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To: KLP who wrote (6054)8/27/2003 4:08:20 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793624
 
Outsider's Quick Turn as Politician
Arnold Schwarzenegger hires a staff of insiders and is fund-raising like an old pro.
By Michael Finnegan and Joe Mathews
Times Staff Writers

August 27, 2003

Day by day, the outsider image that Arnold Schwarzenegger has taken pains to project is clashing with the reality of his campaign.

The gubernatorial candidate who vowed to "clean house" in Sacramento, after what he suggested would be a campaign financed with his own millions, has hired professional fund-raisers who are soliciting money from developers and other donors with a stake in state business.

His campaign is led by Sacramento insiders who ran the state for most of the 1990s. And Schwarzenegger, who has pledged to run a positive campaign, has not only pounded Democratic rival Cruz Bustamante for his politics, but also made fun of his appearance.

"He is another politician," said Larry Berg, retired director of the Jesse Unruh Institute of Politics at USC. "What he's found out is he's unable to keep up the facade: He wanted us all to believe that he wasn't."

The dissonance between Schwarzenegger's rhetoric and his actual campaign has caught the attention of opponents. On Tuesday, state Sen. Tom McClintock (R-Thousand Oaks), another GOP gubernatorial hopeful, tried to raise doubts about the actor's trustworthiness by citing the "spate of special interest money" flowing into Schwarzenegger's campaign. So far, Schwarzenegger has collected at least $1.4 million from outside donors.

"He pledged that he would not be raising money from special interests, and now he's getting money from every special interest in the state, including some of the biggest land developers in California," McClintock said on CNN. "So he's already broken that pledge."

When Schwarzenegger launched his campaign three weeks ago, he repeatedly called himself an outsider who would reform the system in Sacramento. Since then, he has returned to that theme at nearly every campaign appearance, saying he could not be bought by special interests.

"I am rich enough that I don't have to take anyone's money," he told CNN on Aug. 8. "I can go to Sacramento and I make decisions that are the wisest decisions for the people and not what is best for the special interests."

In Los Angeles last week, he said, "I am not taking money from anyone."

But Schwarzenegger has been raising money aggressively from donors with business before the state, including leaders of the agriculture, technology, wine and real estate industries, records and interviews show. The wealthy Brentwood actor has donated $2 million to his campaign, but has hired about half a dozen Republican fund-raisers to collect perhaps millions more. Among them is Kristen Hueter of San Francisco, a fund-raiser for President Bush.

Schwarzenegger plans to attend multiple fund-raising events next month. He is scheduled to collect money from wine industry leaders in the Sonoma Valley on Sept. 6. Agriculture donors will provide checks at Salinas-area events Sept. 10

Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper has invited major donors to "an intimate dinner with Arnold" on Sept. 22 after a VIP reception in Atherton for anyone who raises or contributes $10,000 to the actor's campaign.

The invitation, posted by Draper on the Internet, said donors who "max out at $21,200" ? the legal limit for candidate donations ? would be invited to a "special dinner at Arnold's home" after the election.

Robert M. Stern, co-author of the campaign money reforms adopted by California voters in 1974, said Schwarzenegger's fund-raising contradicts his pledge to take on special interests.

"It gets them access to him," Stern said. "It gets them his ear. It may not get policy decisions, but at least they have an opportunity to present their case."

Marty Kaplan, director of the Norman Lear Center, a public policy center at USC, said in a recent interview that he was confused by the contradiction between Schwarzenegger's statements about taking money and his fund-raising.

"Is he saying that taking money is somehow different from fund-raising?" Kaplan said. "It's as though he is saying: 'It depends on what the definition of fund-raising is.' "

He noted that Schwarzenegger's Hollywood supporters could be called special interests because they lobby in Sacramento on legislation affecting their industry: "This for me is a big issue."

Schwarzenegger acknowledged in a radio interview Tuesday that he was "getting money from various different corporations, various different individuals and all those things."

