Tag Archives: angelides

Angelides, Bowen, McNerney and the grassroots angels

Occasionally, in the process of blogging and writing about local politics, something arrives in your email inbox that just hits you over the head and spanks your ass.

I’d like to use this essay to share just that kind of experience with you. I hope you’ll find it powerful. If you’re anything like me, it will give you a real kick in the pants. By way of providing background for this email, I’d first like to address the political situation here, on the ground, in my home state of California…

Let’s face it, the races in California are tough this year. There’s no getting around that fact. Even my own personal top three are tough:

  • Democrat Debra Bowen is locked in a tight race with GOP incumbent Bruce McPherson for Secretary of State.
  • Phil Angelides is taking it to a resurgent Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
  • and Democrat and environmentalist Jerry McNerney is trying to topple, against all odds, entrenched GOP incumbent Richard Pombo in CA-11.
  • These are difficult, difficult races. But all three of them have deep political meaning and will impact the lives of every citizen of California for years to come.  In way of background, allow me five seconds to share my thoughts with you:

    Debra Bowen stands for election reform. She gets it. Further, Debra Bowen centers her campaigning squarely on that cause.  As countless activists have emphasized here in the netroots: there is nothing more sacred in American politics than one’s vote.  California deserves no less in a Secretary of State than Debra Bowen, and every Californian who cares about elections, should start caring about this race.

    Phil Angelides is a veteran California Democrat with a progressive core.  As California State Treasurer, Angelides initiated two programs that have impacted California families across the state. First, Angelides launched Scholar Share, a savings program that has seen 40,000 California families sock away $170 million for their children’s education taxed at the rate of the beneficiary, not the parent. Second, Angelides spearheaded the Extra Credit Teacher Home Purchase Program whereby over 1000 California teachers have purchased their first homes and put down roots in communites that might otherwise seen a revolving door of teachers move in and out. Home ownership, education, innovative programs run with sound fiscal oversight…programs that lend a helping hand to Californians willing to help themselves: these are the mark of Phil Angelides leadership and exactly the focus that California’s citizens can expect from Phil as governor.

    Finally, Jerry McNerney is in the race for Congress in CA-11 for two reasons.  First, as Jerry has proven, time and again, he’s in it to win. And second, the Democrats in California’s 11th district have kept this ardent environmentalist and engineer in the race. Jerry won the June 2006 Democratic primary over the DCCC-favored candidate with 53% of the vote. That story means something: California 11’s voters want Jerry McNerney and when the going gets rough, Jerry doesn’t quit. Two years ago the Cook report and Larry Sabato wrote off Jerry in CA-11: not this time. In 2006, with strong grassroots support and, critically, the active support of labor and groups like the Defenders of Wildlife Fund, Jerry is taking the battle to Richard Pombo in CA-11 down to the wire.  This election will come down to turn-out and grassroots energy in the precincts. It’s critical that the citizens and activists in CA-11 know that they have, in Jerry McNerney, a candidate who will never quit…not this fall, and not when he arrives in Washington in 2007 to provide real leadership for CA-11.

    ::

    Now, that’s the background for an email exchange and discussion I had with my friend, Matt Lockshin, of SayNotoPombo, expressing some of my thoughts and fears about all three of these races. When I wrote Matt I was brainstorming…I was trying to come up with a blogging strategy and rhetoric that would help all three of these candidates overcome a persistent problem I have with the California Democratic Party: timidity in going after the GOP and a failure to generate a powerful and optimistic message of hope that we can use to energize the grassroots.

    Matt wrote back, like all good friends do, and what he wrote in his email put me in my place. In fact, it was so powerful I asked him if I could share it with you:

    Paul,


    The obvious conclusion stemming from the Lamont victory is that the people in DC don’t know what the hell they’re talking about. Their “expert” pronouncements about the futility of fighting demoralizes a lot of the Democratic base. We need to convince people that every time they knock on a door or make a phone call for a candidate or issue, a little Democratic angel gets its wings.  

    You see, the point about the Democratic Party is that it cannot continue to be a party of people running for office. It must be our party. We need to see Jerry McNerney and Phil Angelides as our vehicles, not us as theirs. If we’re unhappy with the campaigns they’re running, then it’s our own fault. You think the Democrats in CA don’t have the power to go and rattle political cages and make our leaders address our issues in the way we need them to address them? It’s not about making them ideologues. It’s about ensuring that whatever latitude they have to stray from the Party line is latitude that we give them.  

    Of course, this isn’t how things are now. But that’s what will happen when people get invested in the Democratic Party instead of allowing themselves the luxury of simply being alienated from it all.   We can’t win by not trying.  But if everyone tries, there’s nothing that can stop us.

    -Matt

    That’s the kind of hopeful and fighting attitude that will help us win all three of these tough races. That’s the kind of attitude we Californians can take to every district in the State: whether it’s Charlie Brown’s battle against John Doolittle in CA-04 or Francine Busby’s effort to unseat Brian Bilbray in CA-50, or David Roth’s uphill insurgent struggle against Mary Bono in CA-45.  Hell, it’s the kind of thinking that should light a torch under every Democratic ass this fall.

