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Posts Tagged ‘Fox and Hounds Daily’



Swap Meet: Google Text Ads Meet Health Care Riots

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

stevepointingAt least he’s not defensive: Thanks to the anonymity-please Calbuzzer who forwarded a Steve Poizner Google text ad encountered during a no-doubt vigorous session of web surfing. It reads, in full:

“Be Well Informed in 2010 – www.StevePoizner.com –Meg isn’t the only candidate. See the alternatives.”

To which the alert member of the Calbuzz Insider News Tip Team smartly opines: “A little defensive, don’t you think?”

Yes, we do, though it’s not hard to understand the frustration that led Team Poizner to post it. While the Insurance Commissioner has begun to make  himself accessible to the press and is offering substantive speeches and policy proposals on issues like water, Meg merrily captures national attention by doing little more than flashing her Cabbage Patch smile.

Latest example of eMeg’s duck-the-press strategy is freezing Calbuzz out of a “Lincoln Speaker Series” fundraiser tossed by the Santa Cruz County GOP, a move which likely has Honest Abe spinning in his grave.

“I’ll be sure to let you know when there’s another event in the area that will be open to media,” Whitman flack Sarah Pompei told us.

Hey thanks a bunch for your faux sincerity, Sarah, we’ll be sure to hold our breath. Sorry about that whole volcano thing, BTW.

Milton_FriedmanWhat would Milton do: Speaking of defensive, Joel Fox over at Fox and Hounds Daily risked dislocating a hip by leaping up and rushing forward to respond after Joe Matthews Mathews wrote a smart column on the same site suggesting that the late, iconic economist Milton Friedman would see the present need to amend Proposition 13.

“I think it is safe to say,” Fox wrote, with a bit of a protests-too-much tone, “that if Milton Friedman were asked today if he would vote for Proposition 13, his answer would be ‘yes.’”

The brainy Mathews isn’t so sure.

He recounted an interview he had with Friedman four years ago in which the great chrome dome said that Prop. 13 had turned out to be a “mixed bag.” Even though Uncle Milton supported the tax cut measure at the time it passed – even making a TV ad for it – he said in the interview that “it’s a bad tax measure because the property tax is the least bad tax there is” adding that it helped bring about an over-reliance on sales and income tax revenue.

Mathews’ otherwise thoughtful piece was badly flawed, however, by his gratuitous inclusion of the fact that he – Mathews, not Friedman – was just five years old when Prop. 13 passed in 1978. A bushel of big fat raspberries from the Calbuzz AARP and Geezer Auxiliary Division for that crack, pal.

Assembly’s Hidden Ball Trick: The By God L.A. Times finally caught up with Capitol Weekly’s Anthony York, who first reported last week on how the political geniuses in the Assembly expunged the official record of the big budget vote against Arnold’s offshore oil drilling proposal. True, the Times did broaden the story to talk about the mischievous practice of dumping vote tallies on other controversial legislation (leading widely-known media critics to suggest their newsroom still operates on its pre-digital principle: “it doesn’t matter if we write it last, as long as we write it long”). But it was left to the reliable Timm Herdt to actually report the damn vote on his blog for the Ventura County Star.

yudoff

Say it ain’t so Mark: Calbuzz has been second to none in bashing Senator Leland Yee for his preposterous notion to turn over governing authority of the UC system to the clown show of the Legislature. But even we have to admit that the Regents offered up a big fat argument in favor of the notion with their latest let-them-eat-cake move, awarding comfy raises and bonuses to top administrators at the same meeting that President Mark Yudof presented the board his plan to whack the salaries of every other UC employee through a mandated furlough policy. The relentless Nanette Asimov dug out the story for the Chron.

A shameful spectacle: All Right Thinking People agree that the recent spate of thuggish shout-downs and near-riots at town hall meetings, convened to talk about health care by members of congress across the nation, are a pure and simple disgrace, orchestrated in part by the kind of vicious-minded reactionary consultants who doubtless find amusing the dangerous ranting of the lunatic Glenn Beck and the repulsive Michelle Malkin.

These Brown Shirt exhibitions of George Wallace throwback behavior fuel not-so-latent racism and visceral fear of the rapidly changing economy among white working class folks who scream with fury when asked about a public option for health care insurance one minute, then shout out huzzahs for Medicare the next.

Always solution oriented, Calbuzz has a small but substantive suggestion for lowering the volume: require attendees to show some form of identification at the door to prove they actually live in the congressional district where the town hall is being held.

