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Schwarzenegger announces 2006 run for governor
The special election and the crisis of the political establishment
in California
By Andrea Peters
26 September 2005
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California Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger announced
September 15 that he will run for reelection in 2006. Schwarzeneggers
decision to declare his candidacy in next years race is
an attempt to reverse his sagging political fortunes, shore up
confidence among big business, and preempt the growth of opposition
to his administration within the Republican Party.
The problems besetting the Schwarzenegger administration are
part of a growing crisis within the two-party system in California
as a whole. The Democratic Party has been unable to capitalize
upon the increasing popular opposition to the governors
right-wing policies amid deepening political alienation of working
people from both big-business parties.
The current political crisis in Sacramento is unfolding in
the lead-up to the special election, which Schwarzenegger announced
in June. The November 8 referendum will force a popular vote on
a series of right-wing measures that the governor was unable to
get passed through the normal legislative process. In calling
for the special election, Schwarzenegger is attempting to rule
with the same methods that landed him in office in the first placethrough
the subversion of longstanding electoral and legislative processes.
However, rather than halting Schwarzeneggers downward
slide in the polls, the special election has worsened his political
problems. The governors approval ratings hover at 36 percent,
the same as in June of this year and 30 percentage points lower
than a year ago. Polls show growing numbers of likely voters opposing
two of the ballot propositions that Schwarzenegger is backing
in the November 8 electiona state spending cap and an act
that would extend the time it takes for teachers to achieve tenure.
Schwarzeneggers third proposition, a redistricting measure,
has also fallen flat, with a plurality of likely voters indicating
that they will vote against it.
The special election has also revealed the gulf between the
sentiments of working people and the policies of the Democratic
Party. Despite an extensive media campaign, the Democrats and
the trade unions have thus far failed to make significant headway
against the majority support among likely voters for the Union
Paycheck Initiative, which will also be on the November
8 ballot. This measure, which is sponsored by the right wing,
would require public employee unions to get the annual consent
of each member before using their dues money to support a political
campaign. If passed, it would seriously erode one of the major
sources of funding for the Democratic Party by limiting the ability
of the trade unions to funnel money to the organization.
In another sign of the alienation of the population from the
political establishment, approval ratings for the state legislature,
which is dominated by the Democrats, are even lower than Schwarzeneggers,
standing at just 27 percent.
The political crisis within the two-party system in California
has developed in tandem with a protracted and deepening fiscal
and social crisis, spawning further attacks on the living standards
of the working class and leading to a breakdown in the traditional
norms of political rule.
The state treasury is now entering its fourth year of a multibillion-dollar
deficit. This massive budget shortfall was the result of a sharp
fall-off in income tax revenues due to the bursting of the dot-com
bubble in 2000, the implementation of right-wing tax policies
during the 1970s that severely limit the ability of the state
to collect property taxes, and the theft of $15 billion worth
of public money by large energy corporations during the power
crisis of 2001.
In 2003, the state house in Sacramento was occupied by right-wing
Democratic Governor Gray Davis, who had become increasingly unpopular
due to his policies, the emergence of the state budget deficit,
and the 2001 energy crisis. At the same time, a far-right section
of the Republican Party wanted to see the implementation of far
more severe attacks on the living standards of workers. These
included the dismantling of workers compensation, the privatization
of the state pension system, the institution of spending caps,
and drastic cuts in funding for social services, public education
and health care.
These forces saw Daviss collapsing approval ratings as
an opportunity to further their own agenda. Latching on to the
growing disaffection in the population with the Davis administration,
the Republican right led by multimillionaire Congressman Darrell
Issa orchestrated the 2003 recall election.
When it became clear that the efforts to unseat Davis might
prove successful, big business and more mainstream sections of
the Republican Party outmaneuvered the arch-conservative layers
around Issa and advanced Schwarzenegger as a candidate who would
be able to advance right-wing policies under a populist guise.
