CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PLENTY
OF REASONS NOT TO TRUST STATE GOVERNMENT”
Californians don’t trust their state
government. That’s nothing really new, but right now there’s as much cause for
distrust as ever before in modern times.
There is, of course, the scandal that
sees three indicted or convicted state senators under suspension after
accusations of political corruption, gun-running and/or perjury, all refusing
to resign. This leaves millions of Californians without Senate representation
while the unconnected cases drag on and other senators refuse to expel their
disgraced colleagues.
Then there’s the behavior of the
Senate’s top officer, President Pro-Tem Darrell Steinberg, a Sacramento
Democrat who has vocalized in favor of action to regain the public trust in his
tainted house of the Legislature. But what he’s actually done so far is order
his staff to delete the bulk of the official websites of the three troubled
senators, wiping the Internet clean of their press releases, some records of
their votes and the list of bills they’ve authored.
This
makes it harder for the average citizen without hours to spend at it to track
connections between bribes and votes, giving rise to speculation that Senate
leaders are trying to protect their disgraced pals.
And there’s Steinberg’s designated
successor, Los Angeles Democrat Kevin de Leon, due to assume the Senate’s top
slot when Steinberg is termed out later this year. He is mentioned 47 times in
the 124-page FBI affidavit (https://archive.org/stream/813027-sealed-fbi-affidavit-supporting-search-of/813027-sealed-fbi-affidavit-supporting-search-of_djvu.txt)
in the case against suspended Sen. Ron Calderon of Montebello. De Leon reportedly
also brokered a sequence seeing Calderon pull out of a run for chairman of the
Legislature’s Latino Caucus, while $25,000 went from a caucus-aligned committee
to a consulting firm owned by Calderon’s brother, Tom, himself a former state
senator.
In short, the Senate – specifically
its big Democratic majority – wants the public’s trust but kills public
information and doesn’t let questions about de Leon derail his progress toward
its leadership. Not the usual way to earn trust.
So who can be surprised that a new
Gallup Poll of 600 Californians shows only 49 percent with either a fair amount
or a great deal of trust for their state government. That makes this one of
just seven states where more people distrust their government than trust it.
Remarkably, even in New Jersey, home
to the scandal-ridden Republican Gov. Chris Christie, a majority of the public
trusts state government.
And it’s not just charges of
corruption that spur voters not to trust
California government. There’s also performance. The Gallup survey came within
days of a report that the Los Angeles area has seen no net increase in the
number of jobs over the last 25 years. Zero. That’s despite a population
increase of more than 10 percent and the emergence of hundreds of high-tech startups
in the coastal area now known as “Silicon Beach.” Not much achievement there by
either state or local government.
There’s also the growing public
disenchantment with the California High Speed Rail project, where hundreds of
millions of dollars have been spent so far without construction of an inch of
track. When voters approved the project six years ago via Proposition 1A, it
was clear the only way to achieve the promised two hour, forty minute travel
time between Los Angeles and San Francisco would be to follow the Interstate 5
corridor much of the way.
But that route never got serious
consideration, with state planners insisting they would buy up prime farmland
in Kern, Kings, Fresno and Madera counties while building pricey railroad
stations in Bakersfield, Fresno and Merced, where not many passengers figure to
board or detrain. It’s a classic bait-and-switch that has turned off even some
of the original promoters of bullet trains in California.
And
there’s the state Public Utilities Commission, consistently setting rates at
levels designed to benefit big utility companies at the expense of their
customers.
Step back and look at the full picture
and you see a government that hasn’t grown jobs, hasn’t kept its word on the
biggest proposed project in two generations, doesn’t look out for consumers and
works to protect its own.
Does an outfit like this deserve much
trust?
-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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