Breathless anticipation: Only 305 days to the 2010 primary. Have a great weekend.

Swap Meet: Oil & Con Con Meet Gambling Cowboys

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

namlogoNew push for Con Con: Latest player to jump into the battle for a state constitutional convention is the New America Foundation, the influential non-partisan. D.C.-based think tank, which maintains a formidable intellectual presence in California.

The foundation, which is home to big brain journalists including Calbuzz contributor Mark Paul and Blockbuster Democracy blogger Joe Matthews, is sponsoring two community forums in Southern California over the weekend. On Friday, they also released a new research report recommending that convention delegates be average folks, rather than the collection of hacks, flacks and usual suspects who are no doubt lying in wait to hijack the process.

Author Steven Hill based the conclusion on evidence gleaned from case studies of the “deliberative democracy” movement, a host of ordinary people political groups that tackled projects ranging from the rebuild of the World Trade Center to the economy of Northeast Ohio and post-Katrina reconstruction in New Orleans:

“Some have wondered if average people are capable of the kind of in-depth understanding of complex issues that will be necessary for redesigning California. But the truth is, average Californians are the only ones who can lead our state out of the quagmire of special interests and partisanship that currently is paralyzing it. That’s because average Californians bring a special quality that too many incumbents and the political class in general do not have: a pragmatic desire to solve the state’s problems, regardless of ideology, partisanship or career self-interest…

“Participants often demonstrate a ready willingness to mix and match elements from differing political approaches – market-based, public sector, ‘conservative’ or ‘liberal’– as long as the result is a solution that will work for themselves and their communities.”

oil_platformOn-again off-again on-again off-again oil project on-again: Enviros around the state are scrambling yet again to block the controversial PXP oil drilling project off the Santa Barbara coast (a Calbuzz debate on the issue is here and here ), amid reports that approval for the offshore plan is part of a proposed framework in the closed door, Big Five budget negotiations.

“We heard it’s back in the budget and the governor is lobbying very aggressively for it,” said one key player in the long-running fight over the project. “They would put (the project) into a trailer bill.”

If approved, the PXP project would be penciled in for producing $1.8 billion in royalties over the next 14 years, including $100 million in the current fiscal year; foes of the plan, which was defeated earlier by the State Lands Commission but resurrected by Schwarzenegger in the budget fight, bitterly complain that California could reap much more – $2-4 billion annually – and with less risk to the environment, by enacting an oil severance tax on existing production.

California currently is the only one of 22 oil producing states that does not have such a tax., according to a drill down piece by LAT business columnist Michael Hiltzik who went deep into the weeds on the issue.

Environmental groups “started (Thursday) sending dozens of alerts to tens of thousands of coastal activists letting people know that Schwarzenegger’s Vampire was up and stumbling around yet again,” one coastal advocate told Calbuzz. “How many times do you have to kill something, anyway?”

Fox100

What happens in Vegas: Over at Fox and Hounds Daily our friend Joel Fox is trumpeting an editorial in the Las Vegas Review Journal that fiercely attacks suggestions the Prop. 13 be amended, and assails California for having high taxes and too much regulation of business.

As California teeters, Democrats are left to contemplate how this living laboratory of liberalism — with its smothering taxes, intrusive regulatory apparatus, generous social services and well-fed, heavily unionized public sector — could now find itself on the brink of collapse.

Rather than conclude the obvious — that decade after decade of high-tax, anti-business, anti-growth policymaking designed to sate an ever-expanding state is ultimately unsustainable — a handful of liberals have found their culprit: Proposition 13, a measure limiting property taxes passed by voters in 1978.

Not surprisingly, neither the editorialist nor Fox mentioned that Nevada closed its own multi-billion dollar deficit this year by raising taxes, that the state’s unemployment rate is higher than California’s or that the Silver State was ranked the #2 most dysfunctional government in the nation.

To his credit, Fox did acknowledge that “one of the reasons I’m reprinting the editorial here (is) because it quotes me.”

Golden Lone Star State: Perhaps the biggest humiliation for California to date is a takeout in The Economist that compares the Golden State unfavorably to Texas, ferhevvinsake. Noting that Chief Executive magazine has ranked California “the very worst state to do business,” compared to the top-of-list rating of Texas, the piece concludes that “Mr. Schwarzenegger’s lazy governorship could come to be seen not as the great missed opportunity but as the spur for reform.”

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