    As Matt says, these are our races, these races are about us. And every phone call we make, every dollar we give, every door we knock, every block we walk is one more step in reclaiming this party for our children, our parents and ourselves.

    Matt’s vision of a little Democratic Angel getting its wings is funny and spot on.  I couldn’t not share it with you.  I hope it brought a smile to your face.

    I’m still frustrated and angry that with GOP opponents like Richard Pombo, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Bruce McPherson that we California Democrats are so lackluster at this point in generating public energy for our cause. But there’s one thing I’m sure of: if we do win in November, it will be because of the persistent and determined work of people like Matt Lockshin and thousands of grassroots angels across these United States.

    “College tuition fees were too low.”

    First Arnie admitted he has no plan to balance the budget, now he says he thinks our college and university fees are too low.  Isn’t that just extra-special?  Welcome to Planet Republican, where black is white and white is black and people get run over at zebra crossings on a daily basis.

    Schwarzenegger’s comments came during a campaign event in Sacramento Wednesday in which he was officially endorsed by several taxpayer groups. Schwarzenegger was asked why he raised college tuition fees during his first two years in office, rather than raising taxes on wealthier Californians.

    “Everyone had to contribute. This is very clear,” Schwarzenegger said. “But the college tuition fees were too low, in comparison to the rest of the country. So we raised it up a little bit.”

    California college fees rose dramatically in recent years. Fees at the University of California nearly doubled, rising from $3,859 a year in 2001 to $6,802 for undergraduates entering the system this fall.

    You gotta love that term “taxpayer groups” as a euphemism for “organizations that lobby for making the middle class pay more, so rich people can pay less.”  Last I checked, college students and their parents were taxpayers, too.

    last one folks – crashing the (pearly) gate – or pearls for phil part six!

    (One more call to arms from edrie (or in this case, pocketbooks). – promoted by SFBrianCL)

    this is my last begging hat in hand diary (ok, i’m hearing shouts all the way over hear sayin’ YEA!)  there are less than 24 hours before the close of the pearls for angelides contest.

    if you would like to have a chance to win the strand of pearls valued at over $500, go to the angelides contribution page and make a donation – the highest donation will net you these pearls.

    the rest of the donors are equally in the running for a second strand of pearls worth a minimum of $200.  all you need do to be in the running is make a donation.  send me an email letting me know how much and you’re in the race.

    more below the fold…

    for six days now, i’ve been explaining why i wanted to make a difference and help california return to the democratic fold with phil angelides elected to replace the buffoon, schwarzenegger.

    there is more at stake here than the governorship – schwarzenegger has already launched one attack on california’s blue status with his attempt at redistricting the state. fortunately, we were able to beat back that attempt THIS time.  we may not be so lucky the next go round.

    also, phil angelides is a REAL democrat – supporting the individual over the illegal rate increases by the hmo’s in california.  he will protect the natural resources of this state while pushing to enable greater movement toward renewable energy.  this benefits the REST of the nation and the world, not just those of us here in california!

    i am asking – no, begging you to take a moment and make a donation – i do not have cash – i cannot do this but i CAN reward those who help with a strand of pearls made by the humble mollusk and strung by me!  the highest donor will receive a strand appraised at over $500 with a 14k gold clasp – the random drawing will be of a strand worth a minimum of $200 with a sterling clasp. 

    it is what i have to offer california to make a difference.  how about you?  if you can’t contribute, please recommend this diary so that others might see it and have a chance to participate!

    to make a difference, send your donation here to the angelides campaign and email me at takebackcongress2006  at  gmail dot  com.

    i will wait for one more day to post the winners (on sunday) to allow for emails to reach me and for me to confirm that all are included.  the contest ends at 8pm tomorrow nite.

    thank you all for joining me!

    links to prior diaries on pearls for phil…

    #5: why phil? why pearls? why not!
    diary 4 or why i’m willing to give away $1,000 worth of pearls
    Daytime Edition: Win Pearls by donating to Phil Angelides! Part III 
    Pearls for Phil Angelides… Part TWO…
    with hat held out, i am here begging – but not for me!

    Angelides News Digest, Wednesday August 16, 2006

    Some excellent news: Dan Weintraub at the Bee thinks we’re starting to get traction with the message that after running as a moderate, then pushing the Bush agenda, Arnie can’t be trusted.

    But today’s top news, clearly, is the new detailed economic plan.  It looks like Phil may have caught Arnie’s team off-guard, because their reactive, same-old same-old response pretty much just recycled their talking points, with the dishonest, ever-inflating estimate of the cost of Phil’s plans.  (First $5B, then $10B, now $18B…  It’s sort of like McCarthy’s ever-shifting number of confirmed communists in the State Department.)  Combined with the other structural factors in play, the news coverage is beginning to get the message that no, Arnie is not a sure winner.  And despite his bully pulpit as incumbent, he’s lost control of the narrative.

