CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 1, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TRAVIS ALLEN: GREEN LAWNS, LONG SHOWERS FOR ALL”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 1, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TRAVIS ALLEN: GREEN LAWNS, LONG SHOWERS FOR ALL”
(One
in an ongoing series of interviews with significant candidates for governor of
California)
Travis Allen chortles as he boasts that “We took back
America in 2016,” then adds the bold and seemingly unlikely prediction that
“We’ll take back California this year.”
Allen believes President Trump is making America great
again, just as his campaign slogan promised, and he pledges to “make California
the nation’s greatest state again, too.”
His plan for doing it this starts with a planned social and
traditional media campaign “including 13 million pieces of mail” during May, a
month when many voters will already have primary election ballots in their
hands. Even though fellow Republican John Cox, a businessman who moved from
Illinois to San Diego County in 2011, has run ahead of him in several polls
this spring, Allen happily notes that “It’s within the margin of error and he’s
spent millions of dollars more.”
He firmly believes “there is a silent majority” that will
back any Republican who makes it into the November runoff election, where he expects
Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom as the other contestant.
“This is a race I will win,” Allen declared in an
interview. “We Californians have been pushed too far by California Democrats.
They’ve gone too far with the gasoline tax increase, their sanctuary state law
and all their other crazy laws.”
Allen, a three-term assemblyman and dedicated surfer from
Huntington Beach seeking to become the person to move directly from the Assembly
to the governor’s office, has a five-point plan for actions he begun the moment
he takes office.
His first priority, he says, will be to cut taxes, starting
with the gasoline tax increase. Central to his campaign is a repeal initiative
likely to reach voters in November. Next, he says, he will “make California
safe again by getting tough on crime.” He wants to reverse three recent
measures some call soft on crime, including the prison realignment plan begun
in 2011 that has seen thousands of state prisoners sent back to their home
counties for either parole or time in local jails. Allen would also try to
reverse the Proposition 47 and Proposition 57 changes in crime classifications which
made misdemeanors out of many former felonies.
He pledges to fix the state’s roads and expand freeways
without raising taxes or cutting important programs, though he has some trouble
specifying how he’d do that. Again, he says the first step is rolling back the
12-cent gasoline tax increase in effect since last year.
Allen also promises to “fix our broken education system. We
used to have the best public schools in America, and (current Gov.) Jerry
Brown’s funding increases for them are not working. Parents must be given the
right to send their kids to the very best public schools and charter schools.
And we need to test kids early and often to see how we’re doing. No longer will
every child get a trophy just for participating.”
Allen’s other top priority, he says, would be to “complete
the state Water Project by building more water storage up and down the state.”
He complains that “Brown’s water board is holding up bond money that’s already
approved. When I’m governor, every Californian will have a green lawn and take
long showers.”
A lower priority, but still vital, he says, will be solving
homelessness, an extremely touchy subject in his Orange County district. “The
policies of California Democrats have led to the explosion of homelessness
where we have people sleeping under bridges and on sidewalks at an alarming
rate.”
But he says the problem won’t be solved by anything like SB
827, a current proposal from Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener of San
Francisco to mandate dense housing near transit stations. “Californians want
the ability to own a single-family home and there’s plenty of open space in the
state to provide that,” Allen insists.
To win, he says, all he must do is get on the November
ballot and then draw the same 4.4 million state voters who backed President
Trump in 2016. Trouble is, this doesn’t account for the 8.7 million who went
for Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton.
Allen has a very steep task, but he’s undaunted so far.
“I’ll win,” he insists.
-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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