Yank the 'For Sale' Sign
Reinventing California
Editorial
In his campaign, Arnold Schwarzenegger missed the target
with many of the vague darts he tossed at "the mess in
Sacramento," but he hit the bull's-eye with this television
ad: "Special interests have a stranglehold on Sacramento.
Here's how it works. Money comes in, favors go out. The
people lose."
Anger at cash-register politics is not something that arose
with the recall campaign. Californians voted half a dozen
times in the last 25 years to "reform" the way politicians
raised money for their campaigns and how they spent it.
Every effort has been thwarted by political party
opposition, adverse court decisions and loopholes in the
laws â€" either deliberate or unintended. The
current law was written by legislators, sold to voters as a
reform and approved as Proposition 34 in 2002. It actually
gave the political parties a bigger-than-ever role in
bankrolling the campaigns of favored candidates. The
perversity of that "reform" is illustrated by the recall
campaign itself.
Most notable was Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante's acceptance of
nearly $5 million from Indian tribes operating Nevada-style
casinos. He virtually promised them that, if he was elected
governor, they could run all the slot machines they wanted
without fear of the state taxing them. When a court ruled
that the contribution amounts violated the law, Bustamante
tried to use the money for ads against Proposition 54,
which sought to ban certain uses of racial data. The ads
actually amounted to Bustamante commercials. By the time
the courts ruled against the shell game Bustamante used to
pay for those ads, he had spent the $5 million. It is not
clear whether he will face further sanctions.
About the same time, Maloof Sports and Entertainment, owner
of the Sacramento Kings basketball team, gave Gov. Gray
Davis' no-on-the-recall committee $100,000 while a bill
that could help finance a new Kings downtown arena with
public bond money was awaiting his action. Surprise, he
signed. The link is just as clear during the frantic end of
legislative sessions when lawmakers shake down lobbyists at
receptions â€" usually getting $5,000 a head
for hors d'oeuvres while bills await final votes.
Schwarzenegger, however, looked disingenuous in condemning
Davis and others for taking money from the casinos and
public employee unions while himself was accepting at least
$9 million from real estate developers, contractors and
other businesses with intense interest in state law and
regulation.
Each ding of the cash register makes Californians more
distrustful of politics.
Public Financing
When he takes office as governor, Schwarzenegger
will have momentum. He should use it for campaign reform.
The Legislature may agree to close some loopholes in
current law, but public financing remains the only sure way
to reduce the legalized influence-peddling that rules the
state today. Californians endorsed public campaign finance
in 1988 in a measure that won a majority of votes but was
canceled out by passage of a watered-down competing
proposition.
The federal General Accounting Office cites recent studies
showing that public financing in Los Angeles and New York
city elections has increased electoral competition and
helped challengers mount credible campaigns against
incumbents. Seventeen states have some degree of public
financing. Arizona and Maine offer nearly full public
financing that candidates may use on a voluntary basis.
Seven of the nine statewide offices in Arizona, including
the governorship, were won in 2002 by candidates who
accepted public financing and its conditions. These
included strict limits on how much they could spend and a
commitment to debate opponents.
It's hard to quantify "clean" or "corrupt," and the laws
are too new to make unassailable claims. Still, Arizona's
public financing advocates tout increases in contested
campaigns and increased voter participation. And we know
it's better than what we have in California, whose motto
for governing is little more than "pay to play."
Promising Proposals
The new California governor will find plenty of
good advice already formulated. Some of the best comes from
the California Clean Money Campaign, a nonpartisan umbrella
group formed in 2002 that has drawn on experts, including
Robert M. Stern, president of the Center for Governmental
Studies in Los Angeles and the first general counsel to the
state Fair Political Practices Commission in the
mid-1970s.
Under the Clean Money Campaign's proposals, candidates for
statewide office and the Legislature would have to
demonstrate grass-roots support by raising large numbers of
small contributions if they wanted public financing.
Candidates for governor who didn't opt for public financing
would be more limited than they now are in the size of
contributions they could accept. (Rich candidates could
still self-finance without limit, because the courts have
ruled that the 1st Amendment forbids such limits.)
Television broadcasters â€" stewards of the
publicly owned airwaves â€" should help by
offering radio and television time at less than the premium
rates they now charge candidates to get their messages out.
Stern estimates the cost to California at
roughly $178 million a year to cover all state elections,
if it is combined with new, effective contribution limits.
That compares with the more than $130 million that Davis
and his foes spent just in the 2002 contest for governor,
most of it raised from unions, businesses and other parties
that are keenly interested in what elected officials do in
Sacramento.
Arizona finances its plan with a 10% surcharge on civil and
criminal fines levied in the state. Other possible sources
include gambling levies, which would have to be negotiated
with tribes that operate casinos. California could also
experiment by funding only legislative races at first, for
about half the cost. Legislators, degraded by having to
continuously shake down special interests for
contributions, should embrace public funding and put it on
the 2004 ballot. California can't go on awarding the state
to the highest bidders.
Here's a final word from Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano,
about her delight at campaigning under a public finance
system: "I could spend my time talking with voters, not
with [big] contributors. We were able to
… campaign in a fundamentally
different way." Once she was in office, she said,
"lobbyists were not swarming around me" for payback. It
sounds just like public service, doesn't it?
See the article on Los Angeles Times website