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California's Al Gore
The American Prowler ^ | 4/3/02 | George Neumayr

Posted on 04/03/2002 12:31:58 AM PST by nickcarraway

California's Al Gore

By George Neumayr

Published 4/3/02 12:03:00 AM

"I'm not asking people to marry me," California Governor Gray Davis says. "I'm asking them to make a decision as to who they want to govern this state."

Even Davis' self-deprecation is fake. Davis is in low-ball mode because his polls ratings are so low. One out of three Democrats view him unfavorably, as do two out of five independents, according to recent polling.

California's Al Gore is simply seeking to neutralize his negative image through a little contrived humility. Last month he played the bragging veteran against the rookie Bill Simon; this month he is the humble workman against the risky entrepreneur.

This "Yes, I am a loser, but at least I am competent "tack can only work if Simon runs a feckless campaign. Davis knows that he will lose if the race is a referendum on his acharismatic, mismanaging governorship. So he is desperately trying to make Simon's "extremism" the issue. Never mind that Simon's interest in the so-called hot button issues -- affirmative action, abortion, homosexual rights --is nil.

It is not Simon but Davis who displays the positions and personality of an extremist. Davis has learned nothing from Richard Riordan's "pro-choice" monomania, which made Riordan almost sound like an abortionist, turning off even some liberal GOP women.

Davis is proudly hawking endorsements from extremist groups like the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, and, according to the Sacramento Bee's Dan Walters, recently suggested that health-care companies make morning-after abortifacients available without prescription.

Davis demands that Simon talk about abortion with the same level of fervor as he does. Simon hasn't risen to the bait, causing a nettled Davis and liberal California press corps to pout about Simon's unwillingness to address the issues that "concern Californians."

Shouldn't it concern Californians a little bit more that the governor who has wasted billions of their tax dollars on energy socialism wants to spend more of them on abortion?

Davis's extremism is seen on other issues. Pandering to the Hispanic community, he recently announced his support for legislation that would give 2 million illegal aliens the opportunity to receive driver's licenses. Davis, in a typically clumsy compromise, says the licenses should only apply to "work-related" driving, leading Gil Cedillo, the assemblyman who proposed the legislation, to say to the Los Angeles Times, "I don't think people care whether a man is driving to work, taking his family to church or to a medical appointment."

Ever the Clintonian hedger, Davis struck the compromise so that Californians won't label him a softie on anti-terrorism measures. "I believe we can fashion a bill which gives people who have been here for a while and are contributing to our economy the right to drive to work, and does not compromise public security," Davis said.

Isn't it a little extreme to suppose that people who broke the law to enter the state will only drive legally to their jobs, then pull over when headed for mischief? Davis's call to let illegal aliens drive legally to their illegal jobs is about as moderate as his support for letting illegal aliens pay $10,000 less at University of California schools than out-of-state Americans.

Politics, not principle, is foremost in Davis' mind. The Los Angeles Times reported last week that Davis "received an additional $251,000 from California's prison guards union earlier this month, only weeks after the governor granted the officers a pay hike of as much as $1 billion and fulfilled their wish by proposing to close five private prisons."

Prison guards will get a 33.76% phased-in pay raise, thanks to Davis's sudden appreciation for their labor. Davis says he is "philosophically" convinced that private entities can't measure up to the state in building prisons: "If we learned anything from this energy debacle, it is that private companies will do what's in the interest of their shareholders, and sometimes those interests are antithetical to the public. I see no reason why private companies should be in the business of building prisons."

Yet Davis's own state audits, according to the Times, "have given high marks to the five targeted private prisons," which "house a combined 1,400 low-security inmates, most of whom have been convicted of drug-related crimes."

Davis calls his state government an "above-board administration." It is more like a reelection racket.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: calgov2002; california; elections
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To: ElkGroveDan
Thanks for the ping on this. Vote Simon!
21 posted on 04/03/2002 3:57:13 PM PST by ZDaphne
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To: Clemenza
"Governor Davis: Proof that in California, the inmates actually get to run the asylum. ;-)"

Astute observation! LOL

22 posted on 04/03/2002 3:59:05 PM PST by ZDaphne
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To: nickcarraway
"I'm not asking people to marry me," California Governor Gray Davis says

Vote for Simon....he's NOT insane!

23 posted on 04/03/2002 4:14:32 PM PST by Lizavetta
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To: nickcarraway
Hmmm. If he's California's Algore, does that mean he will count and recount ballots in San Francisco and Los Angeles until he wins the election? Ugh.
24 posted on 04/03/2002 4:30:12 PM PST by altair
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To: Lizavetta
Make that, (positive):

A Vote for Simon is a Vote for Sane Government!

Sanity Yes! Vote Simon!

Always use good words to talk about your guys, use the bad ones to talk about the other guys. We already know the Dark Grey One is not actually sane...nor is the state gov't.

25 posted on 04/03/2002 4:48:31 PM PST by no-s
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To: nickcarraway
Davis is so unbelievable that if California hadn't elected Clinton twice I wouldn't believe that they would re-elect Davis!

I think that Davis is the single most vulnerable incumbent in the country. He is so extreme on every issue that I can't believe that the press is letting him slide. (Well, I believe it, but still!) Even on the issues that he's supposed to be "conservative" on, like the death penalty and parole, he's extreme -- he is so concerned about his image that he won't even consider that someone might have been wrongly convicted! While I think it's rare, it's possible -- you have to keep your options open in a free and just society.

Davis is about one thing and one thing only: POWER. Let's not forget that. And, because he loves power, craves power, needs power to survive, he will stop at nothing, at NOTHING, to win in November.

That's why we must pray -- and pray hard -- and work -- work hard -- to ensure that Simon wins, and that his margin of victory is solid, so the cheating and lying and scheming that Davis engages in will not impact the victory.

Go Simon!

26 posted on 04/03/2002 10:47:51 PM PST by Gophack
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