Category Archives: Arnold Schwarzenegger

Arnold announces opposition to Prop 82 (well, kind of)

Well, not opposition, but not endorsing, and definitely not “fantastic” (thanks Julia).

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s campaign said Wednesday he would not endorse a universal preschool initiative that filmmaker Rob Reiner has championed, citing the governor’s long-standing opposition to tax increases.

“Put simply, the governor does not support tax increases and is opposed to Proposition 82 because it will raise taxes,” Katie Levinson, communications director for the Schwarzenegger reelection campaign, said in a statement.(LA Times 4/13/06)

I can understand Schwarzenegger’s hesitancy over the tax increase; he is a Norquist-Republican after all (now, there’s a nice meme).  But, from what I understood, he had agreed to stay out of this race entirely if he wasn’t going to endorse it (more as a personal favor to Rob Reiner than anything else).  Well, I still haven’t heard anything directly from the Governor’s mouth, but I’m not expecting to.  He tends not to say much of consequence when can. 

If you want to endorse it, do that.  If you don’t, then just say that you oppose it.  Arnold needs to learn that Sacramento is not Hollywood.  You can’t just smile and say nothing.  He needs to be leader.  Or more accurately, we need a NEW governor who is going to be a leader. 

Arnold: You play a fine fiddle, Nero

(Is it time to think about something else? Well, here’s the governor and the environment… – promoted by SFBrianCL)

Time Magazine did a cover story about global warming a few weeks ago.  It was not a pretty picture.  We are heading for disaster sooner rather than later.  Bush can hem and haw all he wants, but there is no longer any serious debate about this.  It’s just not possible to find substantial peer-reviewed literature which says that man-made greenhouse gases are not at least partially to blame for the global warming that we are experiencing.  You try, go look.  (To save you time, I can suggest a starting place, The Guardian).

So, Arnold Schwarzenegger makes a good proposal last year to form his “climate action team”.  (CAT) And in response to this report, he began strong:

“The debate is over. The science is in. The time to act is now. Global warming is a serious issue facing the world and California has taken an historic step with the release of this report,” said California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. (Tiempo Climate Newswatch)

Very good governor.  But then he fumbles the ball and brings me back to Nero (it’s a good analogy for Bush).  He proposed a watered-down version of what the CAT proposed.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called Tuesday for California to become a national leader in combatting global warming but cautioned that the state should move slowly in imposing controls on industries that emit greenhouse gases, a step environmentalists argue is a priority.

“We could really scare the business community,” Schwarzenegger warned during a summit at San Francisco City Hall at which he called for programs to help companies cut the amount of carbon dioxide and other gases that scientists say cause global warming.
The governor’s comments caused one environmentalist to suggest Schwarzenegger was a “Jekyll and Hyde” on the issue. The matter could become the focus of a battle this year with Democrats, who are backing legislation, opposed by some big business groups, that calls for enacting emission limits on industry. (SF Chron 4/12/06)

Now is not the time to play half-games.  All the business and good economy won’t help us when our children can’t breathe You can’t bring your money with you to the grave.  We can’t afford to be a laggard in environmental issues, either as a state or a nation.  Already our failure to agree to Kyoto has made us somewhat of an international pariah on these issues.  California has the opportunity to take the lead on environmental issues.  We should do that as soon as possible in a truly meaningful way.

California News Roundup 4/11/06

California News Roundup on the flip. Teasers: Immigration, a little CA-50, a lot of rain, and some news on the gubernatorial campaign, and RAIN.

  • Some tallies from yesterday’s immigration marches: 25,000 in San Jose; 5,000 in San Francisco, with pictures; 10,000 in Oakland.
  • And there’s a fair bit of rumination about the consequences: Roberto Lovato on how these marchers are orthogonal to existing political understandings; From the CC Times (originally LAT), a thin piece on the possibility of backlash among conservatives (how would more be possible?); a thicker piece on the follow up by movement organizers; a piece by Earl Ofari Hutchison on the effect on black Americans; a contrasting news piece on the same thing; last, an interesting explanation of the difference in Latino political influence in Los Angeles and San Francisco.
  • Phil Angelides tells the SacBee he’s the underdog. Read through to the end to see the nasty, slash-from-the-right quote from Westly’s spokesman, and see if you can spot the half-truth. Edwin Garcia from the Merc puts together a pretty good summary of the Democratic primary race.
  • Dan Walters and Daniel Weintraub both think that none of the three candidates are really squaring with the people of the state on finances, nor that they’re all that different.
  • Schwarzenegger is announcing a global warming strategy (probably already has as of this writing). We’ll all have to have a look to see how different it is from the Democrats’ plan.
  • Rain.
  • Rain.
  • Rain.
  • California Blog Roundup 4/10/06

    California Blog Roundup is on the flip. Teasers: Arnold & George: a visual history, California Progress Report, putting one’s money where one’s mouth is, a day of canvassing, the benefits of vagueness, lots of Doolittle and Pombo, and a bit of immigration.

