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Arnold Goes for Broke
Speculation that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will seek to cancel the special election he called for November has been rampant in Sacramento after last week's decision by a judge that the centerpiece of his reform agenda had to be thrown off the ballot. His key measure to turn redistricting power over to a panel of retired judges instead of the legislature was ruled invalid because of small discrepancies in the language that was submitted to the state's attorney general and the language in the petition signed by voters.
Don't bet on a cancellation of the election. First, there is a good chance the California Supreme Court will rule that the wishes of the million-plus voters who signed petitions outweigh any technical violations. Secondly, the governor could probably only cancel the election if legislators passed emergency legislation to do so. Last Friday, Democratic Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez told reporters during a conference call that he wouldn't consider canceling the special election unless the governor's office pledged in the future not to back any attempts to reform the state's budget process or restrict the right of public employee unions to spend member dues on political causes without written permission. If the election were canceled at the governor's request, Mr. Nunez added, he would then support the governor placing another redistricting measure on a 2006 ballot.
GOP legislators say accepting such conditions would amount to a virtual policy surrender to Democrats by Arnold. "Look for him to push even more chips into the center of the political table and force the Democrats to raise the stakes," one legislator told me. "He knows this game isn't over until the voters decide."
-- John Fund
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