    More on the tax plan, global warming, special-interest hypocrisy, and other news, after the jump…

    Phil’s plan on taxes resembles, I think, the successful progressive tax package that was pushed through in Virginia under Mark Warner (who presided over a shift from deficit to surplus, and left office with a 70% to 80% approval rating, depending on which poll you pick), and of course to Bill Clinton’s federal package.  I still think the question Republicans need to answer is:  Why would paying ’90s era taxes somehow cause businesses to flee California, when they flocked here in the ’90s, trying to get rich (many quite successfully)?

    Phil has continued to promote AB 32, the sensible, economically viable plan for addressing global warming, and the bill is making headlines.  The LA Times provides an excellent write-up on the state of play, and has weighed in against Arnie’s attempts to water down the bill by shifting power over enforcement to his own appointees, and adding a loophole that basically allows businesses to ignore the problem right up until the bill’s deadline, and then get the deadline extended because (surprise, surprise!) the standards can’t be met.  As the Times editorial board puts it, the strong version of AB 32 (supported by Angelides) isn’t a worrisome “job killer” like Arnie’s camp says.  The impact of global warming would cost us far more, in losses to our agriculture industry, the health of our citizens, and strain on our already-fragile water infrastructure.  Furthermore, forcing a shift to cleaner energy will probably create jobs due to the new technologies that will be developed, and the new companies that will be founded to commercialize them.

    Industries always fight new regulations, no matter how reasonable.  If our representatives in the government stick to their guns, the industries meet the standards, and make money doing so.  This has happened with auto milage standards, with all kinds of emissions standards, with the banning of CFCs…  So why do people buy this nonsense from lobbyists working for companies too lazy to innovate?

    Changing topics entirely: So, we all pretty much know that the Bush call to deploy the National Guard to the border, at a time when they’re already stretched thin (many personnel are in Iraq or Afghanistan, and what equipment is left has gotten run down thanks to Rummy trying to run a war on the cheap), is merely a sop to the right-wing base.  And we all know Arnie has flip-flopped on his attitude towards all this, first praising anything that keeps out the plague of illegals (including vigilantes), then reversing course when he realized he couldn’t win if he riled up the legal immigrants who vote (especially Latinos).  In order to make sure the Guard continues to have any personnel at all to respond to state crises, we’re now having to offer enticements and signing bonuses, just as the Army is doing.  I found this bit just too rich:

    Angelides, if elected governor, vows to support waiving college fees for Guard members, ensuring that members have health insurance, allowing up to 12 weeks of unpaid family leave to spouses of activated members, and offering tax credits of up to $2,500 to small businesses that pay their Guard employees while on active duty. His published plan does not estimate costs for such proposals or suggest a financing plan.

    Schwarzenegger also has been currying favor with soldiers.

    On Thursday, the Republican governor announced creation of a Governors Advisory Council on Military Affairs to help coordinate policy and form partnerships or programs to serve military personnel.

    So, let’s see…  We’re drawing an equivalence between actual, detailed proposals for education and financial benefits for men and women who offer their service to California and the USA, and an “advisory council” that will “help coordinate policy and form partnerships or programs”.  Is anyone reminded of “weapons of mass destruction program related activities”?  And how is offering education and financing — in the spirit of the G.I. bill — “currying favor”, as opposed to “good policy based on historical precedent”?

    We also got yet another reminder this week that Arnie’s attacks on special intersts in ’03 were hypocritical.  The money rolls in, the favors roll out, just like said.  Strangely, though, most of the people receiving the money, and giving the favors, have an “R” after their name.  And one of them sits in the Governor’s office.

    Tossing out yet another issue that is going unaddressed while an Actor plays governor on TV, the SF online alternative news source BeyondChron points out that, while Gavin Newsom has been making some progress with the Care Not Cash program (which builds on some of the more successful ideas from the Clinton-Gingrich welfare reform compromise), homelessness has completely dropped off the radar of the state and federal government.  What was that about compassionate conservatism?

    Lastly, just for the heck of it, here’s a picture-heavy writeup of last Friday’s rally.  Yes, we had as much fun as it looks like.

    Late-breaking addition: Equal-Opportunity Offender Arnie Insults LA Muslim Community.  Ah, the wonders of that GOP big tent

    Pearls for Phil Angelides!

    (An innovative fundraising idea! Thanks edrie! – promoted by SFBrianCL)

    Hello, all!  this is day two of the “pearls for phil” fundraiser that i first offered on dailykos on friday and have posted the offer again today!

    i am offering (personally, cuz i have no cash but i DO have pearls!) a strand of pearls to the person making the highest donation to the phil angelides campaign between now and friday, aug 17!  i am ALSO offering a second strand to be given to a second “winner” (taken from random drawing to include all those who donate ANY amount to the campaign during the same period!  all you have to do to be a part of this fun – raiser is to email me confirmation of your donation (as little as $5.01 will get you in!) and on Sunday (i work all day sat), i’ll pull the highest donor and then draw the second winner! 

    here’s what they look like——————>

    why am i doing this?  please check beneath the fold and i’ll explain it all!