    This ‘n’ That

    • The California Progress Report continues to be a great outlet for content from progressive groups in California. Here’s an article on TV competition. And two different pieces from the CNA on Clean Money: One, Two. And last, a piece on the California Compassionate Choices Act — who do you want making your decisions: you and people you love, or some religious extremists you’ve never met?
    • Tom Hilton has some questions for anti-choice “moderate” Monika Rodman. I like this approach — make people deal with the legitimate consequences of their stated beliefs.
    • Kaloogian supporters in CA-50 either “canvassed churchgoers” or “stuffed flyers under windshield wipers” in church parking lots on Sunday, says the discussion at SD Politics. I thought Sunday was a day of rest for the faithful, not a day of politicking. Must have been some other Bible I read.

    Goobernatorial Race

    • EmilyD of Daily Kos found a whole buncha pictures of Governor Schwarzenegger and President Bush together. No, Arnold’s not a Bush Republican. Pay no attention to these photos or his campaign team.
    • Alliance for a Better California notes Arnold’s new ad, and says it ain’t surprising he’s running on his environmental record. It’s not bad (not awesome, either), and that’s about the only policy area where that’s true for the Governor.
    • Bill Bradley ruminates on the Angelides and Westly ad strategies. And, he does some math resulting in an opinion that Angelides will have to raise taxes to do the things he wants to do. Westly, by comparison, simply hasn’t disclosed how he thinks he’ll pay for what he wants to do, so he dodges that bullet for now.

    Doolittle, Do Less

    Tell Me Pombo, Pombo, Pombo

    • Say No To Pombo has an email interview with the three Democratic candidates for CA-11, asking them questions about the recent bankruptcy bill. Full o’ substance, and we like it.
    • Richard Pombo, ever on the lookout for a handout, is “sponsoring” Medicare Part D seminars using industry front groups to explain the program. Of course, if the program weren’t such a train wreck, designed to subsidize the pharmaceutical industry, one wouldn’t need industry front groups to explain it. The thing would just work.
    • Progressive 11th suggests that Richard Pombo should call the waaaahmbulance and stop blaming other people for reacting entirely appropriately to his badness.
    • Pombowatch thinks that you can place a lot of the blame for the salmon closure squarely on Richard Pombo’s enviro-hating shoulders — he ignored the structural problems on the Klamath, and chose to externalize the effects to fishermen while he helped the farmers in his district. Oh, and then he blamed the Endangered Species Act.
    • Defenders of Wildlife Action have a series of events, the first on April 15, 10.30 am, San Ramon Public Library for leafletting. Progressive 11th has a listing of other CA-11 events as well.
    Immigration

    California News Roundup, 4/10/06

    Todays California News Roundup is on the flip. Blog Roundup should come later today. Teasers: immigration, more on Westly payola (?), some oppo research on Angelides masquerading as news, CA-50, SacBee thrashing John Doolittle, global warming, salmon, rural roads.

    UPDATE: Somehow I forgot the story concerning voter registration fraud by Republican-hired contractors.

    California News Roundup, 4/7/06

    Today’s California News Roundup is on the flip. Teasers: Schmidt spins, Salmon season chopped, immigration mess, telco infrastructure in California, Angelides interviewed.

    Schmidt Spins

    • John Myers’ Capital Notes notes that Schmidt said both that the election will not be a referendum on Schwarzenegger and that Schwarzenegger will run on his record. Newspeak is alive and well in the Schwarzenegger campaign.
    • This AP article running on Inside Bay Area focuses more on the contrast between the Schwarzenegger team’s Bush-Cheney roots and their insistence that Arnold is not that closely tied to Bush.
    • Daniel Weintraub notes the number of attacks on Westly and the promise of negative campaigning, though without personal attacks from the Schwarzenegger campaign. That’s a promise, but not the promise it appears to be. The swiftboating of John Kerry was not done by BC04, though they didn’t stop it. Expect whisper campaigns and third party ads from people like the US Chamber of Commerce to do Schwarzenegger’s dirty work.
    • Oh, and Carla Marinucci does some steno work.

