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Calitics At Netroots Nation 2009

by: David Dayen

Tue Jul 14, 2009 at 11:46:49 AM PDT


NN09_Speaker_button

We often engage in the day-to-day combat of intracacies of the budget or campaign news here at Calitics.  But we should never lose sight of the long-term questions.  Is California governable?  Does the erecting of procedural barriers to sensible governance in this state prefigure a political crisis for the rest of the nation?  Can we build a movement for reforming this broken system and produce a model that allows majorities in the legislature to reflect the intended will of their constituents?  

I'm pleased to announce that I have put together a great panel that will tackle all of these questions at the blogosphere's signature event, Netroots Nation 2009 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, from August 13-15.  On Saturday, August 15, at 3:00pm, we will discuss the California budget mess and its implications for the nation at large in a panel entitled California: How Process Creates Crisis.

California is the nation's largest state, and is often seen as a bellweather for economic and social change. However, the peculiar dynamic of state government institutions has threatened that role, as the state has slipped into an almost perpetual crisis mode. Despite an overwhelming majority of progressive lawmakers in the state legislature, the two-thirds rule for passing a budget and tax increases, among other issues, handcuffs them and empowers a radical conservative minority. Thirty years of short-term fixes and failed leadership have only exacerbated the problem and put the state-and the nation-in real danger. As Paul Krugman recently said, "Years of neglect, followed by economic disaster-and with all reasonable responses blocked by a fanatical, irrational minority ... This could be America next." In this session, we will look at the reasons for California's budget tangle, the larger implications for the progressive movement at large, and what some organizations are doing to change these outdated rules and take back state government for the people.

In addition to myself, the panel will feature Robert Cruickshank of Calitics and the Courage Campaign; Jean Ross of the California Budget Project; and Kai Stinchcombe, a candidate for State Assembly in AD-21 in 2010.  There may be an additional special guest, which I will reveal later.

If you have not registered for Netroots Nation, you can do so at their website.  If you have, please join us for a wide-ranging discussion on California, a kind of 75-minute blog post on the challenges ahead.

David Dayen :: Calitics At Netroots Nation 2009
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Other Caliticians doing panels at Netroots Nation ... (8.00 / 3)
On Friday at 10:30 a.m., yours truly will be on a panel about "Local Blogs: Covering City and County Government and Empowering Activism."  I will be joined by bloggers from Chicago, New Orleans, Philadelphia and Maryland -- so it should be a fascinating discussion.  I had requested that this panel not be scheduled at the same time as the California panel, so people can attend both.

On Thursday at 9:00 a.m., Todd Beeton will moderate a panel on "Our First Fight: How the Netroots Survived the Presidential Primary."  I think a lot of us will find that fascinating, and it should be lively.

On Friday at 3:30 p.m., David Atkins is moderating a panel on "Turning Red Districts Blue: Organizing for Change," where I believe Darcy Burner and Tom Perriello will both be speaking.

It's great all four panels are happening at a different time.  Netroots Nation is gonna be a blast!!  Can't wait to see you all there!!


the Red to Blue panel will feature (8.00 / 1)
me, Darcy Burner, Eden James of the Courage Campaign, Matt Browner Hamlin, and Adam Lambert whom you probably know better as "clammyc" on DailyKos.

[ Parent ]
Fanatics (0.00 / 0)
As a moderate, with libertarian tendencies, which puts me out of both parties, i never get the idea of saying that the people who passes prop 13 are "fanatics"  it was a majority vote.  

I believe that government spending is way too high, and that the taxes proposed by the legislature are ineffective and regressive.  Do i say that they are fanatics?  No, just wrong.

What amazes me about california progressives is the regressive taxes they have imposed.  I would think that it makes more sense to lessen the welfare state than regressively tax.  The other option, to impose a progressive rate schedule in california, is not workable, as there is not enough money to tax from the rich in california without driving them away or having more of them create delaware tax deferral trusts.  

So, i do not think i am any more fanatic than the progressives.  they seek to regressively tax the state, i seek to cut the budget all over.  


"there is not enough money to tax from the rich in california without driving them away" (0.00 / 0)
Hmmm. Apparently the rich in California missed the memo back in 2004.

http://californiabudgetbites.o...

Proposition 63, dubbed "the millionaire's tax," imposed a 1 percentage point income tax rate on personal incomes over $1 million to fund mental health programs. The CBP examined Franchise Tax Board data before and after the implementation of Proposition 63. We found that the number of millionaire taxpayers increased significantly after the passage of Proposition 63. Between 2004 and 2007, there was a 48.6 percent increase in the number of tax returns filed by taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes of more than $1 million. In contrast, the total number of taxpayers in the state increased by 8.6 percent during the same period.


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[ Parent ]
the rich keep getting richer in CA (7.00 / 3)
This argument that the rich will all leave never ceases to amaze me.  The rich don't leave their home countries in social democracies in Europe and Asia in numbers large enough to make a difference.  they haven't left in New York.

The people leaving California are the middle class, who can no longer afford to live here due to cost of living, and who are buying houses in states with much cheaper housing.

but the rich will stay in California because their jobs and social spheres usually depend on it, and the enticements that California has to offer make the location worth it.  It's far better quality of life to own a smaller home in Malibu than a larger one in the Nevada or New Mexico desert.


[ Parent ]
Exactly. (0.00 / 0)
To me, having the enticements of California is far more worth it that having a big house in Texas or in the desert.

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[ Parent ]
Are you still here (8.00 / 1)
and still convinced that people are interested in your libertarian self-reflections?

By now, we don't actually need you to post to know what you think about taxes.

If you want to allow for progressive taxation, though, I will pretend to look forward to your joining us in the battle to eliminate the restrictions imposed by Prop 13.  I will promise you more progressivity if we succeed.


[ Parent ]
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