A Good Start, but ...
Editorial
Gov.-elect Arnold Schwarzenegger promised that the people
he hired would reflect the people of California. He's off
to a good start. One key advisor, Bonnie Reiss, is a
self-described liberal Democrat who once worked for Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), Schwarzenegger's uncle-in-law.
Former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, a moderate
Republican like the governor-elect, will be education
secretary. His Food and Agriculture choice is a real
farmer, Orange County's A.G. Kawamura. The reported choice
of environmental activist Terry Tamminen of Santa Monica to
be secretary of the state Environmental Protection Agency
is a brave one, especially since he reportedly was opposed
by Schwarzenegger's powerful transition chief, Rep. David
Dreier (R-San Dimas). From Dreier to Reiss is a commendable
range.
Alas, the governor-elect stumbled on another major campaign
promise: to drive special interests from Sacramento. When
he announced his candidacy, Schwarzenegger said his
administration would not play the special-interest game in
which the money flowed in and the favors flowed out. But
the Schwarzenegger administration is up to its neck in the
special-interest game even before taking office. First, he
took nearly $12 million in contributions, largely from
special interests such as building developers. And now, he
is planning a fund-raising affair in Sacramento Dec. 3,
presumably to pay off his campaign debt of $4.5
million.
A "spectacular event" is promised by Alex Spanos, a
Stockton developer and owner of the San Diego Chargers
football team. Among those invited were the ultimate
insiders, Sacramento's lobbyists. The maximum legal
contribution of $21,200 buys two tickets to the dinner and
a chance to have a photo taken with Schwarzenegger.
Spokesman Rob Stutzman insists that Schwarzenegger is free
from special-interest influence. His tortured reasoning is
that the only real special interests are those that
negotiate directly with the governor, such as public
employee labor unions. What that really means is "other
people's friends are special interests, but mine are
not."
It may be that Schwarzenegger can't be bought, but the
perception around Sacramento will be that those who
contribute generously have a better chance at access and
favors than those who do not. This perception isn't helped
by the state Chamber of Commerce's underwriting of his
2,000-person inaugural lunch Nov. 17.
If Schwarzenegger wants to convince people he is
independent of special interests, he should cancel the
fund-raising dinner and let his inaugural lunch attendees
pay $40 to cover the catered chicken.
See the article on Los Angeles Times website