WATCH THE NASCAR RACE ON SUNDAY – AND
CLICK HERE TO HELP END HUNGER IN AMERICA

Advertisement

Contests and
Sweeps

Southfork Ranch Travel Adventure Sweepstakes!

Enter now for a chance to win a Texas-sized prize pack. Do

politics & society
poll

Most Popular
Articles

Viewed

Recommended

Commented

California

Who Wants to Be the 'Governor of Gridlock'?

The next governor of the Golden State has his (Brown) or her (Whitman) work cut out

Everything about California is outsize—including its budget deficit, soaring unemployment and legislative gridlock. So too is the record-setting race to be the next governor of this tarnished Golden State.
    
Meg Whitman, the former CEO of eBay, spent a whopping $81 million in her first bid for office to win the Republican gubernatorial nomination, most of it her own money. That's about $53 for every vote cast for her. The 54-year-old billionaire said she's willing to spend $150 million from her personal fortune.

"After a successful 30 years in business, I have the unique skill set to lead California," she said.

Attorney General Jerry Brown has the advantage of being a Democrat in a Democratic-leaning state and one of California's best-known political figures. Brown became California's youngest governor of the 20th century in 1975 and is seeking to be its oldest governor ever at 72. In his first stint as governor, Brown was renowned for dating singer Linda Ronstadt, eschewing the governor's mansion to sleep on the floor of his bachelor pad and proposing such unusual ideas that he was labeled "Governor Moonbeam." As attorney general since 2007, he has been fighting against violent and environmental crimes.

"Everything I have done in my life has prepared me to fix the mess in Sacramento," Brown said.

He said he'll overhaul the budget-writing process—from getting the public more involved in the decision making to engaging with the legislature in December, earlier than in the past. He said "huge swaths" of government must be cut or taxes increased. And he said he will only raise taxes if the voters approve an initiative supporting a tax hike.

Brown has said little about what he would cut beyond legislative and gubernatorial perks, saying he'll consult with the legislature and public. "These things are going to take a great public debate," he said.

Whitman agreed the current budget process is broken, and also calls for starting earlier to develop a spending plan with the legislature. She supports a two-year budget cycle to encourage long-term planning, as well as a spending cap tied to the state's gross domestic product that would increase only when the state's economy grows. She said the spending cap would "enforce fiscal discipline" and avoid tax hikes.

She has proposed $15 billion in spending cuts. She would freeze hiring to reduce the state government workforce through attrition by more than 10 percent, or 40,000 workers.

"Just as in business, I will refuse to allow the state to spend more than what it takes in," she said.

Robert M. Stern, president of the nonpartisan Center for Governmental Studies, said both candidates are ducking real solutions.

"The candidates are doing everything in their power not to be specific because the more specific they are, the more votes they lose because there are few choices left that make voters happy," Stern said.

The candidates' choices are even more limited by the structural issues that stymied past governors, including a two-thirds legislative vote requirement for budget and tax approvals and a deeply divided legislature.

"Right now, we have a structure that requires exceptional leadership to get something done," said James Mayer, executive director of California Forward, a bipartisan government reform group.

In the past two years, voters have approved two AARP-backed initiatives—redistricting reform and an open primary—that may reduce divisions within the legislature. Another issue on the November ballot, Proposition 25, would lower the legislative vote threshold for budget approval from two-thirds to a simple majority.
Back to Article

Tell Us WhatYou Think

Please leave your comment below.

You must be signed in to comment.

Sign In | Register
Election 2012 Updates

Latest Delegate Count

Updated: May 22, 2012, 2012

Republican (1,144 needed to win)

Mitt Romney 1065
Ron Paul 119

Democratic (1,214 needed to win)

Barack Obama Unopposed

Delegate counts provided by the Associated Press

Discounts & Benefits

Note to see lawyer

Members receive a free, 45-minute consultation with Legal Services Network from Allstate.

Homeowners Insurance

Members can protect their largest asset and its contents with AARP® Homeowners Insurance Program from The Hartford.

ADT Home Security

Business owners save on NEW installation via ADT Security Services, Inc. Small Business.

Member Benefits

Members receive exclusive member benefits & affect social change. Join Today

Being Social

Featured
Groups

Politics — Current Events

Speak out on the issues and controversies of the day. Discuss

Issues & Elections

Civil, bipartisan discussions of today's issues and topics of national interest. Discuss