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CA: Bustamante a candidate; Garamendi likely to run
Contra Costa Times ^
| 8/7/03
| Andrew LaMar, Jessica Guynn and Daniel Borenstein
Posted on 08/07/2003 7:42:21 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
Edited on 04/13/2004 3:31:42 AM PDT by Jim Robinson.
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To: NormsRevenge
I would say that Bustamante is the stake through Davis' heart. Now let's see if the Cal. Sup. Ct. pulls it out.
21
posted on
08/07/2003 8:54:00 AM PDT
by
Faeroe
To: NormsRevenge
Too busy now to scapegoat, yes, but what I want to get a bead on is what we can do to leverage the legislature to do the right thing. How do I define that? 1) Make the hard choices and set priorities 2) Cut expenditures 3)Cut taxes 4)Repeal job killing regulations and make the state more competitive economically 5) Protect our fundamental rights. The governor can lead and has the line item veto, an that helps, but it doesn't finish the job.
22
posted on
08/07/2003 8:55:50 AM PDT
by
RKV
To: Wright is right!
Lieutenant Governor Cruz M. Bustamante Receives
Recognition Award From National Organization
The League of United Latin American Citizens Present Bustamante with Legislative Award
WASHINGTON, D.C Lieutenant Governor Cruz M. Bustamante was honored today by the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) for his continued efforts to ensure that Hispanic Americans are afforded the same civil rights that all other Americans receive. Bustamante received the recognition at the Sixth Annual LULAC National Legislative Awards Gala.
"I am honored to be recognized by such a distinguished civil rights group," said Bustamante. "In California, we endeavor to create an atmosphere that promotes acceptance and diversity. By working together, we will ensure that every American experiences the right to live in a safe neighborhood, has access to a good job, the opportunity to obtain a sound education and the chance to succeed."
Bustamante received LULAC's National Legislative Award for his accomplishments in the areas of labor, health, education and the environment.
"Each year, LULAC honors those individuals who have led the battle for the advancement of Hispanic Americans and made great strides in the Hispanic community through advocacy and action," said Hector Flores, LULAC's National President.
A high profile audience, including members of Congress, ambassadors, federal officials and celebrities were in attendance to honor the award recipients. David Cruz, anchor for NBC 4 in Los Angeles, served as the Master of Ceremonies for the evening's events.
The League of United Latin American Citizens is the oldest and largest Latino civil rights organization in the United States. LULAC advances the economic condition, educational attainment, political influence, health and civil rights of Hispanic Americans through community-based programs operating across the country at more than 700 LULAC councils nationwide.
WHY WOULD ANYONE VOTE FOR THIS LULAC BUTT KI$$ER???????????
23
posted on
08/07/2003 9:03:52 AM PDT
by
GrandMoM
("Vengeance is Mine , I will repay," says the Lord.)
To: NormsRevenge; *calgov2002; fooman; PeoplesRep_of_LA; Canticle_of_Deborah; snopercod; Grampa Dave; ..
HeHEHEHHEHE!!!
calgov2002:
24
posted on
08/07/2003 9:28:45 AM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(All we need from a Governor is a VETO PEN!!!)
To: NormsRevenge
It would be a confirmation that California has gone completely nuts if they replace Davis with Bustedmental. I mean, they're practically one and the same. Bustedmental has been a part of the Davis team from the beginning. He has been right there with Davis through this whole mess, running the state into the ground. How can he make a case for himself, that he would be any better than keeping Davis? Why should people throw out Davis and put in his clone? It would be replacing Tweedledee with Tweedledum, and if the majority of Californians opt to do this, I would say it would be the last straw and there is no hope for the once-great state of California.
25
posted on
08/07/2003 9:36:06 AM PDT
by
chimera
To: NormsRevenge
Garamendi is in officially....
San Francisco Chronicle Reports:
John Garamendi, a Democrat and the current state insurance commissioner, will announce today that he will place his name on the Oct. 7 recall election ballot, according to his press secretary Gary Gartner.
Gartner said the Democratic candidate will discuss his run for governor during two news conferences today, one morning event in Sacramento and another in San Francisco later in the afternoon.
In 2002, Garamendi was reelected to head the state Department of Insurance after serving as the first elected insurance commissioner from 1991 to 1994.
President Bill Clinton appointed Garamendi in 1995 to the post of deputy secretary at the U.S. Department of the Interior.
