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To: mistermj who wrote (6004)8/26/2003 3:03:22 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793639
 
Election (and Arnold) captivate the world's press
Editors worldwide seem more fascinated by the California vote than even a presidential race.

By Randy Dotinga - CS Monitor

The Austrians have landed. So have the Brits, the Japanese, the Germans, and even a Finn or two. Foreign journalists are invading the Golden State, sensing a sterling opportunity to expound on all things American: democracy, immigration, celebrity, and natural-born wackiness.

Back in Geneva, citizens are listening to sound bites of pornographer candidate Larry Flynt on the radio. Londoners have woken up to helpful reminders about what a "chad" is, and the French have learned that there was once a TV show called "Diff'rent Strokes."

"It's going to keep me going for months," says a gleeful Chris Ayres, a correspondent for The Times of London. He uses an expletive participle and the word "brilliant" to describe his joy at hearing of Schwarzenegger's candidacy.

But California's difficult straits were actually making news even before Arnold Schwarzenegger threw his loincloth into the ring. In Switzerland, where deregulation of the power industry is a huge topic, radio listeners have heard reports about California's electricity crisis. Sober-minded German and British newspapers, meanwhile, have monitored the state's slumping business climate and tried to explain why the home to both Hollywood and Silicon Valley could go belly up.

Then things went "fou-fou-fou" (crazy-crazy-crazy), as the French newspaper Liberation puts it. The recall got on the ballot, followed closely by two immigrant candidates - a muscle-bound man the British press likes to call "Arnie" and a Republican-gone-populist named Arianna Huffington, once described by a British reporter as "the most upwardly mobile Greek since Icarus."

Across Europe, radio listeners began marveling over Schwarzenegger's thick Austrian accent, which is detectable even to non-English speakers. "He even has a funny accent for Germans because he's Austrian. He has this little robot-like thing even in German," says German Public Radio correspondent, Kerstin Zilm. "There's a lot of people who make fun of him, but there's this fascinating thing that he seems to achieve a lot of stuff that he wants to."

In European newsrooms, editors went fou-fou-fou over the recall. But Jens Eckhardt, a West Coast correspondent for the German business newspaper Handelsblatt, is less than ecstatic. He has no interest in Arnoldmania, although his normally strait-laced bosses back in Düsseldorf have caught the fever. "I wrote a whole story about the about the recall without mentioning Schwarzenegger, and I got this feedback, 'Are you crazy? You've got to mention Schwarzenegger!' I'm trying to work the business angle, but for name recognition I have to mention him."

In San Francisco, Swiss National public radio correspondent Susanne Brunner has been producing daily stories about the recall since Schwarzenegger's entry. The Swiss "know who he is: the guy who plays Conan the Barbarian and the Terminator," Ms. Brunner says, although she's not sure if they also think of him as "Kindergarten Cop."

The Swiss have been fascinated by American politics since the Florida election debacle of 2000, Brunner says. Direct democracy is of huge interest to the Swiss. "We vote on fishing laws and once tried to get rid of our Army," he says.

But in Switzerland and elsewhere in Europe, foreign editors are a bit fuzzy on recalls. A few think they know exactly what the one in the Golden State means for the future. Clearly, they've been studying those Electoral College numbers. "In Germany, they get these strange ideas that if Schwarzenegger wins, it's Bush [back] to the White House" on the wings of victory in California, Mr. Eckhardt says. "I say, 'No, no, no, pipe down, this is what it is.' "

Elsewhere in Europe, newspapers are busy forecasting the future of democracy in the US. The recall "is only one expression, among others to come, of deep American discontent over their political institutions," intones Liberation, the leftist French newspaper. Andrew Gumbel, a correspondent for The Independent newspaper of London, predicts recall fever will sweep the US.

In Austria, the foibles of American politics have taken a back seat to the American way of life. Schwarzenegger, a hometown boy who has made good, is the talk of the country of 8.1 million. "He came as an immigrant to the United States with literally no money, he had to work on his way up, and he lives what we think of as the American dream," says Barbara Gasser, correspondent for the Austrian newspaper Kleine Zeitung and the Krone Hit radio network. "We still think everything is possible in the United States."

To one journalist, the prospect of a governor Schwarzenegger has a different type of global meaning. The election is a test of whether California voters will "fall for" a plot to put a movie action star in charge of a state in crisis, Gumbel says.

"In other words, once this is all over, either we'll be able to conclude that the world has become irretrievably superficial, or we'll be able to conclude that it hasn't," he says. "It's quite a watershed moment."

