Skip to comments.
TOM MCCLINTOCK DAILY EDITION - 9/15/03 (CA GOVERNOR'S RACE)
Posted on 09/15/2003 5:32:45 AM PDT by Rabid Dog
Please post local, regional, national news and views on Tom McClintock. This is a news and info thread. The following guidelines for posting are per DoughtyOne's most excellent suggestion.
McClintock Camp - Supporters or Defenders
Please post positive articles about Tom's policies and leave the Schwarzenegger bashing to the Democrats.
Schwarzenegger Camp - Supporters or Defenders
The call for McClintock to withdraw right now, or the tactic of calling him and his followers names for not doing so, is not productive and isn't good for the party.
Please save the Rino Arnold/Unelectable Tom rants for other threads.
TOPICS: Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: mcclintock
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-73 next last
1
posted on
09/15/2003 5:32:45 AM PDT
by
Rabid Dog
To: starsandstrips; summer; Salvation; jam137; Ernest_at_the_Beach; NormsRevenge; heleny; ...
Good morning everyone! Should start to see some interesting articles and commentaries this week - with a higher pitch as hysteria mounts. We are not behaving as "good" Republicans and conservatives should!
2
posted on
09/15/2003 5:37:40 AM PDT
by
Rabid Dog
To: Rabid Republican
From Tom's website:
Associated Press: Recall candidate fights "spending lobby" in bid for governorship
By Steve Lawrence
You wouldn't expect a conservative Republican politician to speak fondly of the 1960s, particularly that part of the raucous decade presided over by a liberal Democratic governor. Tom McClintock does.
For McClintock, the mid-60s were the "golden age of California government," when Democratic Gov. Pat Brown was running the state and it had "the finest highway system in the country, the finest public school system in the country ... (and) the finest university system."
Housing prices were low, jobs were plentiful and a family living on a modest income could find the home of their dreams in the Los Angeles suburbs.
That was McClintock's California in 1965, when the future state senator and candidate for governor and his parents moved west from New York looking for a better life.
That was before, in McClintock's view, an era of limits philosophy toward building more dams, power plants, highways and other infrastructure and a "lot of very bad decisions" led to a bloated, inefficient state government.
"The expenditures of government skyrocketed in that period but the state's commitment to its basic responsibilities were abandoned," he said.
The villains in his scenario are Pat's son, former Gov. Jerry Brown, and what McClintock calls "the spending lobby," the state employee unions and private companies that depend on state business.
But McClintock, in his nearly 17 years in the Legislature, has also had run-ins with Republican governors over spending and taxes.
"He is a conservative, a hard-right conservative," said Sherry Bebitch Jeffe, senior scholar at the school of policy planning and development at the University of Southern California. "He is not a compromiser, which has limited his effectiveness."
McClintock calls himself a "Jeffersonian Republican" whose tightfisted fiscal views are catching on with voters.
"My focus has always been on fiscal policy," he said when asked at the first debate of recall election candidates if he was more conservative than most Californians.
State spending, adjusted for inflation, is now about three times per capita what it was in Pat Brown's day, and yet the state isn't providing the same high quality of services, McClintock contends.
The solutions include contracting out more state work to private companies, eliminating agencies that duplicate functions performed by other state, federal or local offices and tightening welfare standards, McClintock said.
"It's not hard to find waste in a government that spends as much as California and produces as little," he said.
McClintock opposes raising taxes to deal with the state's budget woes. In fact, he wants to eliminate the vehicle license fee, contending the approximately $6.2 billion in annual revenue generated by the "car tax" can be made up by reorganizing state agencies.
His other key positions include cutting school administrative costs, building more nuclear power plants and hydroelectric dams to boost the state's electricity supplies, rolling back gun-control and abortion-rights laws and taking a hands-off approach toward Indian gambling.
"A century ago, Indians were banished to reservations with the promise of sovereignty on reservation property," he said. "That promise ought to be kept."
McClintock's critics say his claims about a big-spending government overlook the impact of Proposition 13, the 1978 property tax slash, and the demands on government in a different era.
Proposition 13 forced the state to shoulder a greater financial role to help compensate for the property taxes lost by schools and local governments, said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project, a nonprofit organization that examines state tax and budget issues.
Thee are also more Californians living in poverty now, without health insurance, and that puts more demands on the state, she said.
In the last 40 years, the state has also taken on additional duties in the area of civil rights, workplace safety, and consumer and environmental protection, said Sen. Debra Bowen, D-Marina del Rey.
"There's no question there is some inefficiency (in state government)," said Bowen, who describes McClintock as a "smart guy but not very pragmatic." "I suggest there was inefficiency in Pat Brown's day."
To his admirers, McClintock is a political straight arrow who does what he says he will.
"I think he's the most focused legislator I have ever met," said Sen. Bob Margett, R-Arcadia. "When he reaches a conclusion he does that in a very resourceful way without prejudice, but once he reaches that conclusion, that's it."
James Holman, the owner and editor of a weekly newspaper, the San Diego Reader, said he contributed $21,000 to McClintock's campaign because the senator opposes abortion and supports tax cuts.
"I don't know McClintock well, but I've studied his record, and actions speak louder than words," Holman said.
McClintock, 47, got an early start in politics. Despite his praise for Pat Brown now, he had a Ronald Reagan bumper sticker on his bicycle in 1966 when the actor denied Brown a third term.
"Looking back on it, I still would have voted for Reagan, but that doesn't keep me from admiring the commitment to public works that was a hallmark of the Pat Brown administration," he said.
