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Sunday, May 17, 2009
Paul Jacob :: Townhall.com Columnist
Ode to California
by Paul Jacob
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Will Congress pass Obamacare by the end of the year?

On Tuesday, Californians will get to do something that I love to do: Vote. The Golden State’s Assembly has placed six measures on a statewide special election ballot.

Forget for a moment that these ballot measures 1A through 1F include a giant tax increase paired with a phony spending cap, an authorization to borrow billions from future lottery receipts, and two spending shifts away from voter-approved programs.

Remember that five of the six propositions seem thankfully headed to almost certain defeat. In fact, the only ballot item that appears likely to win — and win big — is Proposition 1F, which stops pay increases for the governor, top state officials, and state legislators when the general fund is in deficit.

Legislators were offering this one sweetener. Voters seem likely to eat this sweet dessert and leave the meat and potatoes behind.

I won’t blame them for voting down the first five measures. I would, too. In fact, I envy Californians for getting the opportunity to vote these idiotic proposals down. I’d certainly like an opportunity to veto plenty of stuff passed by my legislature, and to weigh in on budget decisions.

In Virginia, decisions are made in Richmond with seldom any direct input from the people. And unlike California and 23 other states, we have no initiative and referendum process to check the legislature or to pass reforms ourselves.

It’s not that California doesn’t have problems; it does. It’s just that the problems don’t stem from too much citizen say-so.

Politicians and insiders often blame California’s voter initiative and referendum process for the state’s budgetary problems. They blame term limits, passed by initiative. They blame the two-thirds vote requirements for the California Legislature to pass a budget or raise taxes, again mandated by initiative.

Yet, they ignore the simple fact that Californians love their state’s initiative and referendum process, and the many reforms that have sprung from the process.

Me? I go with the idea that the customer is always right. And voters, not politicians or anointed experts, are the customers of government.

The Los Angeles Times recently wrote that “Propositions 1D and 1E represent ballot-box budgeting coming back to haunt the California electorate.”

Judging from the polls, voters don’t seem “haunted” at all. They’re set to defeat both D and E, ratifying their original vote to direct certain funding.

Both 1D and 1E are on the ballot because, by law, any initiative statute passed by California voters cannot be repealed by legislators. Instead, legislators must put an amendment to or a repeal of the initiative law on the ballot for voters to decide. In this case, legislators are seeking to divert some funding from mental health and childhood development programs passed through initiatives.

Kent Drum’s blog post on Mother Jones entitled, “The Scourge of the Ballot Initiative” notes that one measure concerns just $200 million dollars. Drum argues, “I’m not about to spend hours pouring over ballot arguments.” Continued...

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About The Author
Paul Jacob is President of Citizens in Charge. His daily Common Sense commentary appears on the Web, via e-mail, and on radio stations across America.
 
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Part 2
Third, California has been bailing out the other states for decades. For every dollar in taxes we send to DC, we get back 75 cents. So, we are the ones getting screwed, not you. And, if the Feds would simply PAY for the unfunded mandates they have foisted upon the state, and protected the state from an illegal foreign invasion of illegal aliens as required in the US Constitution, we wouldn't have a financial mess in the first place. We did pass a citizens' initiative outlawing illegal immigration and benefits to illegals back in 1994, but a corrupt ACLU judge on the federal 9th Circuit held up our law for 4 years until a Democrat could be elected governor. He refused to appeal the decision to the full court and just "mediated" our law out of existance. This governor was later recalled and ousted from office after agreeing to give driver's licenses to illegal aliens. Our annual deficit is around 16 billion dollars -- the exact amount it costs us to educate, medicate and incarcerate the illegal foreign invaders. This does not include the costs incurred by their faux-citizen anchor-baby offspring. Nor does it include lost tax receipts from the underground economy. Nor does it include the wage depression a bloated, foreign-dominated labor market foists on all California workers.

Most of California's problems are federally induced, for the rest, we have the citizens' initiative and we use it on a regular basis.

Part 2
Third, California has been bailing out the other states for decades. For every dollar in taxes we send to DC, we get back 75 cents. So, we are the ones getting screwed, not you. And, if the Feds would simply PAY for the unfunded mandates they have foisted upon the state, and protected the state from an illegal foreign invasion of illegal aliens as required in the US Constitution, we wouldn't have a financial mess in the first place. We did pass a citizens' initiative outlawing illegal immigration and benefits to illegals back in 1994, but a corrupt ACLU judge on the federal 9th Circuit held up our law for 4 years until a Democrat could be elected governor. He refused to appeal the decision to the full court and just "mediated" our law out of existance. This governor was later recalled and ousted from office after agreeing to give driver's licenses to illegal aliens. Our annual deficit is around 16 billion dollars -- the exact amount it costs us to educate, medicate and incarcerate the illegal foreign invaders. This does not include the costs incurred by their faux-citizen anchor-baby offspring. Nor does it include lost tax receipts from the underground economy. Nor does it include the wage depression a bloated, foreign-dominated labor market foists on all California workers.

Most of California's problems are federally induced, for the rest, we have the citizens' initiative and we use it on a regular basis.
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