nomination and she's in it to win the Presidency.

Quoting Markos:

What's more, Clinton was the only top-tier candidate to refuse the ultimate Iowa and New Hampshire pander by removing her name from the Michigan ballot. That makes her essentially the de facto winner since Edwards and Obama, caving to the cry babies in Iowa and New Hampshire, took their name off Michigan's ballot. Sure, the DNC has stripped Michigan of its delegates, but that won't last through the convention. The last thing Democrats can afford is to alienate swing states like Michigan and Florida by refusing to seat their delegates.

So while Obama and Edwards kneecap their chances of winning, Clinton is single-mindedly focused on the goal.

The Hillary I know has an awesome record in the Senate.  She came to the Senate, rolled up her sleeves and learned the ropes better than most Senators ever do.  She's worked across the aisle more than any and she has fought the rethug controlled Senate to keep our progressive agenda out front.

The Hillary I know has not only fought the wrong wing smear machine for 20 years, she knows how to successfully stand up and fight their crap now.

Once again quoting Markos:

Clinton, by far. No one has taken more shit from the VRWC, not by a long shot. Edwards earned valuable campaign experience in 2004. It makes me wonder why he'd go through it all again a second time, but still, it's something. Obama has never had a competitive race against a Republican. His best experiences comes from winning primaries. But he's never been in the crossfires of the GOP. Maybe that's why he can pretend that he can move beyond partisanship. Because he's never had to run a partisan race.

The Hillary I know is a progressive whatever that means and a lifelong fighter for our liberal beliefs.

Markos once again:

Clinton isn't horrible on this front, but Obama has made a cottage industry out of attacking the dirty fucking hippies on the left, from labor unions, to Paul Krugman, to Gore and Kerry, to social security, and so on. People think I was being ticky tack with the Gore thing, and in isolation it would've been but a minor non-event. But it was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back for me, yet another in a pattern of attacks against Democrats and their constituencies. He is the return of Bill Clinton-style triangulating personified.

The Hillary I know is a funny, likable woman.  She admits she is uncomfortable talking about herself but she can speak to the issues better than any candidate in this race.

Even Markos likes her:

In other words, I'd have a beer with any of them. But I do love the idea of breaking a new barrier this year, whether it's by having a woman president or an African American one.

The Hillary I know is a Woman.  She is the best spokesperson the woman's movement has ever had and republican's don't like that either.  Women, over 50% of the population, may not always like her policies but they respect her and admire her fighting spirit.

The Hillary I know is the greatest threat the GOP has ever faced.    Why have they relentlessly attacked her for all these years?  Because they know what will happen to the GOP if Hillary is nominated for the Presidency of the United States.

Women.  Single mothers.  Working women. Feminists. Housewives. Women.  Bartenders, Convenience store workers, mill workers.  Women.  Hookers, Strippers, Black Jack Dealers. Women.

Women. who have never voted.  Women. who have voted Republican.  Women. who are independents.

The Hillary I know when nominated will unite these women into the greatest force for freedom that the world has ever seen.

The Hillary I know when nominated will cause the largest voter registration the country has ever seen.  All those women voters standing with their sisters to see the first Woman President will be registered as Democrats.

If you are not threatened like republican's are, you will support this incredible woman.

The Hillary I know is the greatest threat the GOP has ever faced.  She is a Woman.

What’s the deal with this polling on behalf of Hillary?

The LA Times is reporting that there is some form of push-polling in the field that favors Senator Clinton. From the Top of the Ticket Blog.

every question about Clinton was curiously positive, Coghlan recalls. … Every question about the other candidates was negative.

***

“That’s when I caught on,” said Coghlan. He realized then that he was being push-polled. That malicious political virus that is designed not to elicit answers but to spread positive information about one candidate and negative information about all others under the guise of an honest poll had arrived in Southern California within days of the important election.

Someone who obviously favors Hillary Clinton is paying an unidentified company to spread this material phone call by phone call among independent voters, who can, according to California party rules, opt to vote in the Democratic but not the Republican primary on Feb. 5, when nearly two dozen states will choose a large chunk of the delegates to the parties’ national conventions next summer.

Coghlan said he was offended by such underhanded tactics and knew he was going to get out a warning about this dirty trick, but he said he played along for the full 20-minute “poll.”

“The guy was very slick, very personable,” Coghlan told the Ticket. “He never fell out of character as a pollster the entire time. He seemed interested in my answers and just kept going through his list of questions as if he was noting my answers. He was very good, very smooth.”

The post further notes that they contacted the Clinton campaign for a response, but none was forthcoming in the following 8 hours after initial contact.

At this point, it is not clear who is paying for these. My guess would be one of the pro-Clinton 527s that have been quite active in favor of the junior Senator from New York. I would be hesitant to point the finger at the Senator’s campaign itself, however.  The push-poll is a tremendously effective tool if used properly, but the only problem is that if you get caught, there can be serious blowback. These folks just happened to hit on a former journalist who knew the score on push polling. It’s a big risk at this point of a campaign.

Given that this will spread rapidly, I’d expect to see a statement from the Clinton campaign shortly.

Kevin Drum: Yes on Prop 93

(Brian’s Disclosure – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Kevin Drum, the progressive blogger extraordinaire at Washington Monthly, yesterday endorsed Proposition 93 in his Political Animal blog. In his brief post he called Prop 93 “one of those rare initiatives I’m in favor of.”

From my point of view, there’s an easy one and a hard one. The easy one is Prop 93, which changes our term limits law. Currently, you’re limited to 14 years: three terms (6 years) in the assembly and two terms (8 years) in the senate. The problem with this is that a limit of three terms in the assembly, for example, means that the Speaker of the Assembly never has more than four years of experience before taking over the top spot. This is dumb. Prop 93 PresserThe point of a term limits law should be to prevent people from making careers out of a single political office, not doing away with experience altogether.

The new law is simpler: it limits service to 12 years total, in either house. This is how I would have written the law in the first place, and it’s a good compromise between limiting legislative service while still allowing politicians to gain enough experience to know how to run things. This is one of those rare initiatives I’m in favor of.

In addition, the campaign organized a press conference at the LGBT Center here in San Francisco with (L->R) Mark Leno (who stands to lose 4 years if Prop 93 is passed) and Asms. Ruskin, along with SF Democratic Party Chair Scott Weiner.

Incidentally, the “tough one” for him was 94-97. He seemed to lean towards yes, based primarily on his feeling that the legislature and the governor should get to run the state.

Polls: Obama Leading in the Bay Area

A pair of polls released tonight find that Barack Obama is running ahead of Hillary Clinton in the San Francisco Bay Area. First up is the subscriber only section of the Zogby Poll which puts Obama in the overall lead in the state.

On the Democratic side, California, Missouri  and New Jersey are so close. Obamas lead in California is by virtue of solid support in the Bay Area and among Independents (by 20 points), men (20 points), 18-29 year olds (31 points), very liberal voters (22 points), and African Americans (75%-14%). Clinton does well among women (11 points) and among Hispanics (64%-29%).

Up next is the Field Poll which has Hillary up by 2 points overall.

Obama attracts voters who call themselves liberal, who have gone to graduate school and who are from the Bay Area, which backs him 41 to 31 percent. Clinton’s strength is among conservatives and moderates, those with a high school education and residents of sprawling Los Angeles County, where she holds a 42 to 34 percent lead.

Could Obama carry California on the stregnth of the Bay Area? We’ll know soon.

A dead heat in California? Yes, You Can!

The Field Poll on the presidential race is expected out like…um a few minutes.  I’m hearing right now that the race is now within the margin of error.  If this is true, which at this point I am not able to confirm, this would be a tremendous showing of momentum for the Illinois Senator.  Senator Clinton has dominated the polling in the state since well, forever.

Apparently, this was on the KTVU news at 10 here in San Francisco. I don’t know if that means they violated the embargo or what not, but if you saw KTVU news at 10 just now, help us out here.  The numbers I heard from a friend who saw it on Ch. 2 here in SF said that it was running at Clinton 36, Obama 34, Undecided 18.

At any rate, hard data will be all over the California media within a couple of hours, and likely posted at Field’s archives shortly.

UPDATE: Yup, those numbers were correct. Other/Already voted also had 12%. You can now grab the details here (PDF). As CarlsbadDem points out in the comments, this is a huge surge for Obama, and a slight downward trend for Clinton. It looks like the key will be the number of DTSers who vote in the Democratic primary:

Registered Democrats, who the poll finds are accounting for 87% of those likely to vote in the Democratic primary, favor Clinton by six points, 37% to 31%.  However, non-partisans who represent another 13% of likely Democratic primary voters now favor Obama by a five to three margin (54% to 32%).

Also of note in this poll are the general election matchups. They have Obama leading McCain 47-40, but Clinton at only 45-43. This is a marked difference from the December poll which showed very large leads (and slightly larger for Clinton) against McCain. I’m not sure why this is the case, other than perhaps McCain wasn’t considered really viable in December before the New Hampshire primary.

I also want to point out that if you have marked your VBM ballot for a candidate that has dropped out, just bring your ballot to your regular precinct. They should just tear it up or mark it void and then give you a fresh regular ballot.

A possibility of movement in the Writer’s Strike.

There’s positive news from the Writer’s strike. The L.A. Times is reporting that a contract has been negotiated between the two sides. The two sides have been engaged in unofficial negotiations for the past two weeks. And both sides have been very careful to keep all news blacked out.

The article says that the proposal will be presented to the union’s negotiating committee board by the negotiators on Monday.  

The Calitics Gavin Newsom Interview

Yesterday, I interviewed San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom. We spent a lot of time talking about health care in San Francisco, the state, and the nation. We moved on to marriage equality, livability issues, and the election.

On health care, the Mayor made the announcement that 10,000 people have now signed up for Healthy San Francisco. (By the way, that’s a Calitics exclusive, until it’s not) Healthy San Francisco is an innovative single payer lite program built by the Mayor and Supervisor Tom Ammiano. It brings the focus back onto preventive care rather than constantly chasing our tails on acute care. We discussed ABx1 and the hope that we can salvage some of the good parts of that bill. Of course, ABx1 is similar to Senator Clinton’s plan, so we took some time to discuss that as well.

On marriage, the Mayor came out swinging. I was prepared to tease the 2004 post-election finger-pointing out, but he came right out with it. And added that separate but equal, is just not equal. We’ve moved a tremendous distance since 2004 even, when President Bill Clinton told Howard Dean that he had disqualified himself from being president simply for passing civil unions, to where we are now where civil unions are a consensus viewpoint. The tide of history is moving quickly.

There’s plenty more on transportation, violence in the City, and affordable housing. At the end you’ll see my attempt to try to get him to talk about his electoral future. No luck on that one. But one thing is clear, Mayor Newsom is trying to position himself as a progressive champion of the California party. While he’s sure to find some resistance here in the City (and there’s plenty), he’s saying the right things and voicing the right opinions to move himself to the left edge amongst such prominent politicians in the state.

At the Google Video page, you can download a video for your iPod or other mobile device.


A Downpour of Opposition to Governor Schwarzenegger’s Budget Proposal at Oakland Forum

Cross-posted on the California Majority Report.

It was overcast and dreary in Oakland today, and the dark clouds spread to Lake Merritt United Methodist Church during a budget crisis forum sponsored by Assemblymembers Loni Hancock (D-Berkeley) and Sandré Swanson (D-Oakland).

“I believe the drastic cuts proposed by the Governor would be devastating to the people I represent,” Hancock told the 100-person crowd. “The budget will define our values as a community.”

The budget as a statement of values was a theme repeated throughout the program. “We can have this conversation about numbers,” Swanson added. “But that kind of misses the point. This is really about values.”

