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Beamer


That about says it all for Prop 87, the alternative fuels proposition. Very sad. The oil companies fought this one. I was thinking that there's going to have to be a LOT more education of the voters on the need for measures like this.

I voted for Warren Beatty as a write-in, by the way, for Senate against Feinstein.
Beamer

Arnold with Eunice Kennedy Shriver





Maria looked quite hot in her gold dress
Beamer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/politics...-home-headlines

ELECTION 2006: CALIFORNIA RACES
Voters back all 5 public works bonds
The $37-billion package had bipartisan backing. Tax levies on oil and cigarettes falter.
By Evan Halper and Jenifer Warren
Times Staff Writers

November 8, 2006

SACRAMENTO — California voters were poised to approve $37 billion in borrowing for a panoply of public works projects, according to unofficial election returns Tuesday but were rejecting proposals to expand government programs through new taxes on cigarettes and oil companies.

The massive public works bond package was championed by Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders after extensive negotiations earlier this year. Appearing on the ballot as propositions 1A through 1E, the plan would authorize borrowing for a host of improvements to the state's roads, bridges, schools, ports and levees.

Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez (D-Los Angeles) praised voters for backing the bipartisan effort by lawmakers and the governor to shore up California's aging infrastructure.

"When the Legislature and the governor work together to solve people's problems, the voters stand with us," Nuñez said. "This is a huge investment in California's future. It will continue to give California the competitive edge."

Two other money-raising measures — one seeking to tax oil companies to promote the production of alternative fuels, the other aiming to expand healthcare funding through a tax hike on cigarettes — appeared headed for defeat.

Among the plethora of propositions facing voters this fall, they were the most passionately contested, targets of noisy advertising campaigns and heavy spending.

Topping the spending charts was the oil industry, which invested a record amount — at least $94 million — against Proposition 87. The measure sought to hit oil companies with billions of dollars in new taxes to promote the production of alternative fuels.

Big money was spent in support of the measure as well, with Los Angeles developer and movie producer Stephen Bing pumping nearly $50 million into the cause. Former President Clinton, meanwhile, had led a gaggle of A-list celebrities in promoting the measure at events around the state.

Proposition 86 sparked an equally vigorous fight, with the tobacco industry spending lavishly against the proposal to more than quadruple the tax on cigarettes. The measure had broad public support in polls earlier in the year, but it dwindled as tobacco companies boosted their campaign spending.

Their advertisements warned that only a small fraction of the billions raised through the measure — designed to expand healthcare for low-income children and increase funding for emergency rooms and research — would go toward anti-smoking efforts. The hospitals and public health organizations supporting the idea could not afford much of a reply because they were outspent by the tobacco companies nearly 5 to 1.

The record-shattering spending dismayed campaign finance reform advocates.

"The process has been converted from the people's process into a system in which public policy is up for sale," said Ned Wigglesworth, policy advocate at Common Cause.

The proposed remedy on Tuesday's ballot, Proposition 89, would introduce public campaign financing to California. The measure never gained much traction with voters, however. By late Tuesday night, incomplete returns showed it trailing badly.


In other proposition battles, a measure to toughen penalties for sex offenders and restrict where they may live was headed to an easy victory.

Proposition 83, dubbed Jessica's Law by proponents, drew little campaign spending but held a strong lead in the polls from the start.

Though crime has dropped lower on the list of voter priorities, sex offenders consistently rank among society's most loathed criminals, and measures that subject them to tougher punishment are passing easily around the country.

Aside from imposing longer prison and parole terms for sex felons, the measure would forbid released offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a park or school and would allow local governments to adopt their own stricter residency rules.

Proposition 83, sponsored by a husband-wife team of Republican legislators, also would require registered sex offenders to wear electronic tracking devices for life and would make it easier to designate a convict a "sexually violent predator."

The measure was backed by nearly every state lawmaker, Schwarzenegger and his Democratic rival, Phil Angelides.

Another measure that addressed a controversial topic but drew relatively little attention was Proposition 85, which would require parental notification 48 hours before a minor could obtain an abortion. With two-thirds of the vote counted, it was losing late Tuesday. The measure was placed on the ballot one year after its chief sponsor, San Diego newspaper publisher James Holman, lost a push for a virtually identical law.

As in last year's effort, Holman was the largest individual donor for Proposition 85, spending more than $2.5 million, while vintner Don Sebastiani invested about $400,000 in the fight. Opponents outspent proponents by more than $1 million, with the biggest chunk of cash coming from Planned Parenthood affiliates around the state.

Supporters said the measure would protect girls by ensuring that parents had a role in decisions related to abortion. Opponents said such a law would force scared teens to make dangerous decisions, either delaying abortions or seeking one from an unsafe provider.

The debates over propositions 84 and 88 were barely audible above the din generated by other measures.