Schwarzenegger presented himself as a man who, because of his
personal wealth and lack of prior political experience, stood
above the influence of special interests. He used
his Hollywood persona and millions of dollars of campaign funds
to launch a massive media campaign to stampede public opinion
into supporting him.
The Democratic Party proved incapable of fending off this attack.
Having themselves shifted to the right for many years, they had
no basis to oppose the agenda of the Republican Party and were
unable to expose the fundamentally antidemocratic character of
the recall election.
However, Schwarzeneggers election has only served to
deepen the social and political turmoil in California. In response
to the state fiscal crisis, Schwarzenegger has, in tandem with
the Democrats, implemented two austerity budgets that have eliminated
billions of dollars of funding for health care, schools and universities,
and public services. The governor has presided over the effective
dismantling of workers compensation, a series of sharp hikes
in tuition and fees at the states public universities and
colleges, the closure of hospitals, the implementation of stricter
requirements for enrollment in public health insurance programs,
and the elimination of numerous environmental protections. He
has also sought to privatize the state pension system.
These policies have worsened already deteriorating social conditions
in the state. Over the course of the past several years, decent-paying
jobs with health care, pensions and other benefits have been disappearing.
Housing costs in the state have skyrocketed, with the average
home price in California topping $500,000. Already struggling
to maintain a decent standard of living, many poor and working
class families are seeing the public infrastructure and social
programs they have relied upon in the past either vanish or become
inaccessible.
Since Schwarzenegger took office in 2003, the real social and
political interests behind his populist rhetoric have made themselves
increasingly clear, leading to growing disillusionment in his
administration.
The trade unions have responded by attempting to channel opposition
to Schwarzenegger into support for the Democratic Party. This
effort has included chasing the governor around the country to
stage publicity stunts wherever he speaks and increasing union
dues to raise an additional $20 million for a television ad campaign
calling on workers to vote no on the Union Paycheck
Initiative.
The Democratic Party itself, however, has been deeply discredited
by its own right-wing policies, including its support of many
of Schwarzeneggers austerity measures. The Democrats and
the trade unions fear that the growing social discontent in California
will move beyond the boundaries of the two-party system.
However, even given the Schwarzenegger administrations
political disarray, the Democratic Party has little confidence
in its own future. In an extraordinary admission of the partys
political bankruptcy, Democratic Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez
told the Los Angeles Times last July that it was possible
but unlikely that a Democrat could beat Schwarzenegger in
the 2006 elections.
I say its unlikely because I think one way or another
the governor will figure out a way to gain more ground among the
moderate Republicans who are beginning to turn the other cheek.
And he might get some of the more moderate-to-conservative Democrats
if he can figure out a way to get them back, Nuñez
added.
Schwarzeneggers calling of the Special Election was an
attempt to find a way out of his administrations political
crisis by utilizing the same methods employed during the recall
electionto once again swindle the population into supporting
measures directly opposed to their own interests. This attempt
has thus far failed.
Instead, Schwarzenegger has witnessed declining confidence
in his administration on the part of big business and sections
of the Republican Party, as well as growing hostility to his policies
in the population at large. This has expressed itself in calls
for the cancellation of the November 8 ballot by some leading
Republicans and the failure of campaign fundraising contributions
to the governors cause to keep pace with that of the trade
unions. Thrashing about to find a means to restore sagging confidence,
Schwarzenegger came upon his reelection bid for 2006.
However, within the framework of the two-party system, neither
the Special Election this November nor the gubernatorial election
in 2006 will resolve the political crisis in California. Neither
the Democrats nor the Republicans have a progressive solution
to the fiscal and social crisis in the state. Only through the
building of a mass independent movement of the working class on
the basis of a socialist programa program that places social
needs above the profit margins of big businesscan working
people in California defend their interests.
See Also:
Schwarzenegger budget
to slash health and education in California
[17 January 2004]
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