CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SILLY SEASON: TWO PLANS GOING NOWHERE”
The end of December
and early January is usually a downtime in the co-dependent businesses of
government and news, replete with vacation breaks for many. This can often net
flaky ideas and words far more coverage than they deserve.
So it was when
ex-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called state legislators a bunch of “girlie men,”
early in his term, only to have those same folks later best him at every turn.
And when ex-Gov. Gray Davis first suggested the same lawmakers exist to
“implement my vision.”
It’s that way again
these days, but current Gov. Jerry Brown is savvier and more tight-lipped than
his immediate predecessors, so the newest laughable ideas come from rich folks
who apparently have too much time and money on their hands.
First out of the
gate early in the Christmas season was John Cox, a San Diego County real estate
investor who doesn’t like current California legislators. He realizes he can’t
entirely rid the state of elected lawmakers, so instead, he proposes flooding
the state with them.
Cox is just now
starting to circulate an initiative to expand the Legislature from its current
120 members (80 in the Assembly, 40 in the state Senate) to 12,000, each with a
district of 5,000 to 10,000 residents. Imagine being a member of the decennial
Citizens Redistricting Commission and having to draw boundaries for all those
districts, many encompassing little more than a neighborhood or a large
apartment complex.
Oh, Cox realizes
that elected bodies of 8,000 (Assembly) and 4,000 (Senate) persons would be
just a tad unwieldy. So he’d only actually send to Sacramento one out of
each 100 of those elected. What do you know? That yields two chambers precisely
the same size as today’s. Except their work product would be subject not only
to vetos by the governor, but also by the larger bodies they’d represent.
Cox thinks this
might take the money out of politics, forcing candidates to go door to door in
their tiny districts, rather than flooding airwaves and mailboxes with
advertising. Actual, working Sacramento lawmakers each would really have just
100 constituents for pleasing and pandering to.
Don’t expect this
one to go very far once it becomes apparent to voters they wouldn’t even be
changing the number of people in Sacramento, but would add a whole new layer of
government.
Equally unlikely is
the new pipe dream of technology investor Tim Draper, a billionaire venture
capitalist who helped found such outfits as Skype and Hotmail, since acquired
for huge amounts by others. Draper is the latest wanting to break up
California, only he wants it divided not into two new states, but six, one
including essentially the Silicon Valley and little more. That would actually
be the name of one of his new entities.
Draper would grant
the wish of far Northern California and Southern Oregon activists who want to
carve a new state called Jefferson out of a few mostly-rural counties so they’d
no longer be subjected to the wishes of their urban fellow Californians. His
other four states: South California, North California, Central California and
Coastal California. All of which would produce more Californias than today’s
combined total of Dakotas and Carolinas.
The idea is not
quite as far-fetched as what Balaji Srinivasan, co-founder of the San Francisco
genetics company Counsyl called for last fall, when he suggested Silicon Valley
should leave not just California, but the U.S.A. Draper’s notion has about as
much prospect of becoming real as Srinivasan’s: None in the foreseeable future.
For making six new
states out of one would give the current California 12 United States senators,
not a prospect that would sit well with other states who already resent the 53
members of Congress this state’s big population produces.
Congress, of
course, would have to approve creation of any new state, no matter what voters
or legislators here might say. And members from other states have worked for
years to deprive California of influence. That’s one reason this state now gets
back only about 77 cents in federal spending for every dollar its citizens pay
in federal taxes.
All of which makes
the two new ideas fun to consider, but nothing to take seriously.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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