    after reading neutron’s diary about the co chair of dianne feinstein’s campaign endorsing schwarznegger, i was livid!  i am tired of “big money” buying elections! i want to see elections return to the hands of the voters – for OUR votes far outnumber the ONE vote of the angela bradstreets of the world – the problem, however, is that our “money” doesn’t buy the same benefit!

    so, since i have little “cash” – it hit me! i have pearls!  i string them, i wholesale them, i HAVE them!  by making this offer, i am hoping that i can “donate” much more than my meager “cash” donation – i am hoping to be able, through you all, to raise much more money than i could ever personally donate and, at the same time, give something in thanks to those who make it possible for ME to “donate”!

    so, make a donation and you, too, could have a strand of beautiful pearls worth an appraised value of $500 or higher!  as i said on kos, i’ll even throw in that really nifty leather box to keep your new pearls safe and beautiful!  after you donate, send me an email with the confirmation (thank you) note from the campaign (or copied check – minus personal stuff) and you’re in the running!  my email is takebackcongress2006 at gmail dot com.  [privacy disclousure: NOTHING will be done with your email other than confirming and thanking you personally!  i promise!  won’t forward, won’t disclose, won’t tell!]

    good luck and please help california terminate the terminator by supporting phil angelides for governor!  oh, we DO have donations in, btw!  thank you to the wonderful folk who have sent money!

    i’ll post a new diary every day until the end of the “contest”.

    thanks, again!  from me, from california and from ALL of us who want to take back america!

    Angelides News Roundup, Friday August 11, 2006

    If you read the front page, you’ve already seen the pictures from the Take Back CA Rally.  It was fun, even if it was a touch behind schedule.  Those poor staffers were getting a little antsy, I think, with Howard and Phil both wanting to stop and talk with anybody who cared to chat, despite the heat from the lighting and the sardine-packed crowd.

    As a procedural note, I should confess that the datestamp doesn’t necessarily mean that everything I’m covering happened between the last update and the current one.  I use Google News Alerts on a few keywords (like Angelides, Schwarzenegger, and “California Governor”), and trawl the blogs for other leads…  I’ll be making an effort to focus on the freshest news, but sometimes an interesting item that’s a few days old will fall into my lap.  Also, I seem to have to compete with all the other sharp eyes here at Calitics, so apologies if somebody else is already covering an issue in more detail, that happens to float through the gubernatorial campaign.

    Actual news after the jump…

    Phil has stated his support Assembly Bill 32, which commits California to reining in greenhouse gas emissions.  The bill seeks to implement the recommendations of a panel Arnold created to investigate the issues of how CA would be affected by global warming, and what it could do, in an economically feasible way, to fight it.  Now that the bill is on the table, Arnie’s business backers are balking, and he’s threatening to veto if the Dems don’t water down the bill.  So much for being an environmentalist moderate.

    Highlighting another aspect of his comprehensive good-government plans — campaign finance, redistricting, and now lobbying and private-sector vs public-sector employment issues — Phil rebuked Arnold for hiring his gubernatorial chief of staff, DINO Susan Kennedy, as a campaign consultant.  Can we possibly believe that actions of our supposedly impartial, technocratic civil service are actually non-partisan, when they’re allowed to be on the payroll of a campaign?

    Speaking of redistricting reform, following Phil’s recent endorsement of the idea, there seems to have been a sudden call to action on this issue — possibly the GOP is seeking to use the cover of a Democratic endorsement to try to sneak through another dirty version of redistricting, or possibly they’re willing to compromise on a fair version in order to get the issue off the table.  The statements coming out suggest that some kind of alteration to the term-limits system might be wrapped up with redistricting reform.  I could link to individual stories, but Frank Russo already has a great round-up.  The Contra Costa Times offers a shorter summary of what’s going on — or at least, what’s publicly known thus far.  I don’t much like their suggestion, though.  I’d rather trust the redistricting process to be constrained by impartial mathematical rules — nesting districts, a limit on the number of “edges”, where edges are limited to long-standing political boundaries, continuous stretches of non-residential streets, bodies of water, etc — than by the goodwill of any set of people, even the CA Supreme Court.  The plan Phil has endorsed would make big strides in the direction of removing the overbroad discretion that currently allows partisans (whether in the legislature or on an “independent” panel) to make mischief like they did in Texas.

    Healthcare is continuing to show up in the news.  Phil had recently announced a package of HMO reforms, to reduce the conflicts of interest where they use delays, hidden fees, and so on.  And of course in almost every speech, Phil mentions that if elected, he would immediately move to cover all California children.  In a bold move, Arnold called a summit — I guess to develop a plan that he can then water down or veto, just like on global warming issues?  In the meantime, Democrats in the legislature are already moving on the issue.  Yesterday’s news mentions SB 1414, which simply requires large employers to provide all their employees with healthcare.

