Here’s to 2010: The Top 10 Stories of the Year
As Tom Meyer presents his right brain look back at the political detritus of 2010, the left progressive brain types in our Department of Belles-Lettres and Fine Writing Done Cheap wish you all the best for a new decade with this update of our annual New Year’s column:
The hoariest cliché in the news business – besides Where Are They Now, the Irrelevant Anniversary yarn and frying an egg on the sidewalk during a heat wave – is the end-of-year Top 10 list.
And at Calbuzz, we’re nothing if not hoary clichés. Or maybe clichéd whores. Whatever.
As you find yourself face down in a bowl of gelatinous guacamole on New Year’s morn, trying to remember why you’re wearing rubber underwear and Raider wrist bands, here’s some bathroom reading, the Calbuzz Top 10 stories of the year, a 2011 primer for those who got drunk and missed 2010.
‘(Click the cartoon for a larger image)
GOP awakens the sleeping giant. From Steve Poizner’s demagoguery on illegal immigration to Meg Whitman’s serial mishandling of her own housekeeper scandal, Republicans worked overtime in the 2010 campaigns to alienate Latino voters throughout California. In the end, their no-path-to-citizenship kow-towing to the right-wing proved an utter disaster, as Democrats reaped big totals among the state’s increasingly crucial electoral bloc, which represented nearly one in four votes on election day.
eMeg’s secret diary. When a slow news day spurred our fervid imaginations to post a spoof version of Meg Whitman’s private thoughts, we had no way of knowing that it would become a case study of life in imitation of art. But her real-life treatment of the help, coupled with her corner-cutting business ethics and rules-don’t apply to me campaign style combined to transform the race for governor into a referendum on her character, which voters decided they didn’t much like.
The triumph of St. Ignatius. When a national political reporter asked Jerry Brown early in the campaign how he would deal with eMeg’s mega-bucks spending, the governor drew deeply upon his Catholic education and sniffed that he would respond with “Ignatian indifference.” His subsequent decision to essentially ignore Whitman’s summer-long assault on him, along with the aid of some independent expenditure advertising by labor allies, made Saint Iggie look like a genius as Krusty wrote yet another new chapter in the half-century saga of his political evolution.
Scientists measure standard quantum limit of money. Along with the rest of the political world, Calbuzz watched in endless fascination as Her Megness shattered all previous records for a self-funded candidate; desperate for a metaphor to help measure its ultimate impact, we turned to the field of theoretical physics. When the deal went down, Herself forked out more than $200K every 24 hours for every day she was in the race, and the only ones who had much to show for it were the vast legions of consultants and hangers-on who took her to the cleaners.
California’s got the blues. In a mid-term election when national Republicans opened an extra-large can of wupass on Democrats, contrary Golden State voters proved solid gold for the party of donkeys and jackasses. Amid waves of wise and well-intentioned advice on what they might do differently, state GOPers decided to double down on idiocy as they shunned candidates who might actually be electable and turned Senate wannabe Carly Fiorina into an angry, snarling parody of a right-winger mouthing political stands more befitting the state of Utah and proving anew that ideology is more important to Californians than gender.
Truth, no consequences. After death panels, the birther movement and the consistently sensational ratings of Fox News, we shouldn’t have been surprised that California’s airwaves filled to bursting with misrepresentations, half-truths and lies. Naifs that we are, it took a while to understand that we were witnessing nothing less than the death of truth in politics.
Don’t let the door hit you in the ass. There were few better examples of the truth-is-always-fungible politics than Governor Schwarzmuscle’s endless exertions aimed at portraying his years in office as an era of splendid success. In case you missed our in-depth one-word analysis of his record – FAIL – you can find more dispassionate and detailed, but no less damning, takes on the matter here, and here.
Tree huggers ascendant. Amid 12+ % unemployment in the state, some cynical smokestack types tried to reignite the economic growth vs. environmental protection conflict. California voters not only saw through the either-or argument on climate change but also broke off their brief flirtation with offshore oil drilling after the Earth Day Deepwater Horizon disaster led Arnold to abandon his ill-laid plans to award the first state lease in more than 40 years.
Reform on life support. Amid a trove of smart proposals for political, governance and budget reform, all the good ideas went exactly nowhere. Fueled by corporate cynicism, the contradictory views of voters and the steady transformation of democracy into a plutocracy the forces of the status quo won out yet again.
ABC: Always Believe Calbuzz. Reporting more than 3 million page views in 2010, an analysis by our Department of Weights and Measures advises that along with the heavily-hyphenated-meat-and-potatoes-sizzle-and-steak-cheeseburger-and-fries-day-in-day-out political coverage our readers look for, loyal Calbuzzers also count on our special-brand-of-journalism-you-won’t-find-it-anywhere-but-here-world-exclusive scoops, whether it’s the inside story of Jerry Brown’s secret eyebrow makeover, prize winning reporting on John Burton’s foul mouth or world-class forecasting on Major League Baseball (Giants win!).
With all best wishes for a happy and safe amateur night celebration, we thank you all for reading. See you in 2011.
Keep up the good work………very informative and very funny.
Happy New Year to your staff!
Tom Meyer has certainly capped the year – and topped himself – with this great cartoon! Thanks for all the memories, Calbuzz. Can’t wait for the next round in 2011.
Wonderful to watch Calbuzz grow and be recognized for the great work you do on the political scene. And thanks for including the PXP debacle as one of the top stories of 2010. Calbuzz took the time to get it right, review the material and prepare a smart story on the consequences of embracing new California offshore oil drilling.
When the deal was first trumpeted, I had drill-baby-drill Republican Assemblymembers dropping copies of the various news stories on my desk on the Assembly floor-saying-“See, even your people (meaning enviros) like offshore oil drilling.” It complicated my fight against what would have been the 1st new lease in CA Sanctuary Act Waters since the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill. Thankfully we were able to forge significant opposition to the badly flawed idea and killed it. But the threat of new drilling will always be with us. Again, thanks and have a fantastic 2011
Puzzles me why voters can see through corporate spending on environmental boondoggles, but not their efforts to buy the government for their own gain. Nor why they don’t see that the latter will almost certainly lead to more of the former.
Perhaps people just don’t care if corporations buy Sacramento, figuring corporate flacks can’t do the job any worse. Or perhaps that politicians are bought and paid for already, so what difference will it make. If so, I’m afraid voters are in for a rude shock. Corporate flacks can do a MUCH worse job given their increasingly free rein.