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California Governor Schwarzenegger launches right-wing agenda (Socialists are having apoplexy)
World Socialist WebSite ^ | Nov. 29, 2003 | Don Knowland and Andrea Peters

Posted on 11/28/2003 10:21:58 PM PST by FairOpinion

Within the first two weeks of taking office, California’s recently elected replacement governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, has unveiled a series of reactionary measures. In addition to laying out an initial $3.8 billion worth of cuts in social services, Schwarzenegger is calling for the implementation of a budgetary spending cap and a massive borrowing scheme that will ultimately lead to the gutting of public services of all kinds.

The Republican administration is seeking to provide big business with immediate benefits, while staving off fiscal insolvency by means of a $15 billion bond measure. This massive increase in state debt will enable Schwarzenegger to put off the most brutal cuts in social programs until after the November 2004 presidential election.

There are two main reasons for this tactic: first, to avoid provoking public outrage against a Republican administration in the midst of President Bush’s bid for reelection, and, second, to ease the way for the Democratic Party in California to collaborate in the implementation of the Republican social agenda. Democrats dominate both houses of the California Legislature and therefore it is imperative that Schwarzenegger bring a significant section of them on board in order to implement his policies.

The $3.8 billion in budget cuts proposed by Schwarzenegger over the next two years take aim at California’s most vulnerable populations. The proposed measures would restrict food stamp eligibility, eliminate art-based therapy for the developmentally disabled, decrease compensation for doctors who treat patients in the state’s health insurance program for the needy, reduce financial support for children in foster care, slash funding for the provision of in-home and transportation services for the elderly, and freeze enrollment in California’s health insurance program for poor children. In addition, $98 million in unspecified cuts would be imposed at the state’s public universities, and campus recruitment programs would be eliminated.

These proposals, announced last week, are in keeping with the path laid out by Schwarzenegger on his first days in office. On November 17, the day of his inauguration, Schwarzenegger demanded that the legislature restructure California’s workers’ compensation system in order to save employers and insurance companies an additional $11 billion, on top of an estimated $3 billion-$5 billion in savings enacted earlier in the year.

He reiterated his campaign promise to his corporate backers not to raise taxes, and issued an executive order suspending for 180 days executive orders that had been implemented by Governor Gray Davis, a Democrat, between the latter’s election to a second term in November of 2002 and his ouster in the recall election held in October of this year. Davis’ orders included a number of environmental regulations vehemently opposed by big business interests in California.

At the same time, Schwarzenegger repealed the trebling of the vehicle registration tax that had been ordered by Davis earlier in the year. Public anger over this regressive tax hike—which would have cost vehicle owners hundreds of dollars a year—was a major factor in Schwarzenegger’s successful bid to recall Davis and replace him as leader of the largest state in the US. In repealing the vehicle tax increase, however, Schwarzenegger increased the state’s budget deficit by $4 billion.

The spending cap proposed by Schwarzenegger last week would force lawmakers to cut state expenditures by 20 percent in 2004 alone. In addition, the measure would allow the governor to make further budgetary reductions throughout the course of the year should a shortfall arise. The spending cap would, in practice, annul a prior law mandating that approximately half of the state’s general fund be dedicated to education, leading to severe cuts in this area. It thus reverses one of Schwarzenegger’s key campaign promises—a pledge to protect education.

Schwarzenegger’s plan is to gain legislative approval for the spending cap and then place the measure on the March ballot. If the voters pass the proposal, the politicians can claim they are simply imposing the will of the people as they dismantle social services.

The $15 billion bond measure is being proposed by Schwarzenegger to deal with the state’s $14 billion deficit. Borrowing on this scale for general governmental obligations, as opposed to specified projects such as infrastructure and schools, is unprecedented. It will require payment of an additional $15 billion-$20 billion in interest and fees over the life of the bonds. This comes on top of another $27.6 billion in bond debt outstanding, plus an additional $23.2 billion in bonds previously approved by the voters. Wall Street is expected to impose stringent terms to handle the new bond offering, given the level of outstanding debt and the state’s budget deficit.

This plan to mortgage the state’s treasury is the height of hypocrisy for Schwarzenegger, who throughout his election campaign accused Gray Davis of “fiscal irresponsibility” and claimed that an audit of the state’s finances would reveal massive waste. On November 14, incoming budget director Donna Arduin declared that the results of her audit of the state’s books had uncovered no significant “fat” that could be trimmed without affecting basic programs.

The Democratic Party has already indicated its readiness to collaborate in the new administration’s austerity policies. Several prominent Democrats, such as San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, Los Angeles Mayor Jim Hahn, and Assembly Speaker Herb Wesson, joined Schwarzenegger’s transition team as a show of bi-partisan support. In addition, the new governor has sprinkled his administration with prominent liberal Democrats.

The Democratic Party offered no resistance to Schwarzenegger’s demand for a special legislative session to debate his borrowing and spending cap proposals. Last Tuesday, the state Senate, in which the Democratic Party holds a majority of ten senators, voted unanimously to support Schwarzenegger’s proposal to repeal recently enacted legislation allowing undocumented immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses. Not one of the six Latino senators could summon the political backbone to vote against Schwarzenegger’s anti-immigrant measure, which the millionaire film actor and former body-builder had made a central plank in his election campaign, in a thinly veiled appeal to anti-Hispanic prejudice. Instead, the Hispanic Democrats abstained.

Schwarzenegger is combining these attacks on the living standards and democratic rights of California’s working people with threats to bypass the legislative process and go directly to the voters for approval of his initiatives should the state legislature fail to fall into line. In this way the new governor is signaling his intention to rule in a quasi-Bonapartist manner, posing as an authoritative figure who is “above politics,” while in reality pushing an agenda set by the corporate elite.

The character of Schwarzenegger’s administration was foreshadowed by the manner in which he gained office. He obtained the governorship through an anti-democratic effort launched by right-wing Republicans to remove Davis. The recall effort, which was financed by Republican multi-millionaire Darrell Issa, started only three months after Davis was elected to a second term and barely a month after he had taken office.

Issa and his allies hired canvassers to amass the signatures necessary to get the recall onto the ballot, capitalizing on widespread disgust with Davis’ right-wing policies and disillusionment with the Democratic Party. Schwarzenegger ran a demagogic campaign, portraying himself as a tribune of “the people” rather than a tool of “special interests.” He refused to spell out his program and instead relied on Hollywood-style photo-ops and empty slogans to hide the reactionary character of his political agenda.

Just as it proved incapable of fending off the recall effort, the Democratic Party is proving itself incapable of mounting any opposition to the policies of the Schwarzenegger administration. The Democrats have no alternative social program to offer, since they are themselves beholden to the same corporate interests that stand behind the new Republican administration.

Schwarzenegger’s initial actions as governor and the prostration of Democrats underscore the need for the working class to build a mass political party independent of the two big business parties. These developments vindicate the socialist perspective advanced by John Christopher Burton, the candidate of the Socialist Equality Party in the recall election.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; US: California
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To: imhere; Admin Moderator
Are you brain-damaged or something? I told you last year to QUIT FREEPMAILING ME.

I have absolutely no interest in being penpals with a skulking little creep like you, who wants to whisper in people's ears instead of commenting publicly on threads like a normal person.

Now leave me alone forever. Got it?
61 posted on 11/29/2003 8:01:17 AM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: FairOpinion
I'm just wondering where all the McClintock supporters who called us everything from hicks to the antichrist for daring to speak a mildly supportive word about Arnie are.

Some of them are probably here already, being smug and hoping that memories are short. Or maybe they won't care how stupid they look.
62 posted on 11/29/2003 8:02:58 AM PST by The Coopster
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To: FairOpinion
I just hope this serves as an example to the "death before electability" crowd. 'Tis much better to have a so-called RINO in office than Gray Davis.
63 posted on 11/29/2003 8:10:02 AM PST by Spyder (Just another day in Paradise)
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To: The Coopster; Carry_Okie
"Lincoln once wrote that the only thing worse than paying off a large debt was being forced to pay off a larger one; exactly so."
64 posted on 11/29/2003 8:13:10 AM PST by SierraWasp (Recent studies indicate that everyday traffic is 4 times more deadly than combat has ever been!!!)
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To: The Coopster; SierraWasp
Some of them are probably here already, being smug and hoping that memories are short. Or maybe they won't care how stupid they look.

So sorry, I decided to let you have a little fun. Too bad you had to fall to stupid posturing. Here you go:

So, you had to go so far as to find a World Socialists party rag in order to make Arnold look like a fiscal conservative?

There, happy now?

Given the list of Arnold's appointments, you're the one with a short memory.

65 posted on 11/29/2003 8:26:31 AM PST by Carry_Okie (The environment is too complex and too important to manage by politics.)
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To: daviddennis
Amerigo, what would you do at this point?

Six things for sure almost immediately.

1)Use the bloody pulpit to pressure the feds into inforcing existing immigration law.

2)Use the bloody pulpit and the initative process to reform redistricting in California.

3)Use the bloody pulpit and the initiative process to repeal Prop 98.

4)Introduce another initiative, using the Prop 187 experience as a guide line, that substantially denies the public saftey net (education, health services and the legal system) to illegal aliens

5)Make an immediate, across the board, reduction in all public spending, including education, through the veto process, until the crisis has passed.

6)Return to the pre 1963 methods of funding and guiding public education. Return both the administration of and the tax revenues to support public education to the counties and local school boards. In other words, deny the Los Angeles School District access to the state general fund.

66 posted on 11/29/2003 9:14:17 AM PST by Amerigomag
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To: King Prout
:O)

67 posted on 11/29/2003 9:16:34 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (George Soros "MINOB": http://richard.meek.home.comcast.net/SorosRatsA.JPG)
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To: MeeknMing
Good one!

Now you neet to do something similiar about Traitor Hillary.

Hillary to Troops: Support for War Fading
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1030675/posts

"In a demoralizing message to U.S. soldiers serving in Iraq, visiting New York Sen. Hillary Clinton told them that Americans back home are growing increasingly skeptical of President Bush's decision to send them into battle.

Describing two meetings with G.I.s over turkey dinners in Baghdad, Sen. Clinton told reporters later that soldiers wanted to know "how the people at home feel about what we are doing."

Clinton said she told the troops, "Americans are wholeheartedly proud of what you are doing but there are many questions at home about the (Bush) administration's policies."

She also suggested that the U.S. could eventually lose the war in Iraq, contending, "We have to exert all of our efforts militarily, but the outcome is not assured."

68 posted on 11/29/2003 9:40:13 AM PST by FairOpinion
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To: Amerigomag
"well that now makes the left agreeing with the right. "

==

Doesn't it make you concerned to agree with the SOCIALISTS?
69 posted on 11/29/2003 9:41:24 AM PST by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
Socialist are calling Arnold "right wing" now.

I clicked around on the website where you got this article, and found they describe Gray Davis much the same as they do Arnold...

...the vote reflected the anger and frustration of workers and middle-class people over the policies of the Davis administration and the failure of the Democrats to provide any answer to worsening social conditions and growing economic insecurity. Davis, a model of the so-called “centrist” Democrat, embodies the rightward shift of the party as a whole over the past quarter century.

< snip- >

All that remains for the Democratic Party, its credibility shattered by its humiliation in the recall election, is to move further to the right and collaborate with the Republican governor in launching new attacks on the working class in California.
Lessons of the Democratic debacle in California
Barry Grey | 9 October 2003

I'll bet if I clicked around a little more, I'd find your World Socialists are also of the opinion Bill Clinton is on the right. Let's see...

Clinton offered as the greatest accomplishment of his administration the fact that next week he will submit to Congress the first balanced federal budget in more than 30 years. This announcement, and the bipartisan standing ovation that followed, deserves particular consideration. 

This celebration of budget austerity demonstrates how far the Democratic Party has shifted to the right, to the point where it now poses as the party of fiscal "orthodoxy" against Republican proposals to create a new deficit by cutting taxes for the wealthy even further.
Clinton’s State of the Union speech: The politics of illusion 
the Editorial Board | 31 January 1998

Yep. Only took two tries.

So, the folks at the World Socialist Website, whom you proudly proclaim call Arnold "right wing," also cite Gray Davis and Bill Clinton as examples of the rightward drift of the Democrats.

The Socialists have an odd threshhold for what it takes to be on the Right.

Not sure I agree with them.


