-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.weeklyplanet.com/current/cover.html

10 Reasons Not to Vote for Jeb Bush

BY ROCHELLE RENFORD


Make no mistake. Americans do love their royalty. Our founding fathers may have given 
the
finger to the royals in England, but generations later the monarchy still rules. The 
lack of an
official king and queen has only allowed the American public to anoint several 
unofficial
royal lines instead. As much as Americans extol the virtues of hard work, most of us
probably would have preferred the silver spoon route. Work is fine, but really, wasn't
leaving the womb hard enough? For some lucky sperm, the birth canal is the last tight 
spot
they'll have to find their way out of. Like the Kennedys and the Rockefellers, the 
Bush clan is
a monument to unearned privilege and power, but they've distinguished themselves with
their capacity for denial.

Gov. Jeb Bush has said that after college, he was on his own financially and made his 
own
way through his own hard work. So what if that "hard work" was for his father's 
campaign,
and for corporations run by his father's friends. While working at IntrAmerica 
Investments,
a real estate development firm owned by Bush Sr. supporter Armando Codina, Bush's
salary jumped six figures in about six years. He has said his family name wasn't an
advantage but spent much of his career wooing clients who wanted to get next to his
family. He was cut in on investment deals, even though he didn't actually have any 
cash to
invest, and he walked away from scandals involving attempts to defraud the U.S.
government, claiming that he wasn't a fraud but a dupe. Only he knows which is true, 
but
it's clear that if he hadn't used his family connections to do favors for his wealthy 
comrades,
some of the scandals wouldn't have happened. When developer Hiram Martinez Jr.
requested $18-million in federal loan insurance for an apartment development in 1985, 
the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development questioned its land value and delayed
the request. Rather than allow HUD to do its job, Bush wrote a letter to the U.S. 
agency's
undersecretary on Martinez's behalf. The loan was approved, the land values were 
inflated
and Martinez got six years in prison on fraud charges. Bush has amnesia about the 
letter.
Later he made a call to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to help 
another
associate looking to get out of following some pesky federal rules.

Bush denies that he received special treatment in both of those incidents, but any 
citizen
who's dealt with either agency knows that's not true. It's pretty damn special to have 
a top
manager take your call, instead of getting a clerk who transfers your call or tells 
you to fill
out forms.

It's his denial that makes Bush an ineffective governor. It's not possible to see why
minorities would need affirmative action when you refuse to see that alumni and legacy
admissions are a form of affirmative action too. It's easy to focus on punishment 
rather
than rehabilitation when you've never had to be accountable for your own questionable
dealings. Recognizing every citizen's right to vote is harder when you really believe 
that the
only rights that count are yours.

Bush has had four years to prove that he's more than just the product of the lucky 
sperm
club instead he's proven that ego and privilege are a costly mix. Bush may have been 
"to
the manor born," but the governor's mansion belongs to the people. Here are 10 reasons 
to
kick him out.

1. He's Not Stupid, But He Thinks Voters Are

Much has been made of a reporter catching Gov. Jeb Bush showing one face in public and
another when he thinks he's safely in his inner sanctum. This is called politics, and 
it's
nothing new. But Bush wasn't just strategizing or playing politics when he made light 
of a
serious issue -- a missing human being that was in the state's care. Referring to 
gossip
about the ongoing criminal investigation as "juicy" isn't a misstatement; it's a 
character
flaw. Telling Republican legislatures that the two women arrested in the case may be
lesbians because one referred to the other as the "wife" is irrelevant information if 
your
real interest is finding a child. Bush should be completely torn up about the hundreds 
of
missing children that disappeared on his watch, both in public and in private. How can 
he
be expected to take the task of fixing the system seriously if he doesn't sincerely 
care about
the tragic consequences of doing nothing?

People who make racist or homophobic comments only in private are still racists and
homophobes; there's no such thing as a part-time bigot. The Nixon tapes have shown that
private bigotry becomes public policy, whether voters know it or not. Bush may 
genuinely
feel that the class-size amendment is a mistake and he's entitled to make his case. 
But his
saying that he's concocting "devious" plans to undermine it if it passes shows a 
genuine
disregard for democracy.

He is nothing more than a state employee, when his citizen employers give him a task, 
his
job is to get it done.

Bush isn't worried about his comments because he's secure in his false sense of 
superiority.
He expects voters to disregard his own words and instead believe the spin that he 
didn't
really mean any of it. Voters who believe him had better hope the swampland that he 
tries
to sell when reelected isn't the Everglades.

2. Faking It as the 'Education Governor'

What exactly makes an "education governor"?

A willingness to invest money in education would be one factor. Bush likes to say that,
under his leadership, education funding has increased by 27percent. This must be an
example of that "fuzzy math" his brother derided during his presidential campaign.
According to an analysis by the St. Petersburg Times, Bush has increased education 
funding
by less than one-quarter of 1 percent after accounting for inflation and 168,400 new
students.

Bush didn't deny that the Times had their facts straight. Instead he gave this 
frighteningly
asinine response: "I've not said that it's big or small, just that it's an increase."

The math may be fuzzy but the picture isn't. Just look around. Counties all over the 
state,
including Pinellas and Hillsborough, have had to discontinue summer school and remedial
programs.

Bush has resisted calls for smaller classes, and teachers are fleeing the state in 
search of
better pay. Kids still crowd into classrooms with 30 kids or more and attend classes in
trailers, while the state's education ranking continues to drop.

Bush's sacred "grading" of schools perpetuates unequal opportunity. It rewards rich
schools, whose students fare better on the Florida Comprehensive Achievement Test
(FCAT), than students from poor schools. Bush gives away vouchers to let kids leave 
failing
schools instead so he doesn't have to accept the responsibility to fix them. What 
about the
schools that earn Cs and Ds? They're on their own.

The Florida Education Association, the largest group of public school teachers in the 
state,
has pasted a big bull's eye on Bush's hide. Bush wants voters to believe that it's just
because unions hate Republicans. Maybe. But at this point the union would likely 
embrace
Pat Buchanan if he came to the state bearing education funding.

The university system hasn't escaped molestation by Bush, either. Bush has done away 
with
the state Board of Regents and put Republican businessmen on the local boards of 
trustees.
The old Board of Regents was political too, but at least there was a chancellor 
fighting to
implement a statewide strategy. It's all in the hands of local empire-builders now.

3. One Florida, Divisible (With Higher Education for Some)

"Kick their asses out."

That's what Jeb Bush instructed his office security to do when hundreds of students 
flooded
the state Capitol to protest his repeal of affirmative action in higher education and
government contracting.

What he meant by initiating his One Florida plan in the first place seemed to be, 
"don't let
their asses in."

Bush said his plan would dramatically increase minority and female enrollment in state
colleges and universities. It didn't. He claimed it would do the same for minority 
businesses
vying for state contracts. It didn't.

Where did he get this idea? Well, we don't know.

In the Bush kingdom, explanation and consultation aren't necessary. King Bush 
instituted his
One Florida plan by executive order, bypassing the rigmarole of public input and 
tiresome
legislative debates. Public hearings happened after the plan was revealed, mostly to 
mollify
outspoken politicians like state Sen. Lesley "Les" Miller Jr. (D-Tampa).

Bush didn't deign to attend those hearings, