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Jerry Brown in 2010?

by: Robert Cruickshank

Sun Mar 25, 2007 at 08:53:13 AM PDT


In today's San Francisco Chronicle, Matier and Ross report on a J. Moore Methods poll that shows Jerry Brown with a huge lead among theoretical Democratic 2010 gubernatorial candidates. The poll has to be taken with a whole shaker of salt - it's only 2007, no candidates have declared, this is really just a poll of name recognition, etc.

But by a clause in CA's term limits law, Edmund G. Brown, Jr. is eligible to run for a third term in office should he wish to return to it. In the M&R story he said he had "no plans" to run in 2010. Still, the 31% support - far outdistancing Antonio Villaraigosa who had 17% in the poll (although becoming the clear favorite when Brown's name was not included) - makes this at least interesting Sunday morning coffee and donut speculation.

Robert Cruickshank :: Jerry Brown in 2010?
Jerry Brown was one of only four Democrats elected governor in CA in the 20th century, and was greatly helped by sharing a name with his popular father Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, as well as capitalizing on voter discontent with Reagan's governorship in the 1974 election.

However, it's my view that Brown was not a successful governor, and failed to provide leadership during the most pivotal moments in recent CA history. Brown entered office with some interesting ideas, but found his most immediate task to be dealing with a protracted economic crisis. Brown's solution was austerity, cutting or freezing state spending on everything from social services to freeway projects. Half-finished offramps were left hanging in the air as Brown declared an "era of limits."

While he was not totally wrong in recognizing the need to change, he failed to grasp the voter mood. His spending cuts led the state to amass a sizable surplus - over $1 billion by the 1977 legislative session. Meanwhile inflation had led local governments to hike property taxes to provide for local services, stoking a voter revolt over taxes.

Brown's failure was to not find a way to cut property taxes or spend the surplus to forestall Prop 13, written and passed in 1978. In his 1977 State of the State address he called on the Legislature to provide tax relief, but Brown was unable to bring a fractious Democratic majority to agreement on the subject. And since he was unwilling to spend the surplus, voters saw the situation as absurd. Worse, critics of Prop 13 who pointed out its eventually disastrous effects on government finances were told by tax revolters that the state could simply use its billion dollar surplus to bail out local governments.

Facing reelection in 1978 Brown came out in favor of Prop 13, though not enthusiastically and after an earlier period of opposition. It passed by an overwhelming margin in June, and Brown knew that if he were to be reelected, he would have to embrace it. He did in fact use the surplus funds to bail out local governments, but though this was only a short-term fix, it set the precedent that the state has been following ever since, as more and more of the general fund has been going to pay for local government costs that property taxes used to cover.

Moreover, state projects never recovered from Brown's spending freeze. A few were finished, but many others were postponed, a delay that's now lasted over 30 years. While CA's problems cannot be wholly laid at Brown's feet, he did fail to provide leadership to solve them.

The above historical detour is valuable in shedding light on what kind of governor Brown might be. He has always preferred a centrist course, and though he is not especially friendly to corporations, neither has he been sufficiently skeptical of their power. His populism is real, but it has never found a clear manifestation in politics or policy. His term as Oakland's mayor did not see significant improvement in its fortunes, although as anyone who's driven down 880 near Broadway knows, he did prove a friend to developers.

My gut tells me Brown will not run in 2010, but in discussing this theoretical possibility, we can also determine what we DO want from our gubernatorial candidates. A commitment to single-payer universal health care seems paramount. Some sort of plan to fix this state's chronic financial problems also would be good - a gubernatorial campaign built around a well thought-out and well-researched proposal could generate significant political momentum of its own. All governors who have taken office since Brown left in 1982 have merely offered as-needed solutions, which have typically only worsened our budget problems.

Our gubernatorial candidates need to address infrastructure questions, from transportation to water, in a way that emphasizes sustainability, not sprawl. They need to have a good grasp on the state's economic situation and have some idea of where we can promote job growth for the next decade. They also need to be committed to equal rights, whether it's equal marriage or protecting all immigrants' human rights.

The above isn't an ideal, it's instead a sensible list of goals. Both the Westly and Angelides campaigns offered much of the above, although were inadequate on the long-range infrastructure and budget issues. Their 2006 platforms should be considered a minimum benchmark for 2010, while we also help build the more long-range and visionary answers to budgets and infrastructure that these times demand.

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Say it ain't so... (2.00 / 1)
If we elect Jerry Brown as governor again, our state deserves to go down the tubes. George Santayana said it best, "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it"

Westly is my candidate. He's not a career politician, he's innovative, and he's a bridge-builder. I would have voted for him over Arnold, but in hindsight, I'm glad Angelides beat him in the primary. Why? If Westly had lost to Arnold, he wouldn't get another chance in 2010. He wrote an article recently called State must show fiscal responsibility and it doesn't involve tax increases

You helped show the problem. What started our lack of production was Jerry Brown and his "era of limits." He thought that if we stopped building, people would stop coming. We stopped building, and people came anyway, and now we're living with the consequences. He's not to blame alone; Deukmejian, Wilson, and Davis all continued that mentality. Now we have shortages and congestion.

Where I differ is where you say Prop 13 is such a problem. It wasn't Prop 13 that stopped school funding by property taxes, it was the case Serrano v. Priest 7 YEARS BEFORE that ruled we could not rely on property taxes to fund schools. So a lot of the costs were already going to shift to the state.

As for the notion that homeowners are getting ripped off while commercial property owners are getting it easy: I'll believe that the day I see a proposal to increase commercial property taxes tied with a proposal to lower residential property taxes. All I see now is proposals to increase commercial property taxes tied with a proposal to increase spending. What does that tell me? The objective isn't fairness, it's more money

The chronic financial problems, do need fixing. They are not a lack of revenue, they are a lack of management. Revenue grows 23% since Arnold takes office, and they STILL can't balance a checkbook; they're spending more than they're taking in. They spend all the extra revenue, and then some. More revenue solves nothing.

I know jsw has said I define waste as "programs I don't like" and I can't call them waste. He's asking for me to point out objective waste. Problem: unless if the money literally gets flushed down the toilet, THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS OBJECTIVE WASTE. I view the fact that we have to pay unskilled labor $25/hour (or more) as waste, and you may or may not too, but if you ask the unskilled laborers, they'll tell you it's not waste. Ever since 2001, California public sector salaries have grown faster than inflation. If we had just kept them with inflation, multiply the current amount you pay in state income taxes by .2875 and that's how much money is going toward bloated union wages

If trickle down is so wrong, why do we do it that way with funding schools? We put money at the top and expect it to trickle down into the classroom. It should be the opposite. The current system wastes a lot of money, but you know who will tell you otherwise? The school administrative layers and the teachers union.

Or there's the infamous incident of First 5 expenditures going toward promoting Rob Reiner's pre-school initiative. It's waste to you and me most likely, but it's not waste to Rob Reiner.

The point remains: There's no such thing as objective waste, and jsw was asking me to perform an impossible feat, unless there was actually money getting flushed down the toilet.

I know you all are going to cite the fact that we rank low in the government employees to population ratio and claim we have a bare-boned government. That study was underestimating the numbers and was ranking us a bit lower than we actually, but I don't want to pursue that point any further. The main point is your citing of that study and concluding we have a bare-boned government ignores basic ECONOMY OF SCALE California has the most people, so we should have the lowest ratio. We shouldn't just be last, we should be last by a WIDE MARGIN. Why? We have 13.5 million more people than the next most populated state, Texas. Look at the states with the most employees to population, they're also the states that have the least amount of people. Coincidence? NO, it's called economy of scale

The Silent Consensus


Well (8.00 / 1)
I can't speak to your other points in response to jsw, other than to say that he is almost surely right and you wrong.

I am somewhat surprised, yet pleased, to see you cite the Serrano decision, that played a very important role in the overall origins of the tax revolt. I'd have gone into it more here but wanted to keep the discussion focused on Brown. Serrano is a good example of the various pressures on state government funds in the 1970s, as well as one of the causes of the white suburban backlash against helping out people or color - a backlash you seem to have fully bought into.

I do believe Brown was absolutely right in calling the post-1970 situation an "era of limits." What I think he did wrong was not assert a left frame and solution for that. He's no leftist of course, and really isn't even a liberal. He helped shape a conservative frame of "limits," partly out of political expediency - a frame that argues what has to be limited is not wealth or suffering, but instead aid to the poor and the middle class.

As to residential vs. commercial property taxes, AB 80, passed in 1967, was a major part of the shifting of the CA property tax burden to homeowners. AB 80 was a bill that gave breaks and exemptions to commercial property owners, undercutting a decades-old practice among many cities of keeping residential rates low and paying for city services out of the higher revenues brought in from the commercial rates.

In the end, you are blaming the wrong people for CA's problems. The fault lies with the rich, corporations, and their friends in Sacramento - not with the average Californian who seeks a steady government job, or who needs government support to survive. An "era of limits" should not mean cutting people off and saying "save yourselves!"

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


[ Parent ]
Fallacy... (2.00 / 1)
Don't give me ethical fallacies in calling someone automatically right and automatically wrong. The truth supersedes ideology, and I don't care what you say. I'm all about the truth, not about party, not about ideology. I don't give false dilemmas, he does

The Serrano decision said that we cannot rely on property taxes for school funding. I don't know what you're talking about injecting race into this

Brown was absolutely wrong to make it an "era of limits." It helps no one to stop funding construction of roads, schools, aqueducts, etc...

So it's not even Prop 13 that fully caused this discrepancy. Okay

I'm blaming the wrong people? Stop with the straw man bullshit. How are the rich to be blamed for this? That's nothing more than the liberal problem with people making money and the notion that rich people have to have cheated their way to get their wealth. Jack Canfield grew up with that bullshit in his house, and now he understands otherwise. While you're right that you can't say rich people are automatically good people, you can't say that rich people are automatically bad people

ALL special interests are to be blamed, corporations and unions. No one's exempt, and the public employee unions are a huge problem. When we have to pay the guy holding the "slow" street sign $35/hour, wow. If that's what you call "blaming people who seek a steady government job" then you're damn right I'm blaming them. 

More revenue solves NOTHING. Once again, revenue grew 23% during Arnold's first term, and the budgets have only gotten more out of balance. This is not my or your fault for not paying enough taxes, this is the fault of the politicians' mismanagement. Also, we haven't had a 23% tax increase. In fact, part of the reason we had this nice revenue growth is because we DIDN'T have a tax increase. In a high taxed state like California, where every state around us has taxes that are way more uniform and moderate, raising taxes REDUCES revenue.

I go to school in Oregon, I know what a stretched thin government is. Granted, they do have union problems there also, but overall, they are stretched thin. There, it's the Republicans who are crazy, in opposing tax increases for a stretched thin government when every state around it has higher taxes (except Nevada). Here, it's the Democrats who are crazy, opposing practical reforms and calling for tax increases to feed a government that's on an "all you can eat" plan.

I'm not calling for abolishing welfare. I am calling for conforming it to the federal standards. You may believe that people deserve a lifetime of welfare from the government, but I sure don't. Welfare should be a temporary safety net, NOT a lifestyle. You may offer more welfare and taxes, I offer hard work and ethics. I want to enable people to get a job and support themselves, not give them a lifetime of sitting on their ass and receiving a check from the government

The Silent Consensus


[ Parent ]
Correction... (4.00 / 1)
I meant "I don't care what you say" as far as calling me wrong or someone else right. I didn't mean that to apply to everything

The Silent Consensus

[ Parent ]
Perhaps you're right... (0.00 / 0)
It's just so easy for me, and for others, to idolize "Governor Moonbeam" for all his "crazy ideas" which turned out to be great, such as the Coastal Act, which in addition to making the preservation of our coastline state law, but also set up the Coastal Commission to enforce the new law...

However, he didn't really safeguard our infrastructure in the same way that he safegarded our coast. And yes, he was complicit in the Prop 13 DEBACLE that has been destroying our state for nearly thirty years. Hopefully, whoever's out Gubernatorial Nominee in 2010 will do more than "play good politics"...
Hopefully, he or she will OFFER GOOD SOLUTIONS.

: )

Had enough of the "red county" right-wing crazy-talk bulls***? Well, then come and visit us at The Liberal OC! Yes, there ARE liberals in The OC! : )


I like Brown (0.00 / 0)
Don't get me wrong, I'm not hating on him. He was a vast improvement over Reagan, and he ran an honest and, at times, visonary administration. But I think he wasn't willing to offer the kind of leadership the state needed at the time to avoid the morass we're in. Could he have stemmed the neoliberal right-wing tide alone? Perhaps not, but it wasn't as if 1970s California was lacking for strong liberal Democratic allies either.

Brown DID do a lot to get the Coastal Commission created, though a grassroots movement was key there. Similarly, he also championed a bill to help the UFW organize (the California Agricultural Labor Act in 1975). Ultimately, I don't think he would provide the kind of leadership we need to move this state toward more liberal, effective solutions to our many problems.

I guess that's what's at the heart of this - I want a strong vision for 2010. Maybe we should help set that agenda ourselves. Since I so strongly doubt Brown will run in '10, I think discussing his governorship in the '70s and '80s is valuable in helping us all figure out what is we want from the candidates who WILL be running to replace Arnold.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


[ Parent ]
They both suck (0.00 / 0)
Jerry Brown and Ronald Reagan were bad. The only better thing about Reagan was at least we built to prepare for population increases under Reagan, whereas with Brown, his mentality was "let's stop building so people stop coming" and you know how that worked out

The Silent Consensus

[ Parent ]
Eugene, do you have any links? (0.00 / 0)
Since it's my understanding that you weren't around personally during Jerry Brown's gubernatorial years, upon what sources do you base your assertions about his actions as governor?

e's a historian (8.00 / 1)
and studies 1970s california. he's steeped in it.

[ Parent ]
And... (8.00 / 1)
If that's the case, it seems like it would be even easier for him to provide links — you know, share the wealth...

It's just that whenever I read something that summarizes eight years of history into a handful of paragraphs, it leaves me curious to know more about the particulars and the back story.  If it's inappropriate to request that, I'm sorry.  I didn't mean to step out of line.


[ Parent ]
Not a problem (0.00 / 0)
You are absolutely right to ask about where I'm coming at this from. Like I say below, it's mainly the product of nearly 10 years of reading and research, and little of it came from just a few books I could easily point you to. Which is probably not a satisfying answer, but it's the truthful one...

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

[ Parent ]
Good question (0.00 / 0)
I did research on the Serrano decision, Prop 13, and 1970s politics for a research thesis at Berkeley in the late '90s, and that's where I became steeped in all this - lots of archival research helped. Since I began a PhD program in US history in 2001 I've concentrated on political history of SF in the 1960s and 1970s, where I'm still trying to make sense of the politics of taxation during those decades. I think I've got a lot of it nailed down but as the work is still in progress...so is my knowledge.

I've not done research on Jerry Brown directly. Nor have I read any of the biographies on him - which are all out of date (I keep thinking of doing one once I finish this diss), though I'm sure Orville Schell's is good. I have done some reading on the 1977 legislative session when the Dems tried to hash out property tax reform, coming at it from Willie Brown's perspective (through some biographies written on him as well as through some other contemporary articles). The blame for the failure of the legislature to successfully act on Brown's property tax reform proposals lies at many feet, but, I think Brown himself made the situation worse by hoarding a surplus and cutting state spending - it made the state gov look greedy and wasteful and fueled Jarvis and his ilk.

At the same time I don't want to go too far and say it was all Brown's fault. Historian Robert Self has a truly amazing book on Oakland and Alameda County from 1945 to 1980, called American Babylon: Race and the Struggle for Postwar Oakland that does a fantastic job of showing the origins of the grassroots tax revolt - how white suburbanites came to believe their taxes were high because the state was wasting money on urban blacks. Had Brown exercised different leadership some of that might have been blunted, but there WOULD have been some sort of tax revolt and Jarvis would surely have qualified an initiative for ballot. I don't think its passage was by any means guaranteed, and I think had Brown not hoarded a surplus and helped force the legislature to come to some deal before the end of the 1977 session then we might have beaten 13. Maybe.

Amazingly enough, I've still not yet read Peter Schrag's Paradise Lost which is a critical look at Prop 13 and its deleterious effect on California life. In any case, I wish I could say "here are 3 books" that justify my position, but I don't know that they exist. If you want to take my analysis with some salt, I won't blame you.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


[ Parent ]
Jerry, Jerry, Jerry (0.00 / 0)
Eugene -- I was very much around during Jerry Brown's time and largely agree with your assessment of his leadership. I also agree profoundly with your raising the Serrano decision as the pivotal event in leading to our current unsustainable state fiscal mess. Even more than Prop. 13 (a stupid bludgeon adopted to correct a failure of political will), our entire state government has been distorted by its Jerry-rigged consequences.

I think Brown may be telling the truth when he says he won't run for Gov. He is getting up there and getting tired I think.

California Democrats desperately need leadership that will cut through the mess we've made, mostly by way of demogogic initiatives, in our state system. California is well and truly screwed until we seriously overhaul. Frankly, Arnold, a creature of extra-party ambition, is more able to push that than our pathetic Dems.

Can It Happen Here?


Can someone please tell me... (0.00 / 0)
how on earth the Serrano decision helped lead to our current unsustainable mess? Is it something other than:

Property taxes can no longer fund schools. (said in Al Gore tone in his 1992 campaign speeches) Property taxes are still going UP UP UP, while level of service is going DOWN DOWN DOWN. What should be down is up, and what should be up is down, so Prop 13 came along to help turn it right-side up

That would be my best link from what I know so far. If you know more or otherwise, please tell me

The Silent Consensus


[ Parent ]
even before leadership (0.00 / 0)
we need a vision of a california not trapped in the prison of the post-prop 13, "tough on crime" taxaphobic status quo. leadership isn't worth much when it doesn't lead anywhere.

agreed on everything else, though. we've got a deep bench of uninspiring inside-the-box fundraisers, but not much beyond that.


[ Parent ]
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