Jean Ross, Executive Director of the California Budget Project, laid out what values are being put to the test in Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s budget:

  • Confronting education — a $4.825 billion cut to K-12 schooling. That’s a reduction of $786 per student;
  • Confronting health care — a $1.126 billion cut to Medi-Cal spending;
  • Confronting crucial social services for children and families — a $463 million cut to CalWORKs programs. The largest share of these savings would come from removing aid for 150,000 children in low-income households; and
  • Confronting crucial social services for the elderly and disabled — a $324 million cut to cost-of-living adjustments for cash assistance programs for low-income seniors and persons with disabilities in the SSI/SSP program.

To make matters worse, some of these cuts would take away federal matching funds. “What sense does that make?” Assemblymember Swanson pondered.

For more, including a discussion of the early release of prisoners, see over the flip…

As Assemblymember Hancock noted, California is the only state in the nation to both require a two-thirds vote in the legislature to raise taxes and grant the Governor line item veto authority. “This reminds me of the seven layers of Hercules,” Hancock said. “You have impossible barriers you need to cross before you get to the place you need to be, but if we don’t do that this year in California, we will find that this place is no longer the place it has been or we want it to be.”

Previous Schwarzenegger budgets in comparatively good economic times have relied on a combination of bonds, gimmicks, and already steep cuts. With a $14 billion budget shortfall this year, that will no longer be sufficient. Lenny Goldberg, Executive Director of the California Tax Reform Association, laid much of the blame on Governor Schwarzenegger’s revocation of the vehicle license fee and the Governor’s subsequent bonds to make up for lost revenue. Combined, these add up to $9 billion, nearly two-thirds of the budget deficit.

During previous deep red budget years, Republican governors Ronald Reagan and Pete Wilson combined a mixture of tax and fee increases and spending cuts to balance the budget. But this year, legislative Republicans and even our so-called post-partisan Governor have vowed to oppose all new fees and taxes. “The rational conversation on the tax side has been completely cut out,” Goldberg lamented.

On the issue of convincing Republican legislators to act more rationally in regards to tax and fee matters, Hancock and Swanson played good cop, bad cop.

Hancock emphasized that there are some genuinely rational legislative Republicans, even if their voting records suggest otherwise. She told the crowd that she has had Republican legislators approach her and say, “I know a really good tax loophole that you should cut. Of course, I can’t actually vote for it.”

Swanson was a bit less concilitary on the subject. “I can be just as irrational,” Swanson quipped. “I will not make cuts to Prop 98. I will not make cuts to after-school programs.” If Republicans insist on holding firm on revenues, Swanson made clear, then it’s up to Democrats to do the same on the services we care most about so we can finally have a “fair and rational” debate and make a genuine compromise.

Karen Hemphill, a Berkeley Unified School District Board Member, gave the best summary of why Democrats care so much about preserving education funding. The Governor’s proposal would take away revenue equivalent to a month in school for every school district in the state. That’s $768 less per child. At stake aren’t just pencils, textbooks or dodge balls. Education is the most important investment a state makes, she emphasized. Lower performing schools lead to lower performing students. Lower performing students will make less money on average, increasing their reliance on state services and decreasing their contribution to the tax pool. Lower performing students are also at a greater risk for falling into a life of crime, which of course ups the costs associated with courts and incarceration. “I don’t think many of us thought this was what was meant by the Year of Education,” Ross joked.

Hemphill also informed the audience that the district expects to lay off most of its counselors if the Governor’s budget moves forward. But she warned that Berkeley Unified School District is actually in better shape than most schools in the state, because Berkeley voters recently approved a parcel tax to help fund school programs.

The discussion on education costs frequently returned to the question of local government solvency. Assemblymember Swanson noted that much of the Governor’s budget simply shifts responsibility to the local level as an unfunded mandate. “It doesn’t go away; it just passes responsibility,” he said.

Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson gave a sobering breakdown of statewide city and county concerns. 50% of Oakland’s revenue comes from federal and state money, but this includes property tax revenue collected by the city and transferred to the state. And local governments’ access to local property tax revenue has been on the decline. Less than 25% of the county’s budget is discretionary.

