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Contributors
Jon Coupal- Columnist
Jon Coupal
is an attorney and president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers
Association -- California's largest taxpayer organization with
offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento. [go to website] [go
to Coupal index]
Play
The Initiative Card
It's time for Arnold to to make a move...
[Jon Coupal and Shawn Steel] 9/9/04
Two new polls show two-thirds of Californians approve of Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's job performance. That's more political
capital than any governor in memory has possessed. This extraordinary
popularity is based in the public's perception of Schwarzenegger
as an agent of change - as someone who is steering California
away from insolvency and back to its glory days. The trick is
using his political capital to make reality match this perception.
Yes, Schwarzenegger has some strong achievements his first 10
months in office, such as worker's comp reform and getting a
budget without tax hikes.
However, the multibillion-dollar structural deficit is expanding
again. Gimmicks and borrowing are no longer options. Schwarzenegger's
closing window for performing the emergency surgery state government
requires means it is time to live up to his moniker and start
terminating agencies and programs.
The governor's recently unveiled California Performance Review
(CPR) provides him with a detailed reform blueprint. Its implementation
would dramatically restructure state government and save taxpayers
as much as $32 billion during the next five years.
Arnold doubtless understands implementing the CPR is, politically
speaking, a tall order. While even a veteran Schwarzenologist
cannot predict what Arnold will do, both logic and the recent
shift in the governor's comments suggest he is prepared for a
political Gotterdammerung - or at least the possibility of one
- with the Democratic Legislature and its allied special interests.
Schwarzenegger really doesn't have any choice
but to fight for CPR. "Blowing up the boxes" has
been his central theme, and letting the CPR die would compromise
his ability to govern
by making it clear there is no goal for which he is willing to
bleed.
In recent months, even we had begun having such doubts. But
lately he is talking more like a boxer getting ready for the
big fight - baiting the Legislature with threats to reduce them
to part-time status. He has mused publicly about condensing the
CPR recommendations into a laundry list and qualifying them as
initiatives. As governor, he can call a special election and
fight it out at the ballot box in a campaign atmosphere in which
government restructuring is the sole issue. On one side would
be Arnold Schwarzenegger, whom 56 percent of Californians believe
acts for the public interest rather than special interests (according
to the August Field Poll). On the other side would be Democratic
legislators and special interests like the public employee unions
- neither of whom Californians hold in high esteem.
Rhetoric is insufficient. Opponents take threats seriously when
they can see your sword. Taking a leaf from his successful worker's
comp reform, the governor should immediately qualify a series
of initiatives implementing the heart of the CPR recommendations.
Our organizations are prepared to qualify such initiatives so
opponents of reform can be faced with the consequences of obstructionism.
The still-reverberating recall, the California Performance Review
and Schwarzenegger's exceptional political strength present the
governor with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to enact reforms
that will reverberate positively for decades. He is literally
the only California politician with the stature, popularity and
ability to hold voter's attention that will be necessary to push
the CPR's recommendations into law.
Ronald Reagan had his triumphant showdown with PATCO, the air
traffic controllers union. Margaret Thatcher emerged triumphant
from the violent miners' strike and broke the power of the national
trade unions. These were defining moments for both of these historic
leaders, microcosms of their willingness to tame out-of-control
government.
Fighting to implement the CPR with a similar
disregard for the political costs would be Schwarzenegger's "PATCO moment" and
earn him a place alongside Hiram Johnson, Earl Warren, Pat Brown
and Ronald Reagan as one of California's truly historic governors. CRO
Coupal is president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. Steel is director of
the California Club for Growth.
copyright
2004 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers association
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