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MCCLINTOCK = BEST HOPE, CHECK & BALANCE for CALIFORNIA FUTURE: CRITICAL CONSIDERATIONS
DIRECT POST | by R. Scott Moxley

Posted on 10/05/2003 1:35:33 AM PDT by joralink

The Case for Governor Tom McClintock: Why progressives should vote for the most conservative candidate in the race to replace Gray Davis


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: acheckabalance; bestchoice; mcclintock; recall
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McClintock is the best choice to serve as governor of California for the next three years.

***

Let me explain.

Start with character. Unlike his top competition—Davis, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Cruz Bustamante—McClintock does not lie, duck debates, accept illegal contributions, hide from reporters, flip-flop positions, defend crooks, pander to special interests, place party loyalty over principles, rely on one-liners, award no-bid contracts, surround himself with sleazy advisors or pretend good government is as simple as marketing a movie.

Let’s be blunter: even if McClintock was as ruthlessly ambitious and unprincipled as the other candidates (he isn’t), he would still deserve support in this special election.

Why?

Checks and balances.

I’m hardly a conservative, but the Democrats—rulers of all three branches of state government for the past four years—have proven themselves unwilling to control taxes, spending and bureaucratic growth. After four years of Davis, California’s $10 billion surplus became a $38 billion deficit last fiscal year. For those of you counting, that’s a $48,000,000,000 flip. Note the zeroes: it’s enough money to fund several small- and medium-sized federal agencies for the next 50 years.

Is there reason for alarm? Not, apparently, if you’re Davis or his Democratic allies in the legislature. They’ve spent like whiskey-drunk business guys on an expense-account trip to Vegas. While California’s population rose 21 percent during the Davis era, the Democrats raised state spending by a whopping 40 percent. They’ve added 44,000 new public employees to the state payroll and, in the midst of the current fiscal crisis, strapped taxpayers with an additional $700 million per year in ridiculously generous public-employee pension perks. I could go on, but you get the point.

This hemorrhaging of public funds coupled with a continuous demand for new tax revenue while government services are routinely slashed leads me to an observation sure to offend some of my fellow progressives. Sometimes the best endorsement is inadvertent. Ask Sacramento Democrats what they think of McClintock. They’ll likely tell you the last man they want holding the veto pen to their spending habits is the relentlessly frugal 47-year-old conservative from Thousand Oaks. At the moment, that’s good enough for me.

***

I’m calling my choice "Tough Love for California’s Democratic Party," a drifting organization desperately in need of self-examination and reform. The party is so out of touch with legitimate citizen anger about the state’s massive budget deficit that its elected officials are proposing new spending projects even during a heated recall race largely about finances.

That fact alone should have rank-and-file Democrats manning the barricades alongside Republicans and Independents. Davis and Bustamante, the state’s top Democrats, are slapping their own party’s middle-class and poor constituents with plans for new regressive taxes. Davis tripled the vehicle license fee and helped inflate everyone’s monthly energy bill on behalf of the wealthy, private shareholders of Southern California Edison stock. Bustamante promises to raise taxes on corporations and the rich—and to increase taxes on cigarettes from 87 cents to $2.27 per pack as well as boost alcohol taxes an additional 25 cents per gallon. He literally smiles—why?—when he says "everybody has to pay" for the state’s mess. And pay we will. There is talk again of raising the state’s gasoline and sales taxes, already among the highest in the nation.

They don’t like to talk about it, but Democrat leaders foresaw this fiscal calamity and then pretended it didn’t exist, just as George W. Bush did at the national level. Their ignorance had a purpose: to assure Davis’s 2002 re-election. Only after they couldn’t deny the mess any longer—and Davis had safely won re-election—did they begin to offer plans to face a state deficit larger than the gross national product of most countries. Even that so-called debt-reduction plan was a ruse. To once again mask the depth of the problem, the Democrats borrowed $11 billion more from Wall Street and then went back for another $1.8 billion to cover deficits in the state-employee pension fund. A clever Democratic strategist recently declared without a hint of insincerity that California’s debt problems are history.

Most liberals are in denial about this record of Democratic negligence. During a Sept. 19 fund-raiser at the Santa Ana home of state Senator Joe Dunn, Bustamante—a delightful fellow in person —spoke primarily in platitudes. He said he’s committed to "protecting the values of working-class people." Democratic audiences are apparently easy to please: they greeted the line with undeserved applause. The lieutenant governor moved on quickly to a subject sure to divert attention from his own shortcomings. He attacked Schwarzenegger’s qualifications and alliances with establishment Republicans such as former Governor Pete Wilson and congressmen Christopher Cox, Dana Rohrabacher and David Dreier. The tactic fired up the faithful. At the end of the event, a Democratic activist turned to me and cheerfully said taxes should be higher—for everyone. So much for protecting working-class people.

***

Each election season in California, the biggest weapon in the Democratic arsenal is a negative punch: "Vote for us. At least, we’re not those women-hating, gun-loving, environment-spoiling, homophobic nuts from the other party." Bustamante is still learning to handle this weapon; Davis has mastered it. But voters should for once resist the gimmick, temporarily set aside the urge to solve every social concern that isn’t life-or-death—and admit that the most critical problem facing California is the government’s unprecedented financial disasters.