    More ambitious is SB 840, a universal, single-payer plan, using an 8% business payroll tax and a 3% personal income tax.  Taking into consideration that salary offers are lower because businesses factor in benefit expectations, the total 11% cost sounds quite reasonable; and of course reduced admin costs both on the insurer side and the healthcare provider side (they don’t need a fulltime person to deal with the plethora of insurance forms!), and the increased power to bargain collectively with healthcare and drug providers, would reduce costs.  Unfortunately, even if this makes it through the legislature, Arnie will almost certainly veto it.

    Healthcare was discussed on one of the house party conference calls with Phil during the primary.  He stated his firm support for universal healthcare, though he said he was not committed to any one particular method of getting there, expressing interest in the new Massachussets model (making health insurance a personal mandate, like car insurance, then providing a subsidy for those with low incomes), as well as mandatory employer coverage, and of course the possibility of straight single-payer.

    Yet one more issue where Arnold is trying to make headlines, while Phil and other Democrats are trying to make good policy, is the prison crisis.  Both candidates admit the need to reduce crowding.  Arnold called a special session to introduce some fairly  limited fixes.  The prison guards’ contract expired over a month ago, and Arnie’s administration can’t seem to get a new one signed.  Phil, on the other hand, released a real comprehensive package for prison reform over a month ago.  As on so many issues, we have an Actor, and a Leader.

    Angelides News Roundup, Wednesday August 9, 2006

    (Great work auros… – promoted by SFBrianCL)

    I’m going to see if I have the time to post a regular — not daily, probably, but every two or three days — Angelides news digest.

    To introduce myself, I am the chair of the Santa Clara County Grassroots Steering Committee for Angelides ’06.  Note that I am in no way paid or controlled by the campaign, nor can I speak on their behalf.  Opinions expressed herein are solely my own.

    That said, I’m devoting my spare time to trying to make sure Phil is the next governor of California.  If you’re in Santa Clara County (or even on the broader Peninsula), and interested in this effort, feel free to drop me a line at [email protected], to get on my mailing list.

    On, to the news…

    Last week, Bill Clinton came to town to kick off a fundraising drive.  Tapped out after the primary, the campaign is far behind, but it does seem to be raising money faster than Team Arnie.  Phil has already been successful in rounding up small contributions.  But a few of these big, multimillion dollar events will help fund the TV war.

    Adding to the previous good-government endorsement of Prop 89, Phil announced that he is in favor of redistricting reform, as long as it’s done in a principled fashion (unlike the blatant power grab Arnie put on the ballot last fall).  This really should be the final nail in the coffin of the canard that Phil is a “machine candidate”, because of his history of involvement in the mechanics of the party.  You don’t build a political machine by reforming finance and redistricting to favor citizen participation and even-handedness.  I don’t expect the meme to actually die; the lie “Al Gore claimed to have invented the internet” has never died, either.  But, the facts do speak for themselves.

    Over in Arnold-land, the gubernator torpedoed an effort to rein in the shady practices of some conservators, people who are supposed to administer the affairs of the elderly.  The LATimes did an excellent expose last year on how some conservators make a business out of fraudlently getting seniors declared incompetent, effectively imprisoning them, and stealing all their money; in some cases over the objections of the senior and their children.

    Also, it emerged today that Arnold’s “running mate”, Republican LtGov nominee Tom McClintock, has banked a good deal of funds through the good graces of Mel Gibson.  This isn’t too surprising, considering that McClintock’s campaign manager from the Recall election thinks religion trumps the Constitution.

    What’s missing from the coverage of the McClintock’n’Mel story, thus far, is any discussion of how Arnie has been trying to partner up with Tom to keep his conservative base happy, while simultaneously distancing himself from his 2005 efforts to push the right-wing agenda, and to return to a more moderate image with independents and conservative Democrats.  Why isn’t anyone talking about how ridiculous this is?

    Oh, wait, I’m asking for reporters to actually think, in the presence of a movie star, rather than simply standing their starstruck…  Never mind, then…

    Blogosphere: We need Kos like we need a hole in the head.

    Ever since the primary, Markos Moulitsas Zuniga, aka Kos, has been talking down the chances of one Phil Angelides for Governor. He was pro Westly during the primary and now he seems to be happy to talk down Angelides’ chances at every turn.

    We don’t need your pessimism, Kos.

    More after the flip.

    This is my official resignation from Daily Kos, a move which I have been pondering for months. I post as “MamasGun” on Daily Kos.

    For the past couple of months, I have been cut off from my Trusted User status on Daily Kos, just in time for a big wave of troll diaries and pie fighting over the Lamont/Lieberman primary. I thought this was an accident of the new website interface, which is a ponderous monstrosity that uses tons and tons of AJAX. When Google does AJAX, they do it with grace and in a way that doesn’t weigh down FireFox. However, when Kos does AJAX, it becomes a crashy thing that crashes FireFox quite often.

    However, I am not so sure now that it was an accident that left me without my “Mojo.” Since I have yet to get my “Mojo” back after two months of losing it, never mind that I have had many double-digit rated posts in the past two months, I am beginning to suspect that I had my Trusted User status taken away from me by Kos himself because I had the guts to call him on first his support for Westly in the primary and then his consistent anti-Angelides tone since the primary.