    Everything Else

    • The Pacific Coast salmon season will be drastically cut back this year, based on the decimation of the Klamath coho run by excessive damming and agricultural water use. At least it’s not closed, and there may be some remedies over the next few years. Local ocean-caught salmon will be expensive this year, but if you can afford it, support the local fisheries. Farm-raised salmon is not the same thing, and it’s not particularly good for the environment. Tom Stienstra has the rules for anglers. [Side note: the best coverage on this issue today was from the LA Times — not a fishing town paper. Odd, that.]
    • Something’s happening in the Senate on immigration. But nobody seems to know what. The SacBee says the bill is tanking. Knight Ridder (through the CC Times) seems more optimistic, but the quotes from the deport-them-all wing of the Republican Party are not encouraging. Either way, the proposal sounds like a mess, dividing up immigrants without a documented date of entry into different groups by length of stay with different citizenship tracks. And even if it passes the Senate in some form, it will go to conference committee, where the radical House Republicans will remake the bill in their image. Whatever happens, more marches are coming.
    • Fabian Núñez introduces a bill to allow telcos to compete with cable companies for television services. It sounds like a good idea — more competition and all that — but the devil is in the details (some of which are laid out in the linked article.
    • The OC Register has an AP syndication of an interview with Phil Angelides on a number of issues, with requisite counter-quotes from Westly’s campaign and former Bush adviser Steve Schmidt, now running Schwarzenegger’s campaign.
    • Steve Westly will be returning $15,000 in campaign contributions raised by a VC fund he later recommended to CalPERS.
    • The Chronicle has a brief piece on the upcoming renewal (one hopes) of certain portions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The three provisions up (1) require federal approval of new voting procedures in jurisdictions with histories of discrimination, (2) require federal observers in jurisdictions where there’s been intimidation of minority voters, and (3) require bilingual ballots in areas with substantial non-English speakers. These provisions affect different California counties to different degrees, but pretty much every county has the bilingual ballot requirement.
    • A new form of Generic Dan Walters Column may have been spotted: Structural Problem X exists. Blame Union Y for it, even though the problem results largely from the anti-government constitutional amendments passed in the seventies and eighties. Today, X = School Funding, and Y = the California Teachers Association.
    • This not important to anyone but me, but the Red Vic will now be allowed to sell beer.

    Belated California Blog Roundup, 4/6/06

    California Blog Roundup is on the flip. There’s a lot, as I’ve been busy with other things (mea maxima culpa). Teasers: Call to Action from Debra Bowen, Eric Roach, Busby campaign responds to NRCC ad buy, lots of CA-11, some CA-4, Schwarzenegger’s ratings and his campaign staff, clean money advances (slow boring through hard boards), more immigration, and a fun little potpourri of links at the end.

    Call To Action

    CA-50

    CA-11

    • Say No to Pombo has a great explanation of how the California Democratic Party chooses an endorsement in a primary, in the context of explaining how Jerry McNerney almost got the supermajority necessary to get the tentative endorsement, despite armtwisting on Steve Filson’s behalf by Dem officeholders.
    • SNTP again has an interesting discussion on the relative benefits of voting in the Democratic primary vs. voting for McCloskey in the Republican Primary, and the need for movement-building. It continues in the comments, so keep scrolling.
    • Progressive 11th reprints Jerry McNerney’s press release: he raised over $50K in the first quarter of the year. If someone has the cash-on-hand numbers and the Filson fundraising info, that would be great — we’ll add them. Otherwise I’ll go dig up the reports.
    • PomboWatch wonders if Pombo is using the House Resources Committee as some sort of personal vendetta against the environment.

    CA-4

    Governor’s Race

    Reform

      Don Perata supports AB 583, the clean money bill. Note that the current version is no longer just a display bill, but would have teeth. Time to really pay attention to this one.

    Immigration

    • Down With Tyranny starts a meditation with Dana Rohrbacher, swerves into punk rock, then back to Rohrbacher. Just go read it.
    • People who read the right-wing blogs will have read about Josh Denhalter, the SoCal high school student who staged an anti-MECha protest. Turns out he had some support from the Minutemen and from Save Our State — just a smidge nativist. Everyone should know who the Minutemen are. I have to admit I didn’t know anything about Save Our State. I’m not sure I’m a better person for knowing. Here’s one example of their thinking. And one should read the interchange on their forums where Denhalter asks for support. It’s enlightening. I particularly like that his location is identified as “Third World Cesspool”. Don’t know if he chose that or it’s automatic in the Save Our State forums. Either way, it says a lot.

