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Posted:
September 12, 2003
![]() Who Speaks for the People? Yes, Mr. Schwarzenegger could do more harm than good.
by John Kurzweil John Kurzweil is editor of California Political Review. Printer Friendly version The
drive to line up Republicans behind Arnold Schwarzenegger for governor
bears all the elements that reduced the California Republican Party
to a shambles by the end of the Yes were against taxes ... but, you know, property taxes are too low what? did we say that? no, no, we love Prop. 13, dont listen to that man behind the curtain If he says that again, hell have to do 500 sit-ups No, I wont sign any pledge not to increase taxes, though Californians are terribly over-taxed. Its just that I cant bring myself to say even that I wont add to their burden, much less outline a plan for relieving it. There could be an emergency, like a flood or an invasion from Mars; but, trust me, Ill clean house. To my friends and colleagues who support Arnold Schwarzenegger or who believe his election, despite his shortcomings, would strengthen the Republican Party, I must say I disagree. Hardly more than a few weeks ago, we all expected Democrats to hold the governors office for three more years so little did the prospect trouble Republicans that, had it not been for Darrell Issas generosity and foresight, the recall would have been left to fail for want of a cash investment relatively small considered against the vast resources routinely poured into California politics. But now, suddenly, October 7 is being discussed as though it were the last election we would ever see. I do not minimize
the critical issues at stake in the recall: on the contrary, it is precisely
because they are so important that I urge Republicans to keep matters
in context. A quick victory even supposing such a thing is likely
were Mr. Schwarzenegger alone in the GOP field, and I do not think it
would be but even supposing it were likely, I believe Weve been through this before eight years of it. Pete Wilson was going to create a powerful New Republicanism but left the California GOP a wreck, characterized by dysfunctional or non-existent Party organizations, a famine in new candidates, a collapsed grass roots structure, wracked by internecine ideological warfare, unable to register voters, raise dollars, or articulate a message (with notable local exceptions here and there where the Wilson influence had not penetrated or had been overcome). It added up to a one-Party, Democrat state. Wilsons New Republicanism wasnt new, and it wasnt, as advertised, fiscally conservative and socially moderate. It was opportunism. The governor publicly excoriated and privately betrayed fiscal conservatism as quickly and vehemently as social conservatism when either crossed his vision for his own career. He also adopted conservative themes when that served his purpose. One thing you can be sure of, a longtime Sacramento activist told me after Wilson announced support of some already-popular initiative to eliminate race preferences or bilingual education or benefits for illegals or something, it is already an almost certain winner. They never back anything until theyve tested it every way possible to make sure it will help Pete. Democrats are
in trouble and in revolt against Gray Davis for the same reason Republicans
rebelled against Wilson. Both governors made it plain they themselves
were their top priority, not issues, not base constituencies, not
the people who sacrificed to What is the message of the Schwarzenegger campaign? Tough talk when a restive public demands it, but, from beyond the limelight, one keeps hearing such things as that Arnold Schwarzenegger has tapped former Los Angeles Mayor Dick Riordan to create an issues team made up of experts on California policy to help his campaign develop specific proposals .... (Fox News, August 9) Need we re-hash Mr. Riordans policy positions, the man Sacramento Bee columnist Dan Walters noticed differed from Gray Davis only on points where the Riordan silhouette protruded to Daviss left? the man whose check book helped bank-roll (in the six figure range) Democrat campaigns against even sitting Republican office holders like George Deukmejian? In cold terms, the Schwarzenegger message is: elect me and you will have a governor with an R after his name. Beyond that, no guarantees, except, of course, that he jettisons the interests of at least two core GOP constituencies, pro-lifers and pro-gunners. That should please Democrats, especially those aware of the shellacking they took last year in the 80th Assembly District where a pro-life Republican defeated a pro-abort Democrat in a Democrat-gerrymandered, heavily Latino district. Mr. Schwarzenegger will not harvest the rich Reagan Democrat potential of Hispanic voters. Return to Republican civil war is inevitable under Mr. Schwarzenegger, just as the civil war was unavoidable under Wilson, a man who wanted to win as much as the Terminator does. A strong grass roots structure becomes an automatic brake on and embarrassment to a Party leader who opposes the grass roots political goals. When Governor Schwarzenegger, for instance, wants a tax hike, hell know Senator McClintock, among others, will rise in the Legislature, at Party gatherings, before reporters, and on talk radio to point out in detail how destructive to the economy and to GOP fortunes it will be. The governor will know that Mr. McClintock will be cheered by most ordinary Republicans, and by many other Californians, who will then think ill of the governor. So Governor Schwarzenegger, like Wilson before him, will counter-attack, adopting the usual clichˇs about rigid, right-wing ideologues stuck in the past, uncaring, unpopular, unable to lead, and the press will eat it up. I have seen it too much. The one way guaranteed to fill a news conference with reporters and generate lavish next day coverage was always to lambaste Pete Wilson. The Republicans attack themselves again story is always news. And it somehow magically pries opened the otherwise hermetically sealed (to conservatives) op-ed pages of the Los Angeles Times: slam the governor, or have the governor slam conservatives, and the page is yours. In the mid-1990s,
I organized a Capitol news conference with former U.S. Attorney General
Ed Meese to criticize a decision authored by state Supreme Court Chief
Justice Ron George. The room was packed, but despite our showing such
noteworthy items as that former Democrat Senate Leader David Roberti
agreed that George was The Schwarzenegger candidacy serves a variety of interests, some quite legitimate, others less so, but mainly it ignores the interests of the people of California. It serves the national interests of the White House and east-coast Republicans who believe Mr. Schwarzenegger offers their best chance of reading GOP Retakes California Governorship in the Washington Post and New York Times October 8, with the implication of dismay and demoralization for national Democrats and national momentum for the president and his Party on the eve of his re-election campaign. But the details for those of us actually living in California under a liberal GOP administration fall outside those concerns. It
serves the interests of members of former Governor Wilsons administration
surviving in the political wilderness since Davis took office who believe
Mr. Schwarzenegger represents their best
chance of returning to the state Capitol. And it serves liberal But it does not serve Californias people, and, by failing to do that, it ultimately guarantees failure for Republican political fortunes in California, certainly in the long run, if not right away. Successful politics in a democracy consists of a pact between political leaders and enough people to supply resources and votes sufficient to win elections. Wilsonian New Republicanism breaks the pact. Its return will smother the nascent Republican revival in Los Angeles, San Diego, and other counties, resurrecting the ideological wars and sending the creative, dedicated people capable of rebuilding the Party streaming again for the exits. The Democrats speak and act for their special interest supporters Davis forgot that, and he is about to be deposed as a result. Republicans speak for those oppressed and abused by the Democrats special interests: unborn babies, taxpayers, pro-family activists, freedom loving patriots, business owners and their employees, home schoolers, religious believers, families, young people looking for economic opportunities, seniors looking for secure retirements, kids and parents in the Boy Scouts, anyone who likes to drive a car or own a home in a phrase: ordinary Californians, the people. Pete Wilson forgot that, giving us our one-Party state. Reverting now to opportunism while forgetting about people will cost more than it will gain. One candidate in this election speaks for the people. He is a Republican and well known, a proven vote-getter who offers a genuine alternative to the Democrats. As the antithesis of the Wilson idea, he will rebuild the Party for all the reasons Mr. Schwarzenegger threatens to tear it down. Tom McClintock will get my vote October 7.
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