I mm... how :an I top last Halloween's costume? for more information contact media services in the knight library or go to: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/med__svc/laptops/ *.' * * ' jp p# ( ■ « I I # * Chec Nation & World News California's recall winner may face short honeymoon A change of leadership is unlikely to cure the state’s economic ills that prompted voters to seek the recall By Dick Polman Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) LOS ANGELES — "Be careful what you wish for." That's the message for the governor of California. After the results of this historic re call election are certified, the unlucky winner will be stuck with the same economic headaches and political gridlock that triggered the recall in the first place. And the bitterness of the re call campaign has probably made the climate even worse. As Robert Stern, who runs the nonpartisan Center for Governmen tal Studies, said here Tuesday: "It's a heck of a lot more fun to campaign than it is to govern. On the cam paign trail, it's all about getting adu lation. But governing in Sacramen to, these days especially, is about getting hit from all sides." Here's the reality: a severe recession in a state that has never recovered from the dot-com crash; a state now deemed by Wall Street to be less cred itworthy than Mississippi; budgetary red ink that stands at $8 billion and climbing; a choice of wildly unpopu lar solutions, ranging from big tax in creases to draconian spending cuts; and a state legislature that is dominat ed by ideological partisans on the right and left. Amidst this polarization, even a skilled politician would be severely challenged by the tough choices that lie ahead. California analysts say there's no way that the books can be balanced without big tax hikes and spending cuts — but that none of the major recall candidates prepared the electorate for the bad news. The top Democrats, incumbent Gray Davis and Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante (who was essentially campaigning to re place his boss), avoided the topic of cutting spending. The top Republi cans, movie star Arnold Schwarzeneg ger and state Sen. Tom McClintock, avoided the topic of raising taxes. Schwarzenegger, for example, in veighed against a recent tripling of the state tax on cars, and vowed to erase it. He thrilled followers last week by declaring, "Let me tell you something I was 25 years in show business, and if I played a character who didn't like something you know what I did? I destroyed it!" — whereupon, by pre arrangement, a wrecking ball fell on an Oldsmobile. He didn't say that without the car tax hike, California's deficit would grow by $4 billion. He also didn't say where he'd find the money to replace the car tax money. He said only that he wouldn't raise taxes. In his defense, nonpartisan analyst Sherry Bebitch Jeffe said: "He's not alone in saying so little. In this cam paign, nobody has wanted to get spe cific about anything." This was be cause candidates didn't want to confess the embarrassing truth: A California governor is ham strung on both the tax and spending sides, by the various voter referenda enacted over the last quarter-century, and by a slew of federal spending mandates. That's the dirty little secret in California, and it was never men tioned in the recall rhetoric; on the contrary, Schwarzenegger often im plied that the books could be rewrit ten as easily as a film script. Tim Hodson, who directs the non partisan Center for California Studies in Sacramento, explained the facts of life: "The budget is roughly $80 bil lion" — larger than the budget of all but five nations — "and two-thirds of it is totally untouchable, off the table, cannot be cut. Californians don't un derstand that." One example: A few years ago, vot ers passed Proposition 98, which was sponsored by the state teachers union. It mandated that, for every new dollar of state revenue, 34 cents had to be earmarked for education. Everybody wants better schools, but there was no mention during the recall campaign that a governor lacks the ability to al lot scarce resources as he sees fit. But raising new revenue isn't so easy, either. Proposition 13, which slashed property taxes back in 1978, has become sacrosanct in California politics. Hodson said, "Californians, like many Americans, are spoiled. They pass lots of initiatives that put more money into various services and programs, yet they're not willing to pay for it. They want lower college tu itions, better social services, and lower car taxes. And the candidates haven't prepared them for hard choices." Schwarzenegger regularly invoked Ronald Reagan on the campaign trail * — without mentioning that Reagan, * in his first week as California governor in 1967, proposed a $1 billion tax' hike, which fell heavily on banks and corporations. Schwarzenegger's men tor is Pete Wilson, who as California governor in 1991 solved a fiscal crisis by combining tax increases and spending cuts. But any governor, in the current po litical climate, would find it difficult to raise taxes. Even though studies in dicate that Californians rank 19th in the nation in personal tax burden, they perceive themselves to be over taxed — and that perception is ram pant among Democratic voters as well as Republicans. Bruce Cain, a nonpartisan Califor nia analyst, said: "There has been a consistent suspicion about taxes, throughout the state, since before Proposition 13, and that makes it difficult for politicians to talk open ly about all the options." Indeed, when Schwarzenegger adviser War ren Buffett said early in the recall campaign that Prop. 13 was bad pol icy, and that he'd be happy to pay more taxes on his sumptuous Cali fornia home, he instantly vanished from public view and hasn't been heard from since. (c) 2003, the Philadelphia Inquirer. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Win an iPod. Test drive a Mac at the UO Bookstore and enter to win a pair JBL Creature Speakers or the grand prize of an Apple iPod. APPLE DEMO DAYS. October 8 - 9 at the UO Bookstore. Visit the store for drawing details. Drawing at 4 p.m. on October 9. Must be present to win iPod. Oregon Daily Emerald P.o. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Friday during the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates inde pendently of the University with of fices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private prop erty. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. 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