[The Christian Science Monitor - csmonitor.com]
from the August 25, 2003 edition - csmonitor.com



To: mistermj who wrote (6004)8/26/2003 6:13:51 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793639
 
Cruz Bustamante
The Democrats' backup plan.
By Chris Suellentrop
Updated Tuesday, August 26, 2003, at 2:15 PM PT

Cruz Bustamante's campaign for California governor boasts what is no doubt the most unwieldy URL in the short history of online politics: www.noonrecallyesonbustamante.com . It's an appropriately awkward name for an awkward campaign with an awkward candidate. Much has been made of the Bustamante campaign's shortcomings, both its message and its messenger: a short, bald, round guy (who bears more than a passing resemblance to the actor Jon Polito ) declaring that the recall of Gov. Gray Davis is an undemocratic power grab by election-stealing Republicans while simultaneously participating as a contender in said power grab. Bustamante's campaign slogan is basically, "Vote for me, I'm the worst-case scenario candidate!" Is he running for governor or insurance commissioner?

The Bustamante campaign appears to be the result of a late-night bar bet among political consultants: How many contradictions can dance on the head of a candidate? Bustamante is against the people who organized the recall effort (they're "hijacking democracy") but not the people who signed the petitions ("they're not part of some kind of a conspiracy"). He's opposed to the recall (or at least the "recall process"), but he hasn't endorsed Davis ("I think the governor can praise himself"). And it's not clear what exactly Bustamante dislikes about the recall process. He's not categorically opposed to ballot initiatives designed to thwart the results of the most recent election: He's declared that, if as governor he couldn't get his economic plan through the duly elected legislature, he would do an end-run around that whole electing-representatives process by putting his plan on the ballot for the voters to decide directly.

But paired with the carefully scripted ordinariness of his Unfrozen Caveman Politician persona (key talking points: "I'm a regular guy" and "I wasn't the smartest kid in the class"), Bustamante's message is providing him with a serious chance to become California's next governor. Though he was locked in a statistical tie with Arnold Schwarzenegger in a couple of polls last week, over the weekend the Los Angeles Times released a poll showing that Bustamante was leading the race with 35 percent to Schwarzenegger's 22 percent?well outside the poll's 3 percent margin of error. (Of course, there's a 5 percent chance that the poll is just wrong, but that's true with every poll.)

The secret of Bustamante's success so far is his ability to be both anti-recall and anti-Davis at the same time. By differentiating between the process of the recall and the person of the governor, Bustamante has managed to promote an unspoken campaign message that's effectively, No on Recall, No on Davis, Yes on Bustamante. On Meet the Press last week, Bustamante trumpeted his "different style" and "different way of doing things" than Davis. Later in the week, when reporters told him that his budget solutions sounded similar to Davis', Bustamante made subtle jabs at the governor to distinguish himself: "I've been in the Legislature. I understand the way budgets work. I believe I have a certain style and an ability to bring people together." The "No on Recall, No on Davis" strategy was never more apparent than when National Public Radio's Alex Chadwick asked Bustamante on the Slate-NPR radio show Day to Day , "Would you honestly prefer that Gray Davis survived this recall rather than becoming governor yourself?" Bustamante niftily dodged the question by ignoring the subject of Gray Davis while insisting that the "recall process is bad."

Quietly campaigning against Davis is old hat for Bustamante. During his 2002 campaign for re-election as lieutenant governor, Bustamante employed the slogan, "Leading California's new leaders." (If Bustamante was leading the new leaders, who was Davis leading?) During that campaign, Bustamante aired a TV ad that mentioned a Davis administration scandal over a $95 million software contract with Oracle, signed after Davis cashed a $25,000 campaign check from an Oracle lobbyist. The ad's narrator intoned, "Cruz Bustamante followed his conscience when he thought others were wrong." Bustamante told the Los Angeles Times of Davis, "He's an independent person?and so am I." Even after their joint re-elections, Bustamante continued to distance himself from the governor. He told the Sacramento Bee, "I'm not his yes man, and I don't know that it's helpful for a lieutenant governor to be the yes man."

The animosity between the two men dates to 1999, when they had a falling out over the Davis administration's strategy on Proposition 187, the voter initiative?since declared unconstitutional?denying government services to illegal immigrants. But to Bustamante's unquestionable dismay, Davis is now showing signs that he wants to kiss and make up. In the convoluted political logic of the recall election, the down-ticket candidate (Bustamante) is Davis' only chance at generating enough turnout among Democratic voters to withstand the recall. (If down-ticket candidates rely on the "coattails" of candidates higher on the ballot, what do up-ticket candidates rely on? Collars?)

The most damaging moment to Bustamante's campaign came not when Schwarzenegger declared that he would be back, but when Davis said Sunday on CNN's Late Edition , "Cruz is my friend." Bustamante's political reputation is as a nice guy, but he doesn't want to be friends. Being friends with Davis is an obstacle to getting a shorter URL: www.governor.ca.gov.
Chris Suellentrop is Slate's deputy Washington bureau chief. You can e-mail him at suellentrop@slate.com.

Article URL: slate.msn.com