    What does he want to do? Does he want Arnold for four more lousy years? What is his freakin’ problem?

    If Kos put as much energy into cheerleading for Angelides as he does for cheerleading for Ned Lamont, Angelides would have all the “big mo” he could use. Instead, he brays, Eeyore-stylee, that Angelides doesn’t have a chance against the steamroller that is Herr Ah-nuld der Gropenfuhrer.

    Thing is, last time I checked, Kos is a Californian, not a Connecticut-person. What are residents of Connecticut called? Connecticut Yankees? See, I’m Californian, second generation Californian even, I don’t know. Anyway, Kos is from California. The Angelides/Schwarzenegger race is in his own freaking back yard.

    I don’t want Ah-nuld’s signature on my Masters of Social Work when I get my Masters in hopefully 3 years. I am freaking tired of his face and his attitude. I want that bastard OUT OF OFFICE. I would really like to see him drummed out of the state and sent back to Austria where he belongs with his goose-stepping Nazi-nostalgic buddies like former UN Secretary/Austrian Chancellor Kurt Waldheim.

    If Angelides loses, and Ah-nuld gets 4 more years to play Fuhrer here, the best goddamn role the hack’s ever gotten, then there will be more than enough blame to go around. I am not saying that Kos will be even an important person to blame for the failure: the way the campaign is going Angelides will have more than enough people on his staff to blame. But as the old ’60s saying goes, you are either part of the SOLUTION or part of the PROBLEM. And Kos is part of the PROBLEM right now.

    Arnold and Angelides on Prison Reform

    (An excellent review of the positions of both candidates. Also, check out jryan86’s blog, Berkeley Bubble, it’s quite good and has some excellent original analysis. – promoted by SFBrianCL)

    (Originally posted at Berkeley Bubble).

    On a recent drive across the Richmond bridge, while trying to focus on the immense natural beauty of the San Francisco Bay, I couldn’t help but stare at San Quentin prison, which sits at the northern end of the span. As I drove past this prison, I realized that I didn’t want to live in a state where state prisons continue to explode, expand, and become permanent, visible fixtures, of our cities and counties, and of the California landscape.

    Sadly, prisons have dominated our political landscape, and prison overcrowding has become a permanent problem.  On June 27, Arnold called for a special session to address the prison crisis in California, to deal with overcrowding of prisons.  As it turns out now, the Legislature will now consider prison reform beginning on August 7, 2006. And wouldn’t you know it, Arnold just happens to be running for re-election.

    Unfortunately, the Terminator’s solution to prison overcrowding is to adopt the same, short-sighted policies that our state has adopted to alleviate traffic on our highways and roads –just build more (lanes) prisons. And Democrat Phil Angelides’ policy proposals for prison reform aren’t much better, as one might expect, as he attempts to cautiously court (or avoid alienating) moderate and independent voters concerned with crime.  This is the problem with resolving crises in the middle of election cycles–political expedience takes precedence over viability and policy prudence.

    Read the flip for more about the the details on the various policy proposals for prison reform.


    Angelides v. Arnold on Prisons

    As this report from the Chronicle notes, Arnold called the special session in response to a special report by John Hagar, a special master appointed by federal district court judge Thelton Henderson to deal with use of force, discipline, and other pervasive problems among California’s 33 state prisons. In his report to the Legislature, Hagar highlighted serious problems with the administration of prisons and vast abuses on the part of prison guards, while noting that the state’s prison guard union has been an intractable obstacle to true reform.

      Arnold highlighted some of the issues facing the prison system:

    “He noted that a system designed to hold about 100,000 inmates houses more than 171,000, and more than 16,000 inmates are sleeping in gyms, dayrooms and other areas of lockups not intended for housing.

    Arnold also noted in his speech calling for the special session that in addition to alleviating prison overcrowding, he seeks to address the extraordinarily high recidivism rate here in the Golden State–apparently, it’s the highest in the nation, with 70 percent of inmates returning to prison after release. (Sounds like prisons aren’t rehabilitating most prisoners).

    And here’s Arnold’s plan–build more prisons:

    “The governor proposed a four-pronged approach: building at least two new prisons; enacting rules to suspend some state laws to allow the new prisons to be built quickly; shifting 4,500 female inmates from prisons to community-based facilities closer to their families; and opening new facilities designed to help male inmates adjust to life outside prison.”

    Building new prisons really isn’t a long-term solution to the state’s prison overcrowding problem–in the short term, it may alleviate temporary overcrowding, but in the long-run, it really just ensures that we’re going to expand the number individuals we sentence to imprisonment, according to this source:

    The problem is there is one solution put forward, and that is build, build, build. Increasing the number of cells will only increase the number of people in prison. “History teaches us that if you build them, you fill them”, says Rose Braz, national campaign coordinator for Critical Resistance, a prison reform organization
    .

    ***

    It’s the Prison Guards Union, Stupid!