    Everything Else

    California News Roundup 4/6/06

    News Roundup from the last couple days on the flip. Teasers? We don’t need no stinking teasers! Oh, alright then: Millionaires, Schwarzenegger, pay-to-play(?), more immigration, San Diego corruption, emissions, energy, salmon, water water everywhere, Prop 82, and earthquakes.

    Special roundup of news coverage of the Univision debate up next and then much later today, a belated blog roundup

    Pure Politics

    • The CC Times reminds us that only millionaires are running for Governor. This may be in part an unintended consequence of limiting contributions while allowing unlimited spending on a campaign from one’s own wealth. Of course, lifting the contribution limit will allow millionaires to buy their own candidates, so I fail to see where that would help. Sounds like public financing is the way to go.
    • Dan Walters thinks that 2006 is setting up the pool of California’s elected officials for the next big things. But isn’t that true of pretty much every major election?
    • Daniel Weintraub reports, mostly without injecting his personal biases, on a pending problem: a recent court ruling that initiative petitions need to be translated from English into the language(s) spoken by any large minority of the population of the relevant political unit.
    • Schwarzenegger’s approval ratings rising . . . some. This story is mostly notable for the Schwarzenegger spokesman pushing the “it’s a choice” message. Wouldn’t want Schwarzenegger to have to run on his record — no accountability for Republicans.
    • Steve Westly probably didn’t do anything really wrong when he suggested that CalPERS have a look at a VC fund that raised contributions for him (especially when one considers how little outside funding he really has. But still, it looks like pay-for-access. Public financing, people.

    Environment

    • There’s a lot of coverage of the global warming pollution restrictions being discussed in the California State Government. The CC Times has a good summary of the larger picture. There’s a nifty quote from an oil company lobbyist, who admits that “climate change is real”. Wow. After all those millions (and probably billions) of dollars spent by the oil industry attacking the science and delaying any effort to deal with the problem, now global warming is real. Of course, the oil companies don’t want do do anything about it, so that hasn’t changed.
    • In other news, moderate Republicans who aren’t in the pocket of the extractive industries seem to be educable on the problem. Now if only they’d buck the Bush-Cheney-Oil wing of the party and do something about it.
    • Re that issue, for example, see this SacBee editorial calling out the Bush DOT’s usurpation both of state regulatory authority and the EPA’s authority.
    • Vinod Khosla and Steven Bing are teaming up to sponsor a ballot initiative to tax the oil industry and fund alternative energy technology.
    • The looming salmon fishery closing has effects beyond just the commercial fishing industry. There’s a big group of people who fish recreationally and a lot of merchants who serve them.

    CA-50

    Immigration

    Water: Not Enough, Too Much

    • Generic Dan Walters: There’s a problem with X. Politicians need to stop listening to special interests and fix X. Today, X = Water Policy.
    • Non-generic Dan Walters: Local governments shouldn’t be able to freeload on the state’s liability for flood damages by building in known danger areas.
    • Some federal money may be coming to strengthen the levees.
    • And from a professor who actually studies, y’know, ecosystems ‘n’ stuff, a flood control plan that doesn’t rely on building artificial canyons or lakes.

    Other

    • Think tank doesn’t like Prop 82 much. And it doesn’t seem to be ideological.(Link fixed by Brian)
    • If the big one hits before we fix some (well, a lot) of stuff, the Bay Area is screwed. Oh, the Delta too: levees down, floods everywhere. And does anyone think that a Republican-controlled federal government will help us godless librul eleets, even if by some miracle, they’re competent to do it right?

    California Blog Roundup, 4/3/06

    Today’s California Blog Roundup is on the flip. Teasers: Old Clark, Immigration (but you have to say it with an Austrian accent), Policy Day, some Dems go without, Doolittle, a couple events, Issue 1 of The Daily Roach, money, and some nice photos.

    California News Roundup, 4/3/06

    California News Roundup on the flip. Teasers: Peter Schrag on California, Pelosi profiled, Schwarzenegger profiled, voter registration, Dean, salmon, emissions regulation, insurance, and of course, lots of immigration.

    Not Immigration

    Immigration