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Politics : IMPEACH GRAY DAVIS! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lazarus_Long who wrote (421)6/29/2003 2:09:24 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1641
 
California Politics:
California Gov. Davis Faces Recall Fight

URL:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,90684,00.html
Saturday, June 28, 2003

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Recall or resign -- those are the two choices opponents of California Gov. Gray Davis (search) are giving the Democrat as they continue to gather signatures and support for his ousting.

So far, Davis insists he won't step down -- recall or not. And while many big-name California Democrats say they aren't interested in the governor's job, they could feasibly have a shot if a recall election (search) is eventually held.

Davis was elected in a landslide in 1998, but his approval rating tumbled to 28 percent amid voter wrath over the state's energy and budget crises. He narrowly beat Republican opponent Bill Simon in his re-election effort last year.

"His support is evaporating," said Republican political consultant Sal Russo. "He just doesn't have the support that he's had as an incumbent governor."

The idea for a recall was raised by Republican activists after Davis' re-election victory. Proponents say Davis has mismanaged the state and lied to voters about the size of the budget deficit, projected to be as much as $38.2 billion by July 2004.

Rep. Darrell Issa (search), a Republican lawmaker representing Vista, Calif., has poured $1 million into the "Rescue California" effort to recall Davis. The goal is to gather the needed 900,000 valid signatures to put the recall on the ballot.

Recall campaigns have been attempted 31 times against California governors but none have made it to the ballot. Few Republican activists thought the latest effort would get so far.

Davis allies recently formed a committee and raised nearly $800,000 to fight it; supporters say they're prepared to spend up to $4 million.

"The people behind the campaign to recall Davis wear their partisan motives right out on their sleeves. An election was held. They lost, and now they want a 'do-over,'" Dan Terry, president of the California Professional Firefighters and who is heading the campaign supporting Davis, told the San Jose Mercury News.

Davis himself has begun speaking out against the recall campaign.

"It will move us backwards and cost the taxpayers $30 million," he recently told The Associated Press, referring to the projected cost of a special election. "It's just a bunch of affluent losers who are trying to spend money to throw this state into reverse."

As of Friday, recall campaign backers said they have collected nearly 900,000 signatures and plan a victory celebration on July 4 in Orange County, reported the Orange County Register.

"Darrell Issa supplied the fuel necessary. Now the rest is just mechanical," said Allan Hoffenblum, a Republican consultant. "It's not a matter of if, it's just a matter of when. And it's going to be a wild ride."

Issa, a car alarm magnate from the San Diego area who has set up a gubernatorial campaign committee, denies that he is funding the recall just to forward his own political ambitions, but has said, "I'd be very interested in being governor. I've made that clear."

Democrats who are increasingly worried about the recall said Issa's cash infusion looks like political opportunism by a man too inexperienced to be governor.

"He is someone who wants a position," said Rep. Hilda Solis, D-Calif.

Recall supporters have until Sept. 2 to collect nearly 900,000 signatures to get the measure on the ballot. They hope to complete the process next month to force a special election this fall instead of next March, when Democrats will turn out for the state's presidential primary.

California Democrats like U.S. Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer continue to oppose a recall, but could potentially join Republicans like movie star Arnold Schwarzenegger and Issa on the ballot if a recall vote is held.

"I'm doing my utmost to see that this recall is not successful," Feinstein said. "I believe it's one of the worst things that could happen to the state of California."

"Let me remove all doubt in anyone's mind about the total commitment California Democrats have to defeating this recall and to retaining Gov. Davis as the governor of California," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Many Republicans fear the recall could backfire and leave them worse off in a state where Democrats already control every statewide office and both houses of the state legislature.

If Davis resigns before 900,000 signatures can be certified, then Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante gets the job and the Democrats keep control of Sacramento's top political spot. However, that situation could end up in court, said election expert Richard Hasson, and a judge could likely have to decide when and if a governor under recall is allowed to resign and hand the job over.

"The California election law is not entirely clear on what it means for the recall petitions to be filed," Hasson said.

Recall campaign workers say they will continue to collect signatures through the holiday weekend, and will submit the documents to election officials as early as July 7.

"The bottom line is we're just about there," David Gilliard, a consultant to the campaign, told the Register.

But Davis political spokesman Roger Salazar was skeptical.

"They claim to have this huge surge but it took a couple of months to get to 380,000 signatures," he told the Register. "Whatever numbers they are using now are absolutely inflated. Don't believe all the hype."

Fox News' Adam Housley and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



To: Lazarus_Long who wrote (421)6/29/2003 9:42:07 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1641
 
An interesting article on The Terminator in today's LA Times. As the article points out, a recall election is probably his best chance. His personal life would probably be a uncomfortable factor if he had to face a long campaign. I was actually hoping that Arnold would do a another Conan before running for office. <gg>

Rise of the Politician Could Be the Sequel

He is coy about his plans, but if Arnold Schwarzenegger runs for governor, he may find that scrutiny trumps celebrity.


latimes.com t

By Michael Finnegan
Times Staff Writer

June 29, 2003

In his most famous role, Arnold Schwarzenegger plays a merciless killer robot in dark sunglasses who sprays bullets at people from a vast arsenal of guns.

Now, the Hollywood icon who built his tough-guy image as "The Terminator" is pondering whether to drop his 33-year film career to run for governor of California.

The timing is ripe: The campaign to recall Gov. Gray Davis could give him a chance to seek the job in unique circumstances with distinct advantages over a normal election, strategists say. But the allure of his celebrity candidacy has yet to be tested by the real-world rigors of California politics. The champion bodybuilder has yet to answer scores of questions that any candidate for high office would face. Above all: What qualifies Schwarzenegger to govern a state of 34 million people as it teeters on the edge of fiscal collapse?

In the last week, Schwarzenegger has chatted with Regis Philbin, Howard Stern and other national talk-show hosts to plug "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines," which opens Wednesday. In fawning interviews that political rivals could only envy, Schwarzenegger faced few serious questions. Instead, he shared his thoughts on plastic surgery (hasn't had any), nude scenes (lifts weights for weeks to prepare) and his diet (eats a lot of ice cream).

On NBC's "Tonight Show With Jay Leno," the host asked Schwarzenegger whether he would run for governor. When the shrieks and applause died down, he responded: "In a few days from now, I do have to make a very, very — probably one of the most difficult — decisions of my life: what to wear on my opening day of 'Terminator 3.' "

The audience laughed at his playful evasion. But if he runs for governor, Schwarzenegger will face pressure to lay out a concrete public agenda for a state with four times the population of his native Austria.

In broad terms, Schwarzenegger, who declined to be interviewed for this article, has long described himself as a fiscal conservative with moderate views on social issues, a standard Republican formula for victory in a Democratic-leaning state like California.

But on freeway traffic jams, offshore oil drilling, the fiscal crisis, smog, immigration, the state's electricity mess and other big issues, Schwarzenegger's ideas are largely a mystery. Democrats are already pouncing on the lack of specifics.

"It isn't enough to sign autographs and pose with screaming teenage girls," said Garry South, former chief political strategist for Davis. "What does he know about water? What does he know about how the sales tax is administered in California? Anything?"

Schwarzenegger advisors say that if he runs, he will respond to questions on public issues once the campaign begins. For now, they say, he is, in general, well-equipped to be governor, especially given the state's dismal financial shape.

"His character qualifies him," said George Gorton, his chief political strategist. "People, I think, are looking for someone willing to stand up to special interests, and who doesn't care whether they'll be reelected or not, and will bring the kind of solutions he's brought to business and charity."

Schwarzenegger, who lives in a Brentwood compound with his wife, broadcast journalist Maria Shriver, and their four children, oversees a business empire largely unknown to Californians, Gorton said. He owns a shopping mall in Ohio and a Boeing 747 jet that he leases to Singapore Airlines, along with a block of real estate in Santa Monica that includes the Schatzi on Main restaurant, Gorton said.

Schwarzenegger is also chairman and co-founder of Inner-City Games, a national network of after-school programs, and has been active in the Special Olympics. Last year, Schwarzenegger was the lead sponsor of Proposition 49, a successful California ballot measure that could steer up to $455 million a year to after-school programs. John Hein, a California Teachers Assn. leader who worked with him on the campaign, said: "I've learned to like him and respect him and know him as something significantly more than an actor."

