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What’s up with guys? They never want to listen to the girl…even
when she’s right.
During
California’s budget debacle, State Controller Kathleen Connell
warned Governor Davis that California would spend around $30 billion
to buy power just to keep the lights on. Construction of new freeways,
school classrooms, and other state projects would be halted. She
insisted that across the board, services would be slashed or new
fees would be required to keep the state functioning.
But
Governor Davis insisted she was wrong. In his own words, “The
state will be out no money, none, zero, zilch.”
Connell,
a Democrat like Davis, was relentless. She refused to pay the $50,000
monthly salaries to Davis’ two political operatives hired
to spin the budget crisis away from his administration. An $11,000
bill for “emergency” meals, including a $1,000 sushi
dinner, was also ignored.
“It
all goes back to government agencies that have grown 47 percent,”
Connell said. “The question is why. How is that possible over
eight years? It’s a stunning factor. The government chooses
to just grow. The result is this immense budget crisis.” She
fought for government spending to be restrained and a zero-based
budgeting strategy adopted.
Connell’s
department grew at 0 percent during her eight years in office.
Connell
ordered an audit of the state’s power-buying. She accused
Davis of withholding key financial information from her office,
the legislature, and the public. She refused to transfer $5.6 billion
into a “rainy day fund” she said was set up to impress
Wall Street as the state issued $10 billion in revenue bonds to
cover its power buys, calling the transaction a “shell game”.
Steve
Maviglio, Governor Davis’s spokesman, went on the attack.
In July of 2001, at the height of the crisis, he told the press
that “Unless (Connell) wants to go home and bake a few pans
of lasagna for the guys on the front lines who are trying to keep
the lights on, she should stick to the job of writing checks.”
Maviglio’s
credibility was later tempered by the Los Angeles Times disclosure
that he bought stock in Calpine and Enron Corp. (California energy
providers) during contract negotiations.
At
the statewide Democratic Convention Connell delivered a scathing
rebuke. “We are well into the fifth month (of the energy crisis),
and we have yet to find any answers from the administration. There
will be no excuses for Democrats in this state… Whatever solution
(the governor) provides must come fast and be shared openly with
the people of California.”
Garry
South, the governor’s senior political adviser responded to
Connell’s warnings with “It’s all air…not
only hot air, but a foul wind.”
Now
the state of California faces a structural deficit that would qualify
a Third World country for International Monetary Fund assistance.
Last year California had a negative immigration flow. People are
fleeing the state, especially people with money.
Davis
should have fought his administration’s boys-club only mentality.
He should have listened to her advice. She took unpopular stands
based on credible data. Connell was the rational one, the truth-teller.
This
Tuesday Californians will decide if Davis should remain their governor.
Polls indicate he will lose his job. If he does, it will be the
second time in the United States history a governor has been recalled
from office.
Maybe
then Davis and his good ol’ boys will admit they should have
listened to Kathleen Connell and her message of fiscal responsibility.
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