If any of the candidates is a likely target for the usual Democratic fear-campaign strategy, it’s McClintock. He’s pro-gun, anti-choice, anti-gay rights and a proponent of environmental regulatory rollbacks. He hates union power, campaign-finance reform, judges who protect the rights of suspects and illegal immigration. He craves tort reform for big business and more nuclear power plants. If he won, Sacramento would be less involved in local affairs. He favors school vouchers and wants to make sure everyone utters the words "under God" when they recite the Pledge of Allegiance. He authored California’s lethal-injection law for death-penalty convicts. He is Barry Goldwater, circa 1964.

Nevertheless, like Goldwater—who proved to be quite the statesman in his later years, going so far as to abandon his party’s absurd anti-gay politics—there is not only hope for McClintock, but also a use. The New York native and UCLA graduate, whose working-class family moved to the San Fernando Valley in 1965 to find jobs, has two characteristics Californians urgently need in a leader: unyielding honesty and independence.

You should know that McClintock is the only politician in California with enough integrity to do all of the following without reservation or fear of retribution from his own party’s less principled bosses:

1. He blasted the backroom deal that forced a multibillion-dollar ratepayer bailout of the state’s Republican-dominated private utility monopolies.

2. He publicly chastised the disgraceful ethics of Chuck Quackenbush—at a time when the Republican insurance commissioner was still backed by Republican leaders.

3. He launched the fight against the regressive car-registration tax that hits the poor and working class hardest.

4. He has displayed 15 years of almost vicious political independence in attacking massive tax hikes and corporate giveaways no matter who proposed them—whether Republican governors Wilson and George Deukemejian or Democrat Davis. Consider his showdown with Wilson just after the governor’s 1991 tax hike of $7.4 billion. McClintock objected, and the then-governor backed the defiant McClintock into a corner and angrily called him "fucking irrelevant." McClintock, however, refused to be intimidated.

"I place principle over party," McClintock recently told Orange County Register reporter Martin Wiskol. "The party is only as good as its devotion to their principles."

***

It’s no surprise that such a man scares members of his own party—and no wonder many Republican heavyweights want McClintock to quit the race in favor of Schwarzenegger, who sometimes claims he’s pro-gay rights, pro-gun control, pro-choice, pro-environment and sympathetic to illegal immigrants. Schwarzenegger is a man in whom Republican leaders see themselves: his failure to remember the 1970s gangbangs and illegal drug use he once bragged about reveal a budding slickster on par with Bill Clinton, who likewise believed he could talk himself out of any indiscretion. And if it’s true that you can know a man by the company he keeps, then what are we to make of a celebrity body builder who surrounds himself with Pete Wilson and his team of establishment Republican advisers who are likely already plotting new corporate subsidies?

Now you know why Republican leaders—who claim to share all of McClintock’s policy positions—so quickly beat the drums for the more liberal Schwarzenegger: like the Democrats, they can’t stand a man of conviction in their ranks. Perhaps believing his comment would harm McClintock rather that prove his bona fides, a miffed Republican insider said this to a reporter: "[McClintock’s] very bright, but the number of people [in the GOP leadership] who do not like him is very high."

***

When I tell friends I support McClintock, they invariably run down his catalog of conservative social stands. I tell them I’m not worried, that when McClintock says his "focus has always been on fiscal policy" and that social issues are "ancillary," we have good reason to believe him. To date, he has been a man of his word.

And then there’s my own realpolitik: the Democrats firmly control both the state Assembly and Senate. A governor can only sign a bill into law after it has been approved by the legislature, a legislature that is, in this case, as Democratic as a meeting of the ACLU.

An upset McClintock victory on Oct. 7 could give us the following scenario: Democrats in the state Legislature won’t get most of their Volvo spending programs and special-interest payouts. The Republican governor won’t be able to enact any of his 1950s-era social initiatives. And because of McClintock’s hard-wired stinginess, the rest of us—Democrats, Republicans, Independents, Greens and Libertarians—can finally see some financial sanity returned to Sacramento.

1 posted on 10/05/2003 1:35:34 AM PDT by joralink
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2 posted on 10/05/2003 1:37:01 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: joralink
Vanity posts, I've been told, are usually not something that is breaking news. Be that as it may, you make a reasonable case for Tom by bashing another Republican.. I've always found such an argument to be rather, well, Democrat like.
3 posted on 10/05/2003 1:40:12 AM PDT by kingu (100 percent of liberals would like to see Free Republic fail.)
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To: joralink
I think this was the OC Weekly article. It was posted on FR a few days ago, and the OC Weekly article was referenced in a WND piece about Libertarians for McClintock.
4 posted on 10/05/2003 1:42:09 AM PDT by heleny
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To: kingu
I've always found such an argument to be rather, well, Democrat like.

The author writes for a Democrat audience. If you had read the article before posting, you would have seen that he said clearly that his intended audience is democrats, whom he is suggesting should vote for McClintock (instead of Bustamante or whatever other progressive/democrat/liberal candidate they had considered) for real change to fix CA.