McClintock worked as a campaign volunteer at age 16, became a Republican county chairman when he was 22 and won his first race for the state Legislature when he was 26.
His previous campaigns have also included a bid for Congress and two attempts to win the state controller's office, the last time in 2002, when he was the California GOP's top vote-getter.
He traces his conservative views to the day he came home from school to find his mother crying because taxes had wiped out the family's savings. "That made a big impression," he said.
As governor, McClintock said his first act would be to roll back the tripling of the vehicle license fee triggered by the Davis administration to help ease the state budget deficit.
To do that he would have to make a finding that the state had enough money to reimburse local governments for the $4.2 billion in lost revenue, said Anita Gore, a spokeswoman for the Department of Finance.
McClintock's also trying to qualify a measure for the ballot next year to eliminate the vehicle license fee entirely.
McClintock said he would scrap the "outrageously overpriced" electricity contracts signed by Gov. Gray Davis during the 2001 energy crisis and give lawmakers 30 days to adopt a less costly system of treating workers who suffer job-related injuries.
If lawmakers didn't meet the deadline, he would try to put his workers' compensation plan on the state ballot along with a series of other measures, including proposals that would create a flat-rate income tax and reimpose a state spending limit adopted by voters in 1979.
The measures would "work a dramatic improvement on the state's finances and on its economy," he said.
"Small changes, tinkering at the margin will not bring prosperity back to this state. We have major components of our system that are broken and they must be repaired," said McClintock
3
posted on
09/15/2003 5:38:47 AM PDT
by
Rabid Dog
To: Rabid Republican
Hey...where is the BARF ALERT???
4
posted on
09/15/2003 5:39:20 AM PDT
by
montag813
To: montag813
You are absolutely correct. Witnessing mass sell-out is always sickening. I should have posted an alert.
5
posted on
09/15/2003 5:42:22 AM PDT
by
Rabid Dog
To: montag813
The price of appeasing evil
Is measureless
It comes at untold cost
In families ruined
In lives lost
EV
To: Rabid Republican
To: Rabid Republican
Thanks for the ping. I don't see the convention speech online yet.
8
posted on
09/15/2003 5:54:05 AM PDT
by
risk
To: risk
That's what I'm looking for too. (I hear no video of him was taken at the convention.)
To: EternalVigilance
You are really sick in the head. Should I post a picture of Ronald meeting Gorby?
To: Rabid Republican
He traces his conservative views to the day he came home from school to find his mother crying because taxes had wiped out the family's savings.
This is always a serious concern of the productive. While this has not happened to me yet, I believe that it could eventually do so. The government only wants us to "keep" so much of our earnings for our personal use. It consideres excessive private-sector holdings to be "selfish" and uncaring for the "needy," meaning public sector.
To: Theodore R.
Your comment made me think that Arnold (being so rich) might not have a good idea of what impact keeping or giving back money might mean to the common wage earner in California. I'm sure its no skin off his teeth if surpluses are handed out to the "needy" versus given back to the people because he doesn't really need the money. But to most people, they could use a few more dollars in their wallet - especially if it was their's to begin with.
To: Rabid Republican
PRESS RELEASE, FOR IMMEDIATE PUBLICATION: OCT 8,2003
Flushed with gratitude to his new best friend, newly elected Governor snoz busta-my-wallet, has announced that Senator Tomas McPerot has accepted the governor's offer of an appointment to head the newly established Department of Angelo Affairs. Pointing to the " rich history of Angelo contributions to Mexifornia", the Governor went on to say, " Without the selfless contribution of my great and good friend Senior Tomas, can I now call him Don Tomas? - our victory would not be possible." Then, almost breathlessly, the Governor wipped a tear from his eye and continued, " Don Tomas has agreed to put up his own money to pay for the 3 buses needed, so that the 112 elderly Angelos that still live in our country, will be able to attend our May 5, 2004 formal return ceremony in East Los Angles." There was no comment from the Motherland on the coming ceremony.
To: republicanwizard
There's a difference between meeting and appeasing. The guys pictured above are appeasers. Reagan was not.
14
posted on
09/15/2003 7:40:08 AM PDT
by
TERMINATTOR
((R)nold's like a chrome plated Yugo - all show and no go! McClintock for Governor of California!)
To: TERMINATTOR
Oh pardon. I'm sure you were present when Reagan negotiated with Gorby and Powell negotiated with Arafat.
To: Rabid Republican
Well all our efforts may be for naught after the Ninth Circuit rules...two Klinton appointees and one Carter...not good...
16
posted on
09/15/2003 8:03:10 AM PDT
by
kellynla
(USMC "C" 1/5 1st Mar Div. Viet Nam '69 & '70 Semper Fi VOTE4MCCLINTOCK http://www.tommcclintock.com)
To: kellynla
I think that will make me blow a gasket if the recall is postponed.
To: Rabid Republican
Well be prepared...I would realistically be more surprised if the 9th Circuit ruled FOR the recall election to held 10/7. And of course we all know that the March 2004 just so happens to be a Dimwit primary...
18
posted on
09/15/2003 8:13:38 AM PDT
by
kellynla
(USMC "C" 1/5 1st Mar Div. Viet Nam '69 & '70 Semper Fi VOTE4MCCLINTOCK http://www.tommcclintock.com)
To: Rabid Republican
"We are not behaving as "good" Republicans and conservatives should! Said Schwarzenneger - "Vat is vrong vith deese people, dey are suppost to behave like mind numbed robots!"
To: Rabid Republican
mass sell-out
This is a great term and so appropriate for CA on Oct. 7, 2003.
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-73 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson