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CA-32: Calitics Interviews Emanuel Pleitez

by: David Dayen

Sun Apr 12, 2009 at 12:21:00 PM PDT

The CA-32 race to replace Labor Secretary has less than six weeks to go until the primary.  We know about the two major candidates; Board of Equalization member Judy Chu (not to be confused with Betty Chu, who will appear directly above her on the ballot and surely cause some errors among voters) and State Senator Gil Cedillo, whose extreme spending of campaign contributions on shopping, meals and lavish hotels made the LA Times this weekend and caused a stir.

Somewhat less remarked-upon has been the candidacy of Emanuel Pleitez, a product of East Los Angeles and Woodrow Wilson High School, who matriculated at Stanford, joined the advisory board of Voto Latino (a group that encourages voter registration and engagement for the Latino community), worked for Democratic lawmakers like Antonio Villaraigosa, Tom Daschle and Hillary Clinton, and worked on the Obama transition team at the Treasury Department.  On Friday I had the opportunity to chat with Pleitez about his life experiences, the financial crisis, housing policy and a host of other issues.  A paraphrase of that conversation follows.

(As a side note, this story about one of the volunteers on the campaign, who traveled all the way from Santiago, Chile to work on it, is pretty amazing.)

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 902 words in story)

Infrastructure is Not Pork

by: Brian Leubitz

Fri Feb 13, 2009 at 12:15:00 PM PST

Despite the numerous statements from President Obama, the media hasn't yet really grasped the concept that spending is stimulus.  As the President said, "that's the whole point."

Yet, today we get the Washington Post passing off some press releases from a few anti-tax groups as original research and "news."

The compromise stimulus bill adopted by House and Senate negotiators this week is not free of spending that benefits specific communities, industries or groups, despite vows by President Obama that the legislation would be kept clear of pet projects, according to lawmakers, legislative aides and anti-tax groups.

The deal provides $8 billion for high-speed rail projects, for example, including money that could benefit a controversial proposal for a magnetic-levitation rail line between Disneyland, in California, and Las Vegas, a project favored by  Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.). The 311-mph train could make the trip from Sin City to Tomorrowland in less than two hours, according to backers. (WaPo 2/13/09

PhotobucketI don't know if any of these anti-tax zealots have been on I-15 between Las Vegas and the LA area, but it's a mess. An absolute cluster&*$%.  Trips that should take four hours, at most, take six or seven hours.  People end up just sitting on the freeway for hours at a time.  And it happens every. single. weekend. Every Friday, going from LA to Vegas is impossible.  And every Sunday the trip back is just as bad.  I just did a search on Google Images and I got a slew of images of people stuck in traffic. I liked this one best because people were just kind of hanging out in the middle of the highway. Here's a flickr search for the same topic with similar copious results.

When I spent a summer in Orange County a few years back, I made the trek up to Vegas.  It's not a bad ride. I mean, it's pretty if you like desert and dusty mountains.  Gets kind of repetitive after a while, but the asthetics are quite striking.  You really are driving through the middle of the desert, with nothing really around. When an accident occurs, you get massive delays. Anybody who has ever done the trip understands why relaxing on a train would be a boon to the travel industry.

While there are other projects as worthy of support as this one, this one certainly will be a good investment.  It will save and create jobs now, and it will create jobs for the long-term.  The amount of time wasted on the 15 is an incredible inefficiency. It discourages people from traveling between the two tourist regions and spending money.  Building this project will be an enormous job boon.

After all this is what this is about right? Jobs? Or can you not see past your ideological blindspot. Infrastructure = jobs = economic stimulus.  And this project is a perfect example of that.  It's just too bad that the Washington Post didn't bother to actually, you know, think about why the project is necessary rather than transcribing anti-tax talking points.

Discuss :: (4 Comments)

Can Arnold Pass The High School Exit Exam?

by: David Dayen

Fri May 02, 2008 at 16:07:05 PM PDT

The fallout from Gov. Schwarzenegger's demeaning comments about small-town Californians continue to reverberate.  Chairman Torres weighed in, and noted that rural Californians don't exactly use a horse and buggy to get around, and some of them even have the teevee and the Internets!

