SACRAMENTO When people ask why I moved to Sacramento to write
about California’s notoriously dysfunctional government, I say that, in
the next two or three years, the government here is likely to
(figuratively) crash and burn and that, as a journalist, I want a
front-row seat for the action.
While my seat is, more honestly, high up in the bleachers, I’m yet
to be disappointed by the amount of problems waiting to be covered. I’m
not surprised at the gaping budget hole, the ironclad control of the
Legislature by the insatiable public-sector unions or by the arrogance
of elected officials. But I am surprised shocked, actually at the
degree to which elected officials here are busy congratulating
themselves about all the hard choices they must make. Most of the
legislators seem to be, quite frankly, legends in their own minds not
just in the minds of the special-interest groups that serve as their
funders and enablers.
After Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s final State of the State speech
in early January, he and Democratic Senate President Darrell Steinberg
wallowed in self-congratulation despite the obvious inabilities to even
balance the budget an event I mocked in my column. But I’ve learned
that such delusional mutual congratulation is not the aberration, but
the norm.
The funniest recent example: The John F. Kennedy Presidential
Library & Museum last week bestowed its John F. Kennedy Profile in
Courage Award to four California legislative leaders who attempted to
fix the state’s never-ending budget problem by embracing a budget that
would have raised taxes on Californians up and down the economic ladder.
Granted, the JFK library is in Boston, but its press release quoting
Caroline Kennedy (cousin of Schwarzenegger’s wife, Maria Shriver)
captured the self-congratulatory tone common in Sacramento: “Faced with
the most difficult choices and a budget crisis of unprecedented
magnitude, these legislative leaders had the courage to negotiate a
compromise that they felt was in the public’s best interest. They did
so knowing they would suffer the wrath of their constituents, powerful
interest groups, and their own party members. The members of the
Profile in Courage Award Committee chose to herald this story of
political courage and bipartisan compromise with the hope that it will
inspire other elected officials facing similar challenges to stand up
with courage, to cross party lines, and to do whatever is necessary to
better serve the public interest.”
As one might exclaim on Twitter, OMG!!!!
The honorees are state Sen. Dave Cogdill and Assemblyman Mike
Villines, both Republicans, and Sen. Steinberg and Assemblywoman Karen
Bass, both Democrats.
The two Republicans were ousted from their party leadership roles
for violating the GOP’s stance against tax increases, so perhaps that
could be described in some ways as showing a bit of courage, although I
would never use the word courage to describe doing the wrong thing.
California has dreadfully high tax rates, and its government is
awash in waste, yet Cogdill and Villines thought it better to take more
money from the people who work hard and pay the bills than to challenge
their allies in the state bureaucracies.
And it’s not clear how courageous it was for the two Democrats to
endorse the tax increases, given that the state’s Democratic Party is
committed to few things other than raising taxes in order to pay for a
state government that spends more than it takes in.
The JFK center’s press release described the disastrous aftermath of
the budget deal. The budget referendum the honorees supported went, as
required, to the voters, who soundly rejected it. The state “began
issuing high-interest IOUs to vendors in lieu of payment. In 2010,
California’s budget problems go largely unresolved. The Pew Center on
the States has ranked California dead last among the 50 states on
fiscal health.”
As a CalWatchdog blog post put it, “Last year, four brave
‘legislative leaders’ stood up and signed a budget deal that everyone
hated and was ultimately trashed by the voters so it didn’t really fix
anything, and now our state government remains about $20 billion in the
hole and the economy still sucks like a Hoover upright. And for that we
are honoring those four ‘legislative leaders.’”
Ah, but this gets back to my observation. No elected officials here
are interested in genuinely tough choices. They like to give
vainglorious speeches and pat each other on the back while talking
about all their courage and tough-mindedness. I watched Assemblyman
Anthony Adams of Hesperia, another tax-supporting Republican, use the
word courage to describe his own vote. He dodged a recall effort and
announced that he won’t seek re-election, so at least he has a story to
tell himself and his grandkids to justify his unconscionable budget
vote.
For her part, former Speaker Bass gave new meaning to the word
courage when, as the Los Angeles Times reported, “In one of her last
acts as speaker of the state Assembly, Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles)
quietly doled out 10 percent pay raises and promotions to 20 of her
staff members.” She did this against a backdrop of state worker
furloughs and budget deficits. But if one defines courage as merely
doing something that will anger many people, as the JFK folks seem to
do, then former Speaker Bass had courage.
And the new speaker, John A. Perez, has courage, too, in case you
were worried about a courage deficit during this change of power. The
Sacramento Bee reported last week that Perez “handed out pay increases
or promotions totaling nearly $132,000 per year the day he was sworn in
this month, including a $65,000 raise to his chief of staff.”
If you or I presided over a corporate budget, or family checkbook,
for that matter, that was so deeply in debt and riddled with waste and
abuse that the creditors were breathing down our neck, we would be
filled with a certain amount of embarrassment or even shame. We
wouldn’t be buying ourselves a new car and then championing our courage
for buying only a Mercedes rather than a Bentley.
A Columbia University study from last year found that California
voters are more likely than voters in most other states to get the
policies that they say they want. So we can’t entirely blame
legislators for the sorry fiscal situation in state government. We get
what we vote for. But let’s at least not accept the delusion that
anything truly courageous is going on in Sacramento.
Steven Greenhut is director of the Pacific
Research Institute’s (www.Calwatchdog.com) journalism center.
