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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (499065)11/26/2003 12:26:25 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Schwarzenegger turns terminator

Drastic welfare cuts to curb California's budget crisis

Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
Wednesday November 26, 2003
The Guardian

Programmes for poor, disabled and elderly people will be the first victims of budget cuts made by Arnold Schwarzenegger as he seeks to balance the California state budget.
Proposals due to be introduced yesterday by the new governor would scale back home care for pensioners and therapy programmes for mentally and physically disabled people, and reduce the number of people entitled to food stamps. Substantial job losses were also expected.

Mr Schwarzenegger's repeal of the state car tax, which had trebled licence fees, was introduced as soon as he took office last week and was warmly welcomed by drivers and the car industry alike. But it meant that a further $4bn (£2.35bn) had to be cut from the state's budget, which already had a $10bn deficit.

The reductions now proposed are the first sign of how the governor aims to close the gap. One cut of $385m would end home cleaning, care and transport for around 75,000 elderly and disabled people, according to the draft proposal published yesterday in the LA Times. A further $282m would be saved by cutting art, music and camping trip programmes for around 626,000 Californians with mental or physical disabilities.

Another $200m would be removed from recruitment programmes run by the University of California and California State University, requiring the institutions to make other unspecified cuts.

A potential $77m would be saved by freezing admission to a project called Healthy Families aimed at the working poor.

Money would also be saved by reducing the number of people eligible for food stamps, which are aimed at the state's poorest families.

Cuts would be made in the public transportation budget and another $19m would be found by ending the tax benefit given to people who agree to preserve their land from development.

Some mayors have already expressed concern that the repeal of the car tax would mean that money they had sought to pay for improved police services would not be forthcoming.

"It's almost like a necessary pain that we have to go through," Kevin McCarthy, the new Republican assembly leader, told the LA Times. "We have had a cancer growing on our budget and to cure this we are going to have to go through the chemo."

Democrat assemblywoman Jackie Goldberg attacked the proposals, calling them a "radical right" view of the world. The governor had promised a centrist, bipartisan approach, and has appointed a number of Democrats and independents to his team.

Mr Schwarzenegger, with the support of the state senate, has also moved to repeal a controversial law signed by the outgoing governor, Gray Davis, which allowed illegal immigrants to obtain driving licences. He had promised to overturn the measure, which had been attacked by conservatives but welcomed by many Latino groups, and threatened to take the issue to the electorate next March if the legislature did not back him.

On the penal front, Mr Schwarzenegger has so far proved himself to be to the left of his predecessor. He has granted parole to a murderer, something Mr Davis rarely did, and agreed to a more liberal interpretation of the parole rules.

This means fewer jail terms for non-violent offenders in technical breach of parole requirements.

The new governor has enjoyed a honeymoon with the electorate in the wake of his election - with his car tax promise seen as one of the keys to his success at the polls. Now he has the more difficult task of balancing the budget with what appears to be a substantial loss of jobs and services.



To: American Spirit who wrote (499065)11/26/2003 12:31:26 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
On Kerry, the kids are all right
By Scot Lehigh, 11/26/2003
CONCORD, N.H.

JOHN KERRY has just finished this month's relaunch of his presidential campaign, introducing himself to an assembly at Concord High School as the man intent on giving America a Real Deal instead of the Raw Deal George W. Bush has delivered.

So what's the verdict? Sara Eriksen shakes her head in disbelief.

``It was so cheesy,'' she says. Sara is a Norway native here as an exchange student, so perhaps her Scandinavian sensibility isn't yet accustomed to the tinny tropes of American campaigns.

And what do others think? Shoulders shrug.

``I thought he was ... OK,'' offers Rosie, who won't give a last name to accompany her Laodicean sentiments. Just OK? ``There were parts of it that were kind of sketchy.''

Now, high school kids may not be the world's most politically sophisticated audience, but they are authenticity meters - and today they have caught the essential artificiality of John Kerry, 4.0.

His campaign on the ropes, Kerry has gone the way of all Bob Shrum candidates. The man who once quoted Andre Gide in admiring his own complexity (``Do not try to understand me too quickly'') now finds that voters really don't get him at all. So he has entered the great consultancy cocoon and emerged as the most unlikely of pseudo-populists, a self-styled road warrior embarking on a bus barnstorming mission to reclaim the state that served as his primary toehold back before blunt, plain-speaking Howard Dean stole it away.

Truth is, the kids are right. Kerry's speech is underwhelming: Sometimes trite, often contrived, sometimes just plain dopey.

``Send them someone who offers answers, not just anger,'' Kerry implores. ``Solutions, not just slogans. So New Hampshire, in January, don't just send them a message. Send them a president.''

Thus it is that the man who has repackaged his campaign around a slogan - ``The Real Deal'' - so silly it sounds like he's promoting an Evander Holyfield fight has in four sentences offered three cliched catch phrases, the last recycled from Jimmy Carter's 1976 campaign. All while not so subtly accusing Dean of empty-calorie politics.

And Kerry had made the whole thing worse by reflexively hitting the Washington windbag button, sprinkling the address with the tired tics (``I say to you'' and ``Let me make it clear to you'' and so on) of soporific Senate speechifying.

Honestly, watching Kerry speak and then file his candidacy papers at the secretary of state's office, you can't help but feel a little sorry for him. Jeanne Shaheen, the former Granite State governor, has added some star power, and her husband, Billy, has helped fire up a claque to clap at the State House, but Kerry looks drawn and exhausted, like a patient badly in need of a shot of Vitamin B-12 and two days' sleep.

A man who has always been a distant, fuzzily focused figure, Kerry is caught in the quicksand of a process that demands a more direct connection. And none of the symbolic ways he has tried to strike a common chord - the Harley rides, the hunting - has come off as much more than hokey.

Kerry's shot all along was to define the presidency up - as a job that required the knowledge, skills, and experience that were his special province. But though he has had occasional moments, he has never convincingly delivered that larger dimension to the Democratic campaign. Three new polls in Massachusetts, where Kerry has held public office for 20 years but where Dean now holds at least a slight lead, mark how far he's fallen since the days when his team tried to peddle him as the front-runner.

So now, like Bob Kerrey in 1992 and Al Gore in 2000, Kerry is defining his candidacy down in search of a populist common denominator, boarding the ``Real Deal Express'' with his entourage of ``Real Deal Road Warriors'' to bring his message to schools, firehouses, and other ready-made audiences everywhere.

Can Kerry turn things around? At some point in the next two months, he will almost certainly fire a TV torpedo at Dean, a televised ad attack designed to peel away the liberals Kerry desperately needs. Then we'll see if the former Vermont governor can truly take a punch.

But if Dean can and if Friday's tepid effort is the best the senator can muster, then it's hard to see how even Jeanne Shaheen's horsepower and Billy Shaheen's men can put John Kerry together again.

boston.com.