Californias Uninspiring candidates for governor
Last Modified: Friday, November 6, 2009 at 1:12 p.m.
With Attorney General Jerry Brown the lone (if still formally undeclared) Democratic candidate, and a Republican field of former eBay Chief Executive Meg Whitman, ex-Rep. Tom Campbell and Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner, the race now presents two fundamental, thematic choices: Brown and Campbell argue, in slightly different ways, that fixing California is a matter of making government work better; Whitman and Poizner essentially contend that fixing California means getting government out of the way.
At a time when Californians have record-low regard for state government, none of the four has mounted a challenge to the status quo as strongly as did Newsom. A flawed messenger lacking focus and the discipline to raise the vast sums needed, he nonetheless came closest to seizing the mantle of change.
“This is the race that will shake the system,” the 42-year-old San Francisco mayor said in his first online campaign ad.
The remaining candidates make studied efforts to cast themselves as scourges of the status quo. As authentic agents of change, however, they fall short by almost any measure.
To be sure, campaigning in the current political environment is an extraordinary challenge. The most recent statewide survey by the Public Policy Institute of California found that Californians have dismally low views of the incumbent governor — 30 percent approve of his performance — and of the Legislature, with its humiliating 13 percent approval rating.
Worse for the candidates, the citizens of California across the board are deeply pessimistic about its intractable problems: 80 percent say California is on the wrong track, while two-thirds expect continued bad economic times in the next year.
Despite his organizational problems, Newsom as a candidate displayed high energy and thoughtful policy thinking — on health care, environmentalism and civic reform. And his courage in simply declaring same-sex marriage legal in his city triggered a national debate over the civil rights of gays. None of the rest of the field has communicated such full-throated willingness to “shake the system.”
So what do we know about the candidates who remain in the race?
Poizner: Casting himself as a candidate of “bold ideas,” Poizner promotes a “10-10-10 program” that would cut taxes and spending each by 10 percent and build a $10 billion “rainy day” fund.
Notwithstanding his breezy confidence in the alleged transformational power of his plan, it is basically recycled supply side, unfettered market economics of a brand discredited by the Bush administration.
His political makeover, from erstwhile moderate to born-again right-winger, smacks of poll-driven politics-as-usual.
Campbell: The law professor with the MBA and years of political experience is almost always the smartest guy in the room. An underfunded centrist at a time when moderates are being purged from the GOP, he campaigns as the candidate of specificity; his mastery of the minutiae of state government generates detailed white papers and avuncular assurances, but in the end his message boils down to more efficient management of the status quo.
Brown: It is a great paradox that the septuagenarian Brown, the original rock-star politician, now timidly labels himself “an apostle of common sense,” hardly a slogan that screams “new ideas” or invokes the insurgency of his presidential campaign days. Brown has said little about how his late-life governorship would differ from his first, except to suggest he would be more competent in balancing competing special interests, a version of the theme being sounded by Campbell.
None of these messages offers a solution to the fundamental challenge that confronts the next governor: how to slash the maddening Gordian knot of California’s governance structure.
It is instructive that Treasurer Bill Lockyer, while well-positioned to seek the governorship, shows little interest in doing so. “We’re part of a system that was designed not to work,” he recently told lawmakers studying political reform. “You are the captives of this environment, and I don’t see any way out.”
Jerry Roberts and Phil Trounstine report regularly on California politics at calbuzz.com.
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