Legends in their own minds
Steven Greenhut
SACRAMENTO When people ask why I moved to Sacramento to write
about California’s notoriously dysfunctional government, I say that, in
the next two or three years, the government here is likely to
(figuratively) crash and burn and that, as a journalist, I want a
front-row seat for the action.
While my seat is, more honestly, high up in the bleachers, I’m yet
to be disappointed by the amount of problems waiting to be covered. I’m
not surprised at the gaping budget hole, the ironclad control of the
Legislature by the insatiable public-sector unions or by the arrogance
of elected officials. But I am surprised shocked, actually at the
degree to which elected officials here are busy congratulating
themselves about all the hard choices they must make. Most of the
legislators seem to be, quite frankly, legends in their own minds not
just in the minds of the special-interest groups that serve as their
funders and enablers.
After Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s final State of the State speech
in early January, he and Democratic Senate President Darrell Steinberg
wallowed in self-congratulation despite the obvious inabilities to even
balance the budget an event I mocked in my column. But I’ve learned
that such delusional mutual congratulation is not the aberration, but
the norm.
The funniest recent example: The John F. Kennedy Presidential
Library & Museum last week bestowed its John F. Kennedy Profile in
Courage Award to four California legislative leaders who attempted to
fix the state’s never-ending budget problem by embracing a budget that
would have raised taxes on Californians up and down the economic ladder.
Granted, the JFK library is in Boston, but its press release quoting
Caroline Kennedy (cousin of Schwarzenegger’s wife, Maria Shriver)
captured the self-congratulatory tone common in Sacramento: “Faced with
the most difficult choices and a budget crisis of unprecedented
magnitude, these legislative leaders had the courage to negotiate a
compromise that they felt was in the public’s best interest. They did
so knowing they would suffer the wrath of their constituents, powerful
interest groups, and their own party members. The members of the
Profile in Courage Award Committee chose to herald this story of
political courage and bipartisan compromise with the hope that it will
inspire other elected officials facing similar challenges to stand up
with courage, to cross party lines, and to do whatever is necessary to
better serve the public interest.”
As one might exclaim on Twitter, OMG!!!!
The honorees are state Sen. Dave Cogdill and Assemblyman Mike
Villines, both Republicans, and Sen. Steinberg and Assemblywoman Karen
Bass, both Democrats.
The two Republicans were ousted from their party leadership roles
for violating the GOP’s stance against tax increases, so perhaps that
could be described in some ways as showing a bit of courage, although I
would never use the word courage to describe doing the wrong thing.
California has dreadfully high tax rates, and its government is
awash in waste, yet Cogdill and Villines thought it better to take more
money from the people who work hard and pay the bills than to challenge
their allies in the state bureaucracies.
And it’s not clear how courageous it was for the two Democrats to
endorse the tax increases, given that the state’s Democratic Party is
committed to few things other than raising taxes in order to pay for a
state government that spends more than it takes in.
The JFK center’s press release described the disastrous aftermath of
the budget deal. The budget referendum the honorees supported went, as
required, to the voters, who soundly rejected it. The state “began
issuing high-interest IOUs to vendors in lieu of payment. In 2010,
California’s budget problems go largely unresolved. The Pew Center on
the States has ranked California dead last among the 50 states on
fiscal health.”
As a CalWatchdog blog post put it, “Last year, four brave
‘legislative leaders’ stood up and signed a budget deal that everyone
hated and was ultimately trashed by the voters so it didn’t really fix
anything, and now our state government remains about $20 billion in the
hole and the economy still sucks like a Hoover upright. And for that we
are honoring those four ‘legislative leaders.’”
Ah, but this gets back to my observation. No elected officials here
are interested in genuinely tough choices. They like to give
vainglorious speeches and pat each other on the back while talking
about all their courage and tough-mindedness. I watched Assemblyman
Anthony Adams of Hesperia, another tax-supporting Republican, use the
word courage to describe his own vote. He dodged a recall effort and
announced that he won’t seek re-election, so at least he has a story to
tell himself and his grandkids to justify his unconscionable budget
vote.
For her part, former Speaker Bass gave new meaning to the word
courage when, as the Los Angeles Times reported, “In one of her last
acts as speaker of the state Assembly, Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles)
quietly doled out 10 percent pay raises and promotions to 20 of her
staff members.” She did this against a backdrop of state worker
furloughs and budget deficits. But if one defines courage as merely
doing something that will anger many people, as the JFK folks seem to
do, then former Speaker Bass had courage.
And the new speaker, John A. Perez, has courage, too, in case you
were worried about a courage deficit during this change of power. The
Sacramento Bee reported last week that Perez “handed out pay increases
or promotions totaling nearly $132,000 per year the day he was sworn in
this month, including a $65,000 raise to his chief of staff.”
If you or I presided over a corporate budget, or family checkbook,
for that matter, that was so deeply in debt and riddled with waste and
abuse that the creditors were breathing down our neck, we would be
filled with a certain amount of embarrassment or even shame. We
wouldn’t be buying ourselves a new car and then championing our courage
for buying only a Mercedes rather than a Bentley.
A Columbia University study from last year found that California
voters are more likely than voters in most other states to get the
policies that they say they want. So we can’t entirely blame
legislators for the sorry fiscal situation in state government. We get
what we vote for. But let’s at least not accept the delusion that
anything truly courageous is going on in Sacramento.
Steven Greenhut is director of the Pacific
Research Institute’s (www.Calwatchdog.com) journalism center.
Nothing contained in this blog is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the Pacific Research Institute or as an attempt to thwart or aid the passage of any legislation.