Prior to becoming insurance commissioner, he served 14 years as a state senator and two years in the state assembly.
The Sacramento news conference will be held at 11:30 a.m. in Capitol Park. In San Francisco, an event will held at 2:30 p.m. in Washington Square Park in the North Beach District.
To: Phantom Lord
Hey, since when have rules or laws meant anything to Barbara Bouncer...er...Boxer?
27
posted on
08/07/2003 9:43:09 AM PDT
by
Redleg Duke
(Stir the pot...don't let anything settle to the bottom where the lawyers can feed off of it!)
To: NormsRevenge
Well, Sanchez will have the illegal alien vote sewn up!
28
posted on
08/07/2003 9:44:06 AM PDT
by
Redleg Duke
(Stir the pot...don't let anything settle to the bottom where the lawyers can feed off of it!)
To: RKV
The next major event is the 2004 General election.
We need to toss all the demRats out, rein in the state's finances and learn to live within our means ...
Just cutting the budget by 5 or 10 per cent would be a good start.
Getting the word out will be the key. The demRats will stop at nothing to keep power.
It could and should be the end of the line for the demRats next November ... and about damn time , too! ;-) Socialism sucks, yaknow.
29
posted on
08/07/2003 10:02:43 AM PDT
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi ...&&&&&&&&&...SuPPort FRee Republic.....www.TomMcClintock.com..... NEVER FORGET)
To: NormsRevenge
One more item for my list - prevent voter fraud in the recall election. I expect this will be a PRIME opportunity for the RAT operatives to stuff ballot boxes, vote the dead, vote illegals, vote out of staters... Got get the base involved in this as in Florida.
30
posted on
08/07/2003 10:09:17 AM PDT
by
RKV
To: RKV
Good point.. Lots of controversy over changing over to the new touch screen voting machines statewide, not all the states counties are setup yet, so it looks like paper ballots will still be used in a few counties. Just one of many lawsuits involves this issue and not enough voting places being available for voters, etc.
It can and should happen October 7th.
31
posted on
08/07/2003 10:19:27 AM PDT
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi ...&&&&&&&&&...SuPPort FRee Republic.....www.TomMcClintock.com..... NEVER FORGET)
To: deport; Torie; JohnHuang2; Southack; DoughtyOne
The sources also said that if Ueberroth runs, he would do so as an Independent, pledging to have a bipartisan campaign staff and a bipartisan governor's office.
As an independent? Good. The GOP doesn't need to be associated with the genius architect of Major League Baseball's collusion scandal.
But if he wants to bleed out some moderate votes, fine by me.
32
posted on
08/07/2003 10:20:11 AM PDT
by
Sabertooth
(Dump Davis)
To: mhking; rdb3
Are you guys familiar with Cruz "I didn't mean to say 'n****r' to the black audience" Bustamante?
Many sources (warning: offensive)
It's a freak show here.
33
posted on
08/07/2003 10:24:55 AM PDT
by
Sabertooth
(Dump Davis)
To: Sabertooth; rdb3
It's a freak show here.I'm not familiar with him, but I'm not surprised. The Aztlan crowd is not friendly with black folk on this side of the border. They'd rather we all give them "their" land back.
34
posted on
08/07/2003 10:34:28 AM PDT
by
mhking
To: chimera
Bustedmental has been a part of the Davis team from the beginning. He has been right there with Davis through this whole mess, running the state into the ground. How can he make a case for himself, that he would be any better than keeping Davis? Why should people throw out Davis and put in his clone?Well, never underestimate the stupidity of Dimocrat voters.
To: mhking
Watch for that nasty quote to come out during the recall campaign. There will be few, if any, coalitions. The electorate will be shattered into all of it's constituencies. The next governor will probably get less votes than Davis.
Gonna be a hot Fall in Cali.
36
posted on
08/07/2003 10:42:29 AM PDT
by
Sabertooth
(Dump Davis)
To: JohnHuang2
One of your best.
Absolutely great satire !
37
posted on
08/07/2003 1:11:41 PM PDT
by
happygrl
To: All
 |
Associated Press |
 |
State Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi. |
Posted on Thu, Aug. 07, 2003 It's Garamendi's turn
State Insurance Commission gets into race for governor
By the Mercury News
Meeting with reporters in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco today, State Insurance Commission John Garamendi explained why he decided to run in the Oct. 7 recall election.
``Recall is not the right thing to do but nonetheless it is upon us,'' he said. ``We cannot run the risk of turning the state over to the likes of Tom McClintock.''
State Sen. Tom McClintock, R-Thousand Oaks, also is running for governor/
Garamendi said the lack of experience of Republican candidate and actor Arnold Schwarzenegger also drew him into the race.
``Schwarzenegger says he wants to go to Sacramento and clean house. I don't think he could even find a broom in Sacramento with his lack of experience,'' Garamendi said.
Garamendi said he had decided to stay out of the race until Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante decided to run.
Once Bustamante was in the race, Garamendi, a former state senator and assemblyman who served as a deputy Secretary of Interior under President Clinton, decided to jump into the race because ``the floodgates opened'' once another Democrat joined the race.
38
posted on
08/07/2003 8:33:35 PM PDT
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi ...&&&&&&&&&...SuPPort FRee Republic.....www.TomMcClintock.com..... NEVER FORGET)
From the Sac Bee
2003 Gubernatorial Recall Candidates - California |
|
These are some of the high-profile candidates in the California recall election. See more candidates.
|
|
39
posted on
08/08/2003 7:43:58 PM PDT
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi ...&&&&&&&&&...SuPPort FRee Republic.....www.TomMcClintock.com..... NEVER FORGET)
To: mabelkitty
Bustamante: The Racist in the Race?
By Lowell Ponte
FrontPageMagazine.com | August 11, 2003
HIS FAMILY NAME CAN MEAN GRAVE DIGGER IN THE SPAIN his ancestors left to become colonizers and exploiters of Mexico.
Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante, having broken his promise not to put his name on the October 7th recall ballot as a candidate to replace fellow Democrat Gray Davis, has emerged as his partys last best hope to retain control of Californias governorship.
This races first Time/CNN poll shows Bustamante besting all Republicans on the ballot except Arnold Schwarzenegger (Black Plowman in Austrian German), to whom he would lose today by 10 points.
With what he calls two bruising months to smear the Hollywood star before the election, Bustamante could win. Or this mistake-prone, erratic politician could lose badly and in the process dig a hole so deep that he could bury Californias Democratic Party for decades to come.
Who is this round-faced, balding 50-year-old pol from the farmlands of Californias Central Valley, where a large share of Americas nuts and fruits are grown?
The oldest of six children, Cruz Bustamante grew up south of Fresno, California, with his siblings, mother Dominga and father Cruz, a barber and, briefly, local City Councilman. They shared the home with his grandparents on both sides of the family from Chihuahua and Zacatecas in north-central Mexico. (One of Mexicos notorious presidents, 1837-1839 & 1839-1841, had been Anastasio Bustamante.)
In this agricultural region that some call the once-and-future Mexifornia, little Cruz prior to kindergarten spoke nothing but Spanish. As a politician he reportedly has voiced regrets about losing perfect fluency in it and said he wants to make frequent trips to Mexico to regain it.
When he attended local Tranquillity High School, as Bustamante told LatinoLink reporter Fernando Quintero in 1999, You noticed the differences between everyone there, and you had to take sides. You were either a good Mexican kid or a coconut [brown on the outside, white on the inside].
This was the era when, amid cries of La Raza, the race, United Farm Workers fought growers and then the Teamsters Union for control of farm fields in Californias heartland. Those pickers who dared to question UFW caudillo Cesar Chavez risked a visit by thugs at midnight who would leave them with smashed faces and broken arms as the leftist union tried to force racial polarization and political radicalization down Latino throats.
After high school, Bustamante began studies at Fresno City College to become a butcher. He dropped out before earning his degree.
His father persuaded local Congressman B.F. Sisk to make Cruz an intern in Washington, D.C. The experience ignited in Bustamante a passion for politics and power.
I was like a kid in a candy store
he told Quintero. I found that I could call an agency and make things happen. That was very exciting for me.
To another reporter he said of his internship: I discovered that I was much better at cutting red tape than at cutting meat.
Returning home, Bustamante began attending Fresno State University, where he also failed to graduate but immersed himself in local and student politics, including the racial activism of MEChA, a group whose name is an acronym for Moviemiento Estudiantil Chicano de AZTLAN, the Chicano Student Movement of Aztlan.