As Schwarzenegger decides whether to run, state leaders face wrenching choices to close the record $38-billion budget shortfall that dominates the governor's job. While Davis, a Democrat, has proposed $8 billion in tax hikes and $18 billion in spending cuts, Schwarzenegger has offered no clue to how he would save the state from insolvency. With almost no exceptions, fellow Republicans in the Legislature have refused to raise taxes.

"It's one thing to go around and be a hero for the Inner-City Games and talk about how we need to help underprivileged kids; it's another to say there's state funding for this, and it has to be cut 30%," said GOP strategist Ken Khachigian.

Khachigian is overseeing the gubernatorial campaign of Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista), whose initial remarks this month on guns and other subjects sparked the kind of political troubles that Schwarzenegger could face once he talks about issues.

Schwarzenegger's contemplation of a career change comes after a string of box-office flops: "End of Days," "The 6th Day" and "Collateral Damage."

Despite his dwindling appeal as a star of new action movies, Hollywood producers expect the new "Terminator" sequel to be successful, partly because he is returning to his most popular role.

It's unclear whether the actor's decision on running for governor is linked to the movie's fate. But if it does well, it would raise his profile as a candidate; if it does poorly, it could signal that his superstar days are waning.

Although Schwarzenegger, 55, is coy about his political ambitions, Gorton and others on the team that ran former Gov. Pete Wilson's campaigns have been laying groundwork for the actor to run.

"I've seen candidates, and he looks like one to me," Gorton said.

Former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, a friend of Schwarzenegger's, said he, too, expects him to run. Riordan, who ran for governor last year and became the target of fierce television advertising by Davis, said the actor should brace himself for a vicious campaign.

"Things you think you should be sainted for, you're made to look like a crook," Riordan said.

Among Schwarzenegger's vulnerabilities, strategists say, are reports of boorish behavior toward women. In 2001, when the Davis campaign distributed an article from Premiere magazine accusing Schwarzenegger of groping and harassing women, the actor and his lawyer denied the allegations.

Schwarzenegger also faces an unusual political quandary on guns. In his action movies, gun violence abounds. In one scene from "Terminator 2: Judgment Day," he pulls a shotgun as long as his arm from a flower box and pumps seven shots into a uniformed police officer. (The cop is an evil robot who does not bleed or die.)

Daphne White, founder of the Lion & Lamb Project, a group that opposes the marketing of violent entertainment to children, said there was "a huge, inherent hypocrisy" between Schwarzenegger's film career and his support for youth programs.

"If you're feeding them this constant diet of violence and saying that's what a hero is — violence is fun, violence is power, violence is entertaining, violence is harmless, because you kill bad guys — then they naturally grow up with an intrinsic gut value that violence is OK," she said.

Gorton responded: "There's absolutely no evidence that violent movies cause kids to be violent, but tons of evidence that kids being left alone after school with no parental or adult supervision leads to violence."

Gorton said Schwarzenegger is a "moderate" on gun control, a perennial issue in California campaigns. But advocates on both sides of the issue are wary.

For now, it remains uncertain whether a Davis recall election will even occur. Recall supporters must meet a Sept. 2 deadline to gather nearly 900,000 voter signatures on a petition to qualify for a special gubernatorial election. The election could occur this fall or next March. Californians would vote yes or no on a proposal to bounce Davis, then pick from a list of candidates to replace him in case he is recalled.

For Schwarzenegger, a big attraction to running in a recall race is that he could bypass a potentially divisive Republican primary. His support of legal abortion and adoption rights for gay couples — both stands he has taken in recent years but not discussed in the context of a recall campaign — has already raised concerns among conservatives, the core constituency in a GOP primary. In 1999, he told George magazine he was "ashamed to call myself a Republican" when Congress impeached and tried former President Clinton — and said he would never forgive the party.

If he seeks the GOP nomination in 2006, Schwarzenegger could face a more conservative opponent. An eight-month race against a Democratic opponent would then follow the primary.

But a candidacy on the recall ballot would leave Schwarzenegger far less exposed; the campaign could be as short as 59 days. He also would start with plenty of money and an automatic edge over opponents who would be less well-known to voters.

Finally, the same political climate that is conducive to recalling Davis also is favorable to a candidate like Schwarzenegger who runs as an "agent of change."

"He's an outsider," said Democratic strategist Darry Sragow. "A lot of voters are fed up with what's going on in Sacramento and entertaining the notion of sending a message or shaking up the system."


Times staff writer John Horn contributed to this report.