"But what I'm saying is that it's wrong to take money, for instance, from the unions, for instance, when you know you're going to have to negotiate with the unions as governor," he said on KTKZ-AM radio in Sacramento. "It is wrong, for instance, to take money from the Native Americans when you negotiate with the Native Americans. I think any of those kind of real powerful special interests, if you take money from them, you owe them something."

He was referring to groups that have contributed to his rivals.

Schwarzenegger spokesman Rob Stutzman said the actor was "not participating in the special interest game," as he said McClintock was. He also defended Schwarzenegger's statement Monday that Bustamante was "Gray Davis with a receding hairline and a mustache."

"It was jocular, and I think Cruz can take it, especially since his consultant was calling us names," Stutzman said. "I think the voters' notion of what a negative campaign is is much more dramatic."

Stutzman defended Schwarzenegger's hiring of Sacramento insiders Bob White, Martin Wilson and other veterans of former Gov. Pete Wilson's administration. Martin Wilson's consulting firm, Public Strategies, lists energy, telecommunications and financial companies as clients.

Stutzman said there was nothing inconsistent with the pledge to challenge special interests in the Capitol.

"He's drawing on the expertise of a very well-experienced, bright and creative campaign team," Stutzman said.

Schwarzenegger's critics say the candidate has been most like a traditional politician in his policy pronouncements ? promising billions of dollars in tax breaks and program expansions without naming any specific cuts to offset what is already a shortfall of at least $8 billion.

"He has turned into the most conventional of political people that I've seen in a long time," said Bill Carrick, a Democratic strategist who is sitting out the recall campaign. "It is a campaign devoid of taking any risk on issues whatsoever."

[latimes.com]
latimes.com



To: KLP who wrote (6054)8/27/2003 9:46:40 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793624
 
The "Chicken Noodle Network" gets slammed.

Prime-time defector takes shots at CNN
Fox News' Van Susteren says situation at former employer 'is a disgrace.'

By CAROLINE WILBERT
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Greta Van Susteren's book tackles a range of issues.

Nearly two years after Greta Van Susteren defected from CNN to archrival Fox News, she has plenty to say about her former employer -- and not much good.

"What happened to CNN is a disgrace," Van Susteren said in an interview to promote her new book, "My Turn at the Bully Pulpit."

The problems at CNN, she said, started when parent company Time Warner merged with AOL and laid off employees. But she also criticized recent moves by Jim Walton, named president of Atlanta-based CNN early this year.

Van Susteren thinks Walton made a mistake by downsizing boisterous debate show "Crossfire" from an hour at 7 p.m. to a half-hour in the afternoon.

The show, she said, is one of CNN's "brands" and would play particularly well during the upcoming presidential election season.

"I don't know what Jim Walton is thinking," Van Susteren said.

CNN's prime-time moves also include bringing former Fox-er Paula Zahn to the evening anchor desk, but it still trails Fox by a wide margin.

CNN spokesman Matt Furman declined to comment.

It's not just Van Susteren's words that sting her old employer.

With an average of 1.8 million viewers so far this year, her 10 p.m. show leads the cable ratings race at that hour. CNN's Aaron Brown gets 1.2 million viewers, and MSNBC claims 499,000.

Van Susteren, a trial attorney, started her television career as a legal analyst for CNN in 1991. Her breakthrough moment came with the 1995 O.J. Simpson trial.

Van Susteren gave up her nightly news show on CNN for a gig at Fox in December 2001 -- just as upstart Fox drew ahead of CNN in ratings.

Van Sustern's book tackles a range of issues, from the death penalty to coverage of the Simpson case. And, yes, she writes about having plastic surgery when she moved to Fox, insisting that she just wanted to look younger and didn't expect all the publicity her makeover got.

Van Susteren said she left CNN even after being offered more money.

"I told CNN, 'Don't you get it? This is not about money. Don't you understand? I am not having fun here anymore. I can't stand what AOL is doing to CNN and its people, and I can't stand the atmosphere there.' "

Unlike Bill O'Reilly or other commentators on Fox, Van Susteren doesn't espouse strong conservative views on air. In her book, she says she got grief from people on both sides of the political fence when she switched networks.