I wasnt the most radical Mechista, says Bustamante nowadays. Perhaps not, but he was a member of MEChA and has refused all requests that he dissociate himself from its values and ideas.
As its critics might argue, to say you were not the most radical Mechista is a bit like saying you were not the most radical Nazi. Just to have been a Nazi, however moderate, is radical, socialist and evil enough to warrant condemnation.
Like Nazism, MEChA has acquired more than a tinge of racism. In their tactics to advance Latinos and La Raza, many of its activists have directed racist attacks against not only white-skinned Anglos but also against blacks, Asian-Americans and Jews in fact, against every non-Latino group.
The A in MEChA stands for Aztlan, their word for the entire southwestern United States from Texas to California and from the Mexican border to the Canadian border, lost in war or sold by Mexico to the U.S. Mechistas aim to reclaim all this land for Mexico in a new reconquista, a reconquest like the re-taking of Spain from Moorish Muslims by Roman Catholics that was completed in 1492.
In 1996 and 2000, then Vice President Al Gore worked closely with the Southwest Voter Registration Project to register Hispanic voters as Democrats. Gore appeared with project leaders who as they shook his hand were wearing the brown berets of Aztlan symbolic of the Mechista crusade to restore Mexican control to all once-Mexican land.
Again, Bustamante has refused to distance himself in any way from MEChA and its desire to return Aztlan to Mexico. Does he see himself running to become governor of one of the United States or of the regained Mexican state of Alta California, as the Spanish called the upper counterpart to Baja California in Mexico? This is something he should be asked about by voters and the press at every public appearance.
After telling reporters at a press conference, We could not conduct business without the immigrant, the then-Assemblyman was asked if he supported illegal immigration, Bustamante replied: My district requires it. Thereafter for a time he restricted his press conferences to Spanish language media.
Bustamantes political success is one symptom of Americas largest, fastest-growing Hispanic minority. In California Hispanic-Americans today make up about one-third of the population, and Anglo whites are now less than 50 percent of this states residents.
(Blacks comprise only eight percent of Californias population but hold 11 percent of all government jobs, nearly 50 percent more than what advocates of racial apportionment would call their fair share. Blacks, even more than whites, are immediately threatened in their neighborhoods, jobs and future by the growing rival Hispanic minority manifest in Bustamante.)
The first Hispanic elected statewide in 120 years, Bustamante throughout his political career has urged Latinos to vote for him in ethnic solidarity. Last year he was the poster child running mate Governor Gray Davis embraced in campaign ads aimed at this community. How ironic it is that Bustamante has now dug Davis grave by giving Democrats an alternative on the October 7th ballot.
Bustamante built his early career not only on brown skin, however, but also on green cash. A skilled fundraiser for Democrat politicians, he in 1993 was rewarded with a safe Democratic seat in the Assembly from Fresno. In 1996 he was elevated to Speaker of this lower house of the California legislature when veteran Speaker Willy Brown, now San Francisco Mayor, was pushed out by a new term limits law.
This law turned California politics into a game of musical chairs, forcing career politicians to jump from one job to another. When he was term-limited out of the Assembly, Bustamante won election in 1998 to the lucrative but usually unimportant job of Lieutenant Governor.
In a Freudian slip during a 2001 speech, Cruz Bustamante may have revealed just how much MEChA-like racism continues to infect his own mind.
On February 9, 2001, during a Black History Month speech before 400 members of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, Bustamante casually referred to an African-American labor organization as the Nigger labor organization, using the evil N word and continuing obliviously with his speech for another 10 minutes while up to 100 outraged listeners rose and left the room.
Bustamante then stopped and apologized for what he called his slip. Black activists like the Reverend Jesse Jackson, who would have demanded the head of any Republican politician who used the N word, uttered no criticism of Bustamante. The nations leftist press largely ignored the issue, as it had when former Ku Klux Klan leader Robert Byrd, D-WV, used the same vile epithet on the floor of the U.S. Senate.
You dont make a slip like that, said audience member Gwendalyn Bello, unless it is something you say normally.
What was troublesome to a lot of people, said San Francisco labor organizer and state president of the A. Phillip Randolph Institute James Bryant, was that the word came out very naturally.
Perhaps Mr. Bryant did not know that Bustamante had formed his ideas about race as a Mechista.
Bustamantes first name Cruz is the Spanish word for Cross. This embusteros true name should be Doblecruz, doublecross, to remind people of his tendency to betray and backstab onetime allies.