5 posted on 10/05/2003 1:44:33 AM PDT by heleny
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To: kingu
you make a reasonable case for Tom by bashing another Republican.

Oh please, most of the bashing happens by those backing Arnold, attacking Tom for being a conservative.

6 posted on 10/05/2003 1:45:54 AM PDT by GeronL (www.geocities.com/geronl, stop the DAZI Party)
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To: joralink
YOUR POST AND MR.MCCLINTOCK ARE PATHETIC!
7 posted on 10/05/2003 1:47:16 AM PDT by KQQL (^@__*^)
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To: GeronL
Oh please, most of the bashing happens by those backing Arnold, attacking Tom for being a conservative.

Which isn't right either. And by no means do I claim innocence, though I've worked to reform myself.
8 posted on 10/05/2003 1:57:23 AM PDT by kingu (100 percent of liberals would like to see Free Republic fail.)
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To: kingu
The difference between democrat arguments and this one, is that this one is true. No bashing just the facts.
9 posted on 10/05/2003 2:04:50 AM PDT by TERMINATTOR ((R)nold's like a chrome plated Yugo - all show and no go! McClintock for Governor of California!)
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To: TERMINATTOR
No bashing just the facts.

Opinions are not facts, and that article is full of opinions.
10 posted on 10/05/2003 2:15:08 AM PDT by kingu (100 percent of liberals would like to see Free Republic fail.)
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To: GeronL
McCLintock would make a good governor,but one must deal in reality and facts,He cannot win in this ultra liberal state, therefore republicans,moderate and conservative, must do what is best for the party and that is to vote for Arnold,Mr. McClintock should do the right thing and pull out. He's only hurting the republicans and he could put a democrate back in office. A McClintock vote is a wasted one.
11 posted on 10/05/2003 2:38:55 AM PDT by deedgirl
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To: deedgirl
Then Republicans should just move out of the state.
12 posted on 10/05/2003 2:48:53 AM PDT by GeronL (www.geocities.com/geronl, stop the DAZI Party)
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To: GeronL
McClintock is an exotropic megalomaniacal mental case.

We won't forget what hes done.

Can't wait to see how hes going to run for Senate with no money from the RNC.

13 posted on 10/05/2003 4:51:25 AM PDT by Rome2000 (McCarthy was right!)
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To: Rome2000
Can't wait to see how hes going to run for Senate with no money from the RNC.

That's an empty threat. When McClintock ran for controller the CAGOP didn't give him any support then either. The statists have blown their "moderate" cover and gone out of their way to screw conservatives for over a decade.

Why should we heed you now?

14 posted on 10/05/2003 6:04:26 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (There are people in power who are truly evil.)
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To: KQQL
Gee, if Mary Matalin runs for public office -- of course with an (R) behind her name -- can we also have gushing, slobbering, groupie-type ***Day in the Life of James Carville**** threads on FR adoring her liberal spouse, too?
15 posted on 10/05/2003 6:11:14 AM PDT by AmericanInTokyo (NORTH KOREA is a DANGEROUS CANCER in late stages; we still only meditate and take herbal medicines)
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To: kingu
Its a repost of an article from a commie rag.
16 posted on 10/05/2003 6:13:20 AM PDT by Chancellor Palpatine
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To: joralink
You know, the last minute sleaze campaign against Arnie makes alot of sense: this is the way Davis can get stupid people to vote for him who were previously going to vote for Arnie.

The problem is that all the stupid people have already decided to vote for Tom McClintock

Get used to saying President Hillary Clinton

17 posted on 10/05/2003 6:15:59 AM PDT by chilepepper (The map is not the territory -- Alfred Korzybski)
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To: joralink
I like Tom but he has exactly zero chance to win. At this stage, Tom needs to place the long-term good of the Republican Party ahead of himself, no matter how well-intentioned. We need party unity. If by some reason Arnold is not elected, I believe Tom may find his political career in California over.
18 posted on 10/05/2003 6:25:35 AM PDT by Mariposaman
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To: Carry_Okie
When McClintock ran for controller the CAGOP didn't give him any support then either.

He didn't win then either, did he?

You must be out of your mind if you think people don't support him because he is conservative.

People don't support him because he is a LOSER in a Statewide race.

He has, in addition, BLOWN any chance he ever had of changing that fact in the future by remaining in this race.

19 posted on 10/05/2003 6:56:32 AM PDT by Rome2000 (McCarthy was right!)
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To: Rome2000
Bullcrap.

The Party has never supported Tom McClintock because he'll whack the crooked money bleeding out of the State treasury that funds their machinations. His electability has been confirmed in that he has won repeatedly in a district that voted for GORE. No, this has NOTHING to do with McClintock's record in elections.

There is outright fear of a Governor McClintock in the corporate CAGOP: the real estate speculators, the multinational investors, energy companies, big timber, and big agriculture. Family farmers, small business, and private landowners that are the backbone of the Republican Party and the State's economy need not apply.
20 posted on 10/05/2003 7:08:41 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (There are people in power who are truly evil.)
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