The Perils Of Prop 15

Hidden away on the June primary ballot is Proposition 15, titled the California Fair Elections Act.  While the measure has not received a lot so attention so far, it is a classic example of the law of unintended consequences.  

Disclosure: I am one of the ballot pamphlet signatories opposing this measure.  I signed the rebuttal argument for a couple of reasons.  This is a system of public financing of elections placed on the ballot by the legislature, ostensibly to test public financing in the Secretary of State’s election, beginning in 2014. 

However, the authors conveniently forgot to tell the voters that hidden away in the measure is language repealing the currently existing prohibition on public funding of political campaigns.  It took a lawsuit to get this fact onto the ballot label.

Poizner Poll Shows Race Closing

Steve Poizner’s campaign released an internal poll showing Poizner closing to 10 points behind Meg Whitman in the Republican gubernatorial primary setting off dueling press conferences between the campaigns to discuss the meaning of the poll.

Poizner’s people emphasized momentum; Whitman’s people talked electability.

Let us talk about a wild ride until Election Day for those who revel in political horse races.

Green Economy Is Proven Job Creator

James Kellogg’s recent piece "True Impact on Working People of AB 32 is No
Mere Numbers Game
" seeks answers about the impact recent environmental
legislation will have on jobs in California but unfortunately leaps to
doomsday conclusions that good paying jobs in the trades will vanish
from our state as we move to a cleaner, more energy independent
economy. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Employment in the core green economy in California is now larger than
the state’s robust biotech industry. Between 1995 and 2008 employment
in the green economy grew by 36 compared to 13 percent for the overall
economy, according to an analysis by Collaborative Economics.

Even
through the recession this sector expanded as others contracted. Why
would we now turn our backs on part of the economy that is creating
jobs and in 2008 attracted $3.4 billion in venture capital, nearly six
times more than the next leading state?

Poizner and Whitman Battle for the Old In a War Both Are Losing

Wednesday was a busy day for spin in the governor’s race. Cut through all the talk about polls and general election viability, and two things stand out.

1. Whitman and Poizner are both losing.

Losing in the sense that each is unpopular – and becoming more so. Whitman strategist Mike Murphy and his Poizner counterpart Stu Stevens each did an effective job of explaining the problems of his candidate’s opponent. Murphy made a convincing case that Poizner’s move right in the primary would cost him badly against Jerry Brown in a general election. Stevens was convincing in describing Whitman’s strategic missteps and vulnerabilities as a CEO candidate who wasn’t engaged in political and civic life until recently.

Slow Down and Revise AB 32

At times, even the best of us need to stand down, take a deep breath, and head back to the drawing board. That need to reassess happens in business when the market changes, in our jobs when the company downsizes, or in our lives when unexpected situations arise. We have unquestionably reached that point where the state needs to reassess the AB 32 Scoping Plan and find a solution that will balance the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions with the ability of the state’s economic system to absorb the changes.

Perhaps the problem with the current process is that we are demanding
too much from the California’s Air Resources Board (CARB).  Rather than
asking an environmental regulatory agency to consider macro-economic
factors involving employment, industrial growth, and world trade, the
state should tap additional resources to weave together a plan that
will preserve our current jobs while we develop new technologies for
the future.

Almost every study on the CARB plan has revealed an economic impact,
but the controversy arises over two major areas.  First, there is
disagreement over the degree of impact – some studies find significant
economic ramifications while other reports show minimal effects on
consumers and business.  Second, the studies vary regarding the degree
to which costs will be offset by the benefits that may come with growth
of new technologies.