With the recall movement against his ally Governor Gray Davis on the verge of success, Bustamante shocked fellow Democrats by proposing that he would allow a statewide vote to recall the Governor but, by ignoring what the state constitution clearly requires, would forbid any vote to replace Davis.
By this de facto coup detat, boasted Bustamante, the Governors office would become vacant and he as Lt. Governor then would automatically become the new Governor. All that would be needed to guarantee continued Democratic control of this office, said Bustamante, was approval by an obscure, Democrat-dominated panel called the Commission on the Governorship.
Fellow Democrats apparently sat Bustamante down and explained that California was not yet Mexico, that the voters would not accept such an obvious banana republic coup detat or his shredding and burning of the constitution in front of their eyes. What he advocated was blatantly illegal, much like Gray Davis demand that his name be allowed on the ballot of candidates who could succeed him.
For days Bustamante sulked, holding out the possibility, wrote veteran Sacramento Bee political columnist Daniel Weintraub, that this panel could weigh in and rule that only he could succeed Davis.
Then Bustamante relented, magnanimously declaring that he would allow the people to vote on replacements for Davis.
There is no circumstance in which I would be a candidate, said the humiliated Bustamante in one interview.
I will not participate in any way other than to urge voters to reject this expensive perversion of the recall process, he said earlier elsewhere. I will not attempt to advance my career at the expense of the people I was elected to serve. I do not intend to put my name on that ballot.
In saying this, he was maintaining the united front demanded by Davis and organized labor that no prominent Democrat go on this ballot, thereby sealing Davis fate by giving Democratic voters an alternative to voting against the recall.
But last week Bustamante broke his vow, double-crossed his party, and became the first major Democrat to leave a sinking ship by putting his name on the ballot to replace Gray Davis. His official posture is nearly paradoxical, telling Californians to vote against the recall of Davis but also to vote for him.
In a state with a million more registered Democrats than Republicans, and with Republicans likely to scatter their votes among several contenders, a sizeable turnout could mean victory for Bustamante. That Davis will be recalled seems likely, with a third of Democrats and more than half of Hispanics against him, so the only question to be decided is who will replace him.
But who is Cruz Bustamante? Is he the man who said he would not run under any circumstances, or the man who lied about this and days later was running?
Is he the politician who claims vast experience but now says he has only spoken via telephone with Governor Gray Davis a few times in recent years? Or is this former Assembly Speaker and current Lt. Governor a key part of the ruling Democratic elite that created the economic and social mess that prompted the Davis recall?
In other words, is Bustamante a knave or a naif? Was he part of this ruling leftist elite that ran up government spending by 41 percent while population grew by only 20 percent during the Davis years, thereby causing the current budget disaster in California as well as 40 percent of economic problems nationwide? Or was Bustamante only pretending to be an important player in the government? Either way, he is unfit to become Governor.
Why replace Davis with Davis II?
(It is true that he and Davis have disagreed on some issues, and in every case e.g., whether to expand lawsuits to overturn Proposition 187 and its limits on government benefits to illegal aliens Bustamante has advocated policies even farther to the Left than has Davis.)
Is Bustamante the politician who now says he wants to give Californians a choice? Or is he the coup plotter who tried illegally to seize the governorship for himself by denying the people any vote at all?
(This is close to what he and the Democratic Party are still doing, having used threats and intimidation to keep all other Democrats except pornographer and Clinton operative Larry Flynt off the ballot so that Democrats have no choice but him. Is this pro-choice liberalism?)
Is Bustamante the witty moderate and smiling grandfather that the leftist media will portray? Or is he still the ideologue who refuses to renounce his youthful embrace of the pan-Hispanic racism of MEChA and who in a Freudian slip called blacks Niggers in front of an African-American organization? What did this reveal, and can Californians risk electing a governor with this kind of mind and values?
Is he the good Mexican kid or the coconut he was prodded to choose between back in high school? Does he ultimately see himself as an American or a citizen of Aztlan?
Two things are indisputable about Cruz Bustamante: the man is an opportunist and a liar. He has lied so often and betrayed so many that nothing he claims to be now can be trusted or believed.
For the sake of California and the nation, we can only hope that the political grave DobleCruz Bustamante has dug is his own.
40
posted on
08/11/2003 5:30:31 PM PDT
by
Dqban22
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