    As on most issues, prison reform faces a major obstacle–interest group politics.  On this front, it’s the prison guards union, the California Correctional Peace Officers Association (or “CCPOA”) that has blocked, stalled and gutted repeated attempts at reform.  And while it looked Arnold “the reformer” had originally sought to combat the power of prison unions in his January 2005 State of the State address (proposing a new $6 billion corrections agency that would seek to counter the influence of the prison guards union and reduce incarceration rates), since that time, he appears to be backpedalling and catering to CCPOA. Check out this excerpt from a great article in the Ventura County Reporter:

    In something of a reversal laid out in this year�s State of the State speech and announced again with new emphasis on June 26, Schwarzenegger has proposed a $3.6 billion gift to the union � an expansion of the state corrections system, easing crowding by building two brand new prisons at $500 million each, shipping as many as 5,000 illegal immigrant prisoners to other states, and moving 4,500 nonviolent women inmates to community facilities closer to their families.
     

    The CCPOA loves policies that encourage new prison construction because it guarantees them job-security and income security.  So it’s in their interest to kill any prison reform that seeks to reduce the number of prisons, seeks to promote rehabilitation, or heaven forbid, seeks to reduce the number of prisoners in our prisons.

    Terminator denies this is politics–but check this excerpt from the Chronicle article :

    “Speaking at a conference of state district attorneys in Newport Beach, Schwarzenegger characterized jam-packed prisons as being in crisis and warned that courts could take over the system and “order the early release of tens of thousands of prisoners.”

    Again, echoes of a campaign of fear, from Pete Wilson’s 1994 anti-immigration platform of yesteryear. And what better place to talk about prisoners and crime than the bastion and heart of California conservatives–good ol’ Orange County.  Some of Pete Wilson’s old campaign advisers now advise Arnold, and I’m sure they’ve told him that prisons are a solid wedge issue that can divide Dems and undermine Angelides.  Sadly, spreading fear and scaring voters isn’t going to be productive in resolving this policy crisis… Courts ordering the release of more then ten thousand prisoners? Not going to happen.

    No matter what Arnold says or does, calling a special session less than six months before Election Day means that this becomes a de facto political maneuver.  So Phil Angelides has to weigh in with his own plan as well.  And while this one smacks of election-cycle calculations and considerations in its moderate to conservative tone, Phil’s plan isn’t that much better than Arnold’s:

    “On his first day as Governor, Angelides will immediately:

    Expedite hiring of staff for both prisons and parole
    Immediately increase prison capacity by opening two unused prisons
    Personally contact the federal judge who holds California’s prison health care system in receivership and schedule a meeting within 30 days
    Name the Cabinet Secretary and top-level managers at the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and give them 90 days to produce a prison recovery plan that will:
    A. Increase prison capacity by building new prisons and assuring completion within 3 years of authorization
    B. Improve and expand rehabilitation, education and job training
    C. Improve mental health and substance abuse treatment
    D. Provide a new focus on juvenile diversion programs
    E. Set a goal to take the prison health care system out of federal receivership by the end of Angelides’ first term

    Obviously, Angelides is trying to appeal to the center of the California spectrum in this election year, hence his emphasis on prison construction and capacity.  Here, Angelides isn’t that much different from Arnold.  However, parts B and C of his plan show a glimmer of hope, but again sound more like aspirational statements than detailed policy solutions. I’m not going to second-guess Phil’s campaign advisers on this one.  But I will second-guess the viability of these policy reforms–unless Phil  puts and emphasis on rehabilitation, education, job training, and mental health, his plan won’t resolve the current crisis.

    The Legislature is now slated to take up prison reform as part of the special session on August 7, following their summer vacation.  However, as this report details, the reform package adopted will have to be comprehensive, sweeping and meaningful, and not just a band-aid solution, to help quell criticisms that the special session is purely a politically motivated one designed to further Arnold’s re-election…

    How about Sentencing Reform?

    If the Legislature really wants to solve the prison crisis, they should pay heed to the recommendations of the American Bar Association and the Deukmejian commission, for starters.

    Here’s some of the ABA’s recommended reforms:

    -Lengthy periods of incarceration should be reserved for the most serious offenders, who present the greatest danger to the community;

    -Alternatives to incarceration should be provided to offenders who pose minimal risk to the community and appear likely to benefit from rehabilitation programs.

    The Chronicle also chimes in with its own suggestions:

    We have argued numerous times on this page about the need to revise the state’s controversial “three strikes” law. But we recognize that, especially in an election year, too few politicians are brave enough to touch laws affecting inmates with violent or serious felonies in their backgrounds.

    That’s why the Legislature and the governor should begin with reforming laws affecting inmates who commit nonviolent or so-called “victimless” crimes.

    And here’s the recommendations from the Corrections Independent Review Panel, which was chaired by former Gov. George Deukmejian. Unfortunately, although the CIRP “was originally appointed by Schwarzenegger… (it) has consistently ignored its cogent insights and recommendations”. (For the full Deukmejian report, go to this page. Here’s some of the key parts of the Deukmejian report:

    The Deukmejian report suggested providing inmates an incentive to reduce their prison time by increasing the “day-for-day credits” they could earn if they participated in a range of educational, vocational and drug-treatment programs. It also called for replacing the “determinate” sentencing system with one in which a judge would impose a minimum “presumptive” sentence and a longer “maximum sentence.” In order to be released after serving the shorter “presumptive” sentence, an inmate would have to complete a “program plan” assigned to the inmate on his or her arrival in prison.