Naturally, as on the state level, the services provided with discretionary funds disproportionately harm those most in need of help. If the Governor has his way, the services that will be cut include things like preventative health care, educational opportunities programs, job training, rehabilitation programs, prison deferral services, and the like. While the state may see a short-term savings by destroying these programs, Carson made a crucial point that is frequently lost in the blustering anti-tax rhetoric that frequently permeates in Sacramento and among the chattering class. Simply put, in the long term, these programs improve society and save the state money. Preventative health care stops illnesses before they become a huge financial burden. Programs to broaden educational opportunities and to provide job training help the children of poor Californians become part of the well-educated, higher tax-paying, more flexible middle-class. Drug and alcohol rehabilitation and prison deferment programs reduce imprisonment costs, help reform broken lives, and ultimately generate more tax revenue for the state. Schwarzenegger “clearly didn’t have an understanding of how his budget proposal would impact local communities,” Carson explained.

The Governor’s budget also includes a $372 million cut to the Department of Corrections, mostly through the early release of 20,000 inmates and a quickening of the parole process for another 20,000. While this proposal has received bipartisan condemnation, many progressives will be inclined to support this part of the Governor’s budget, because there are far too many non-violent offenders in prison who simply don’t belong there, and because our country’s incarceration system all too frequently creates hardened criminals where there once was a good chance at rehabilitation. But the panelists cautioned that early release alone is insufficient.

As Ross explained, “I know many of you probably think that’s a good idea, but the problem is those individuals would not have supportive services in the community to help them find housing, help them find jobs, and help them restart their lives in a positive way.”

“It is irresponsible to [release prisoners early] without some funds to help the counties manage,” Swanson cautioned.

“Many of those individuals we would like to have in our community,” added Carson. “But they don’t have the supportive services necessary to assist them.”  

But there is reason for cautious optimism on this issue. Hancock thinks we have a real chance to turn the budget lemon into public safety reform lemonade by including rehabilitation block grants for local governments in conjunction with early release. This would still save the state money and provides a realistic opportunity to permanently reduce the population in our state’s overburdened prisons.

Clearly, Governor Schwarzenegger wasn’t the room’s favorite person, but there was some praise for the Governor, sort of. While previous budgets have relied on “smoke and mirrors,” Ross gave the Governor credit for presenting a more or less honest portrayal of what the budget would look like without additional revenue. “This budget makes clear that California is facing a very serious challenge,” she said.

And there was some good news to report too. Assembly Bill 32, California’s landmark global warming bill co-authored by Speaker Fabian Nunez (D-Los Angeles) and then-Assemblymember Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills), is not particularly threatened by the Governor’s budget, because the California Air Resources Board has limited authority to raise fees without legislative approval. Indeed, the state’s budget wonks are looking into redirecting money from the general fund that Governor Schwarzenegger reserved for AB 32, since that money could also be generated via a CARB fee hike.

So where do we go from here? How do we insure that our values are reflected in California’s budget this year? Goldberg had some suggestions:

  • Tax oil producers. This would generate more than $1 billion yearly, and we are the only oil-producing state that doesn’t tax the oil producers;
  • Bring back the vehicle license fee;
  • Restore the top tax bracket that Governor Wilson abolished. This would generate $2 billion yearly, and those who faced the tax hike could even get a portion back in their federal tax returns;
  • Institute a tax on goods purchased on the Internet;
  • Find fees that can help relieve the general fund. Fees only require a majority vote, so they provide an opening for the Governor and legislative Democrats to increase state revenue without the support of legislative Republican obstructionists. He cited a carbon fee as one option;
  • Organize parents, teachers, and concerned citizens in Republican districts to fight against cuts to education. Schools in Republican districts tend to be even more vulnerable to state cuts to education, and it’s possible the pressure could sway some legislative Republicans to take a more nuanced perspective on taxes;
  • Get taxes on the ballot. While a legislature-approved tax initiative would also require a two-thirds vote, it is possible that enough Republicans could be persuaded to let the people decide their own financial fate; and
  • Support groups that wish to independently carry revenue-generating initiatives. Even if a tax hike initiative can’t clear the legislature, we should expect signature gathering to begin from concerned interest groups.

So those are some of our options. Where are we likely heading? Said Goldberg, “My guess is one way or another, we’re going to be fighting this out on the ballot.”