"The Governor's comments are insulting," Torres told PolitickerCA.com today. "California does not have villages. This is not Austria, this is California. Voters in Central California and others from small towns have more on the ball than Arnie!"

State Senator Dean Florez, from the small Central Valley town of Shaffer, went a step further, introducing a resolution to have the Governor take the high school exit exam.

Like every other kid around the state, small town students take the same graduation tests as big city kids to show competency. Rural kids can make the grade. Given the Governor's distasteful comments, what's unanswered is whether he can make the grade.

That's why, today, I'm introducing a senate resolution asking the Governor to take the high school exit exam. If the Governor fails the test, then we certainly have a capable Lt. Governor who can assume his duties until the Governor successfully passes the exam.

I hope that he accepts this challenge and that he doesn't cower behind some excuse. This is a serious effort to bring attention to the divisiveness of placing labels on people based on who they are, how they live or where they come from -- or even how well they do on a test.

If it is a good enough test for our twelfth graders, then certainly it is a good enough test for the Governor to demonstrate his competency.

And after he takes the exam, maybe he'll think twice about the massive cuts to education funding he's proposing -- he just may have to return to school to brush up for the test."

I would pay money to sit in while Arnold fills in the bubbles on the Scan-Tron sheet.  Can we get this on television?  It'd be the first time local news covered state politics all year!

Discuss :: (1 Comments)

Schwarzenegger: You Hicks Know What An Air-O-Plane Looks Like?

by: David Dayen

Thu May 01, 2008 at 09:14:10 AM PDT

I almost get what the Governor was trying to say, but the fact that it was a proud endorsement of lobbyist-paid junkets, as well as the demeaning stance toward small-town Californians, doesn't come off well:

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Wednesday encouraged lawmakers -- especially those from small towns -- to do more globe-trotting on the dime of special interests.

Speaking at a forum on global economics held by the nonprofit Milken Institute, the governor suggested lawmakers would be more willing to embrace his plans to privatize the building of roads, schools, high-speed rail systems and other public works if they could see how effectively it has worked in other countries.

"Some of them come from those little towns, you know what I am saying, they come from those little towns and they don't have that vision yet of an airport or of a highway that maybe has 10 lanes or of putting a highway on top of a highway," Schwarzenegger said. "They look at you and say, 'We don't have that in my town. What are you talking about?'

"So they are kind of shocked when you say certain things. So I like them to travel around."

Remember, folks, it's Barack Obama who's the elitist.  Arugula!

What shouldn't get lost here is that Schwarzenegger made this little comment to justify what he has done multiple times since entering public office - jetsetting around the world on trade missions paid for by shadowy interests who expect a return on their investment.

There's a virtue and value in world travel, and the country could go a long way to fostering it by providing grants for international study, for example.  If he wants to build a program like the "overseas experience" they have in New Zealand for California's young people, great.  But Schwarzenegger isn't really endorsing that.  He just wants his secret free trips.  The "y'all are hicks" part is just frosting on the cake.

Discuss :: (3 Comments)

Schwarzenegger: Lifestyle of the Rich And Entitled

by: David Dayen

Thu Jul 05, 2007 at 11:01:43 AM PDT

The most sickening thing about Paul Pringle's excellent LAT story on Governor Schwarzenegger's little non-profit scam is that we're talking about a very rich man, one who prides himself on not drawing a salary for his public service, one who has boasted that he can't be bought.  But yet he willingly sucks up all kinds of goodies and treats on the public dime.  I'm going to excerpt Pringle's report on the flip, but first, a little story.  Plenty of people I've talked to in Santa Monica have encountered Schwarzenegger, and I honestly can't say that even one reaction is a good one.  Of particular note is the story of one employee at a Starbucks in a ritzy area of town, one that receives celebrity customers all the time.  When Arnold came in and asked for a couple beverages, he scoffed at the notion that he would have to pay for them.  "I'm the governor," he said.  The employee told me that he was pretty much the only celebrity customer that's ever pulled that move.  But it makes perfect sense in the context of this article:
There's More... :: (7 Comments, 521 words in story)
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