    And it looks like some politicians in Sacramento are listening to the ABA and
    “We can look at bricks and mortar, but we have to look at sentencing reform and parole reform — that’s where change is needed,” said state Sen. Gloria Romero, D-Los Angeles, who carried unsuccessful legislation this year that would have amended the state’s three-strikes law to lessen the use of lengthy sentences for some non-violent offenses.

    So here’s the problem–it’s the politics of entrenched interest groups and short-sighted politicians seeking re-election that has really doomed prison reform thus far.  Furthermore, because our political process has become so reliant on the intiative process, with politicians often punting on controversial issues so that the public can directly vote on them, our state has enacted thousands of new laws on stiffer sentencing  and prison construction, but few that really address the root causes of what drives individuals to resort to crime and violence.

    Part of the problem here is California’s initiative process, which has helped churn out a criminal justice regime replete with a myriad of bizarre mandatory sentencing and parole laws that flood our prisons with prisoners, often for minor crimes, and keeping prisoners locked in due to a lack of rehabilitative policies and mechanism.

    The initiative process, which produced the infamous “three strikes law,” has created a system where wealthy interest groups roam about the political landscape like sentinels, destroying reform proposals through costly ad-campaigns which scare electoral majorities away from voting reform and leading them to support  short-sighted policies that they believe will provide them the most “protection.”  Few voters can often intelligently discern what particular initiatives will actually do given the complexity of prose used by drafters, so they look to campaign ads and direct mail for heuristic cues.  In short, interest groups have turned a process originally intended for reform, into a forum filled with confusion and scare-mongering, an environment no better than the smoke and mirrors of turn of the century insider politics.

    Ultimately, I do think we need to adopt policies that de-emphasize construction of new prisons, and emphasize rehabilitation and allevation of the root social causes of crime and violence.  If you’re interested in taking action on prison reform during this special session, check out this great website committed to ending the  spending spree on new prison construction.

    Conclusion

    What’s at stake here is a budget line item that just keeps ballooning out of control, one that threatens to rob California of economic vitality and balanced budgets…according to the Ventura County Reporter,

    Since 1985, the number of state prisons has increased from 13 to 33, all of them overcrowded every step of the way, and the state’s Corrections budget has ballooned from $923 million to $5.7 billion in 2004.

    And looking at the 2006 budget, we see that this number will increase to 8.6 billion!  The problem with constantly investing the public’s money in new prison construction is that prisons are a TERRIBLE investment from an economic perspective–they don’t produce much, and are mainly a drag on the state’s coffers and economy. (Plus, they’re really ugly and not-at-all-pleasant).  From an economic perspective, it is far sounder policy to invest in more productive sectors–such as research institutes and universities.  But unfortunately, due to poor planning and a lack of vision, California has gone down a dark and dreary road.  California has basically turned into a garrison state–one in which the number of state prisons vastly outnumbers the number of University of California campuses statewide.

    I think the issue of prison reform is both a matter of common sense, as well as an issue of deciding what you want California to look like 50 years from now.

    The next time you are crossing the Richmond bridge up to Marin, ask yourself if you like staring at prisons amidst the natural beuaty of our state, and ask yourself if you’d like to live in a state where prisons dot the urban and rural landscape.

    Read My Lips: Taxes aren’t the issue

    (The media is chasing Arnold’s Ball. Cross-posted on PowerPAC.org – promoted by SFBrianCL)

    So the big news today is Gov. Schwarzenegger predictably declaring he won’t raise taxes if elected for a second term this November. This is the problem (well, one of them) with the mainstream media. Why, I wonder, isn’t the headline “Governor promises not to balance the budget”? That is what is at the heart of this debate, and the relentless hammering on “not raising taxes” is only a convenient and politically expedient distraction.

    As the story in the Bee says, Angelides has talked about a plan to make corporations and California’s extremely wealthy pay their fair share in order to balance the state budget while providing for the needs of the state’s 37 million residents.

    But the mainstream media is playing right into Schwarzenegger’s strategy to make this election all about taxes. Give me a break! There are 7 million people in California who don’t have health insurance. The cost of living is skyrocketing for families, putting the typical California middle-class dream out of reach for millions of people year after year, and further squeezing those lucky enough to be living a middle-class life now. Meanwhile, wages remain stagnant for those at the bottom of the economic scale, under a Governor who has twice vetoed a minimum wage increase.

    These are the issues that matter to most Californians, and these are the issues that the media and the public must hold Gov. Schwarzenegger and Phil Angelides accountable to. Schwarzenegger can and will keep delivering his well-rehearsed lines about taxes in order to try to trick people into voting for him, but those of us who know the truth have to fight back.