70 posted on 11/29/2003 9:45:21 AM PST by Sabertooth (No Drivers' Licences for Illegal Aliens. Petition SB60. http://www.saveourlicense.com/n_home.htm)
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To: Carry_Okie
My sole point is that there will certainly be people here championing Arnold that were here "back then" making all kinds of knee jerk statements/accusations to those who didn't agree 100 percent with their opinion.

There are also plenty of you here who will be every bit as crass now, and I can at least respect an unwavering opinion, whether I agree with it or not.

So, you had to go so far as to find a World Socialists party rag in order to make Arnold look like a fiscal conservative?

There, happy now?

Given the list of Arnold's appointments, you're the one with a short memory.

I said nothing about Arnolds place on the Left/Right scale. So I don't know what this point of your post is about, other than bitterness.

71 posted on 11/29/2003 9:54:19 AM PST by The Coopster
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To: Sabertooth
Nice try.

But it's a long way from the way many here try to present it, that Arnold is NO different than Davis.
72 posted on 11/29/2003 10:02:50 AM PST by FairOpinion
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To: CurlyDave
Can anyone explain just exactly what "art-based therapy" is?

Overpaying the over educated to distribute paper and crayons.

73 posted on 11/29/2003 10:06:12 AM PST by StriperSniper (The "mainstream" media is a left bank oxbow lake.)
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To: FairOpinion
Nice try.

But it's a long way from the way many here try to present it, that Arnold is NO different than Davis.

Didn't say he was, but nice try.

I pointed out that taking a self-described socialist's word for who is "right wing" probably isn't edifying.


74 posted on 11/29/2003 10:12:54 AM PST by Sabertooth (No Drivers' Licences for Illegal Aliens. Petition SB60. http://www.saveourlicense.com/n_home.htm)
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To: FairOpinion
Thanks !

Yep ! I've been all over that thread since I first saw it. Hitlery is totally despicable ! Unbelievable !!

I have thought about making something up on hitlery similar to that. Somewhere down the road, it will come together, I think ...


75 posted on 11/29/2003 10:29:35 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (George Soros "MINOB": http://richard.meek.home.comcast.net/SorosRatsA.JPG)
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To: MeeknMing
Hillary in a tank like Jane Fonda?

Hillary arm in arm with Saddam?

Saddam's Fedayeen cheering Hillary's statements?

All of the above?

And I am sure there are many other good possibilities...
76 posted on 11/29/2003 10:34:12 AM PST by FairOpinion
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To: MarkL
... Maybe the socialists who are complaining the loudest about the cuts in spending will decide to get up off of their collectivist asses, and go do something for the people who they claim will be "victimized" by the cuts. Start collecting money and charitible contributions for the needy... Yeah, right... That will happen. Socialists are the most selfish and greedy people there are... By using the government to collect money and redistribute it, they don't feel any need to actually contribute themselves. And they generally don't. It seems that they're only generous with other people's money.

I wish I had this on a bumper sticker. I'd drive around Boulder with my lights flashing and horn blaring 24 x 7.

77 posted on 11/29/2003 10:34:54 AM PST by softengine (I want to live in Theory........Everything works there.)
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To: FairOpinion
Martin Sheen lost out. He is supporting Dean and worked for the "No on recall" campaign in Calif. He said Davis was recalled because "his image wasn't sexy."

Sheen also said that he didn't get into a "mix about Arnold" because he didn't want to offend the Kennedy family. Sheen is such a moron.

78 posted on 11/29/2003 10:38:12 AM PST by Dante3
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To: FairOpinion
Excellent ! Thanks ! I espcially like the ones about ...

--Hillary arm in arm with Saddam?

--Saddam's Fedayeen cheering Hillary's statements?

You've got the wheels turning now ! Thanks !!

I have a couple of errand to run right now, but when I get back, I might just start working on this ! haha !


79 posted on 11/29/2003 10:48:45 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (George Soros "MINOB": http://richard.meek.home.comcast.net/SorosRatsA.JPG)
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To: MeeknMing
Great!

Looking forward to your Hillary-creation. :)

Please be sure to ping me to it -- I wouldn't want to miss it!
80 posted on 11/29/2003 10:52:53 AM PST by FairOpinion
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