Proposition 88, the ballot's remaining effort to hike taxes, would have increased the property tax bills of most California homeowners by $50 a year to raise money for schools. But the measure was abandoned by its backers early in the campaign, and it was losing badly Tuesday night.

Proposition 84 was another bond issue, placed on the ballot through the signature-gathering process. Written by a Sacramento lobbyist, it sought to sink $5.4 billion into water quality improvements, river and beach protection, park acquisition, flood control, museum enhancements and a host of other efforts aimed at stretching the state's water supply and safeguarding wild lands. Incomplete returns showed it with a modest lead.

Still unclear late Tuesday was the voters' verdict on a little-debated but potentially sweeping measure aimed at limiting government's ability to seize homes and businesses for development.

Proposition 90, supported by many Republican lawmakers, was fiercely opposed by a coalition of government and industry groups, including the California Chamber of Commerce and the League of California Cities.

They warned that the measure would hold up infrastructure investments and paralyze the planning process.

*


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evan.halper@latimes.com

jenifer.warren@latimes.com
Beamer
I can say I am truly stoked by this Democratic victory:

QUOTE
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Challenger defeats Pombo in a stunner
- Rachel Gordon, Chronicle Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 8, 2006



(11-08) 10:19 PST -- Democratic challenger Jerry McNerney, a relative newcomer to politics, unseated seven-term GOP Congressman Richard Pombo of Tracy Tuesday in a stunning demonstration of voter disenchantment with the Republican Party nationally.

McNerney, a wind energy consultant from Pleasanton, took Northern California's 11th Congressional District with 53 percent of the vote. Pombo, who held a leadership position in the Republican-held House, received 47 percent. More than 9,000 votes divided the two candidates this morning.

Incumbent GOP Rep. John Doolittle of Rocklin (Placer County), meanwhile, beat his Democratic challenger, Charlie Brown, 49 percent to 46 percent. Libertarian candidate Dan Warren had 5 percent.

"Everyone knew that this election was going to be bad for the Republicans -- the question was just how bad. (Pombo losing) really is the exclamation point," said Brian Klunk, chairman of the political science department at the University of the Pacific in Stockton.

Doolittle is an eight-term congressman whose district stretches from the Sacramento suburbs to the Oregon and Nevada borders.

The two races mirrored other close contests throughout the country that found Republican incumbents fighting for their political lives. The Democratic Party targeted the two California incumbents as part of its national strategy to wrest control of Congress from the Republican Party, attacking them for their strong allegiance to the Bush White House and their unwavering support of the war in Iraq. Pombo and Doolittle also came under fire for their ties to Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who was convicted of conspiracy, fraud and tax evasion.

Pombo and Doolittle, echoing other Republican candidates, painted their opponents as tax-loving liberal extremists who would be weak on national security.

Of the two races, the Pombo-McNerney matchup got the most attention, due to Pombo's high-profile as chairman of the powerful House Resources Committee. The Sierra Club and other environmental groups targeted him as an "eco-thug" who once proposed selling off some national parks, led the drive to open Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling, wants to let states drill for oil and gas off their coasts, and has pushed to revamp the Endangered Species Act to provide more rights for property owners.

"We're thrilled," said Roger Schlickeisen, president of Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund, which made Pombo its top target in the congressional races. "Not only was he a vote against the environment, but as committee chair he could push his agenda.''

The president, first lady and vice president campaigned for Pombo, 45, on his home turf, both to raise money and to motivate the party faithful. Pombo was relying heavily on his family's deep roots in the district and the aid of the GOP's well-oiled get-out-the-vote apparatus.

The 11th Congressional District is centered in San Joaquin County, but also includes portions of Alameda, Contra Costa and Santa Clara counties. As more people from the Bay Area's more liberal enclaves are moving east of the Altamont Pass in search of affordable housing, the demographics, and the political tenor, has changed since Pombo was first elected 14 years ago.

McNerney, a 55-year-old wind energy consultant and entrepreneur from the East Bay tried without success to unseat Pombo two years ago. In this year's matchup, he was able to gain traction with his call to set a timetable to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq and by embracing the Democratic Party's national mantra that it is time for change.

The party establishment initially did not back McNerney's candidacy and favored one of his more moderate opponents in the June primary. But when the race began to tighten in October, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee pitched in, providing cash and the party's most popular draw on the campaign trail, former President Bill Clinton.   An example of where the national Party can be out of touch.

Many of the issues were the same in the Fourth Congressional District race. Brown, a 56-year-old retired Air Force officer and former Republican from Roseville, ran on an anti-war platform. This is one of the most Republican districts in the state.

E-mail Rachel Gordon at rgordon@sfchronicle.com


URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file...MNG9LM8JDV4.DTL


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©2006 San Francisco Chronicle
dggfwtx
I've said this for years, but I'm *REALLY* glad we do not have initiative and referendum here in TX. I know it sounds weird, but I&R has turned out to be a perversion of the democratic process.
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