"Everybody went nuts," she writes. "The conservatives hated me before they even knew me, and the liberals felt betrayed."

She added that her opinions don't match up with either network.

"I didn't agree with everything said at CNN," she writes. "I don't agree with everything said at Fox. I don't agree with everything my husband thinks, either, but I still love him."

Van Susteren admits to poring over ratings information daily, and she derides CNN executives' claims that they don't focus on the numbers.

"It's as transparent as a kid who can't dribble a basketball and pouts, 'Basketball is dumb!' " Van Susteren writes. "The folks at CNN may deny they're concerned about ratings, that they're above competition and focused solely on great journalism, but that's hard to believe when they spend $15 million to build Paula Zahn a new set!"

CNN has good journalists, she said, but Fox has better morale and it shows in the product. She gives credit to Roger Ailes, the well-known chairman of Fox News, for clear direction. "I know who the boss is," she said.

Asked if Fox has any vulnerabilities in the ratings battle with CNN, she added, "If Roger Ailes left, that would be disturbing to the company."



To: KLP who wrote (6054)8/28/2003 12:22:02 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793624
 
Arnold is "Libertarian Lite"

Schwarzenegger Tackles Issues on Talk Show

By William Booth
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 28, 2003; Page A04

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 27 -- Gay marriage? He's against it. Medical marijuana? He's for it. After weeks of skating around the hot-button social issues in California, actor Arnold Schwarzenegger today revealed his positions on a call-in radio talk show.

Schwarzenegger, the leading Republican in the race to replace Gov. Gray Davis (D) if he is ousted from office in October, described himself as "pro-choice" and said he would defend a woman's right to abortion services. But he said he is against late-stage procedures that some call "partial-birth" abortions.

On gay marriage, Schwarzenegger said: "I do support domestic partnerships." But he said he is against state-sanctioned unions for gays and lesbians. "Marriage should be between a man and woman," he said.

The candidate, who has been criticized by his GOP opponents for his vague positions and "sound-bite campaign," veered left and right and center during a rapid-fire question-and-answer session on the Sean Hannity radio show this morning.

As the actor laid out his positions on social issues, Davis signed what he described as the strongest consumer financial privacy legislation in the nation. The bill prohibits financial institutions from sharing with third parties details of consumers' balances and transactions.

"We all know that when California leads, America follows," Davis said. "We're putting consumers in control of their intimate financial DNA."

On the radio show, Schwarzenegger said he is opposed to giving a driver's license to an illegal immigrant -- a position supported by Davis.

Schwarzenegger said he is not against prayer in public schools. "I think it should be up to the schools," he said. But he noted that he is against school vouchers: "I think it's very important we work with the current system."

Drilling for oil off the California coast? "Absolutely not," Schwarzenegger said.

A ban on assault weapons? "Yes, I do support that."

Schwarzenegger heads to the more conservative central valley of California on Thursday; and in recent days, he has stressed the things conservatives like to hear -- telling radio listeners on an earlier talk show that he is Republican through and through, and restating his opposition to new taxes.

Schwarzenegger's positions are generally not a surprise, as his associates and friends have described his politics as those of a moderate, millionaire, Hollywood Republican who is married to a Democrat.

Schwarzenegger today took a shot at his Democratic rival, Lt. Gov. Cruz M. Bustamante, who advocates cuts in services and new taxes on wealthy citizens as part of his "tough love" plan to bail California out of its $8 billion budget shortfall.

"People have to realize that he's the same as Gray Davis," Schwarzenegger said. "It's the same mold; nothing has changed," he said. "It will be exactly the same, which is, 'Oh, we made a mistake; oh, we want to continue spending.' How can we continue spending money that we don't have?"

Schwarzenegger said he would raise taxes only in case of a state emergency. His GOP opponents have asked him to sign a pledge never to increase taxes. Republican recall candidate Peter Ueberroth, the former major league baseball commissioner, said on CNN today: "If taxes were raised in any way, shape or form for the little bit of money that would go into the budget, more jobs would leave the state and take those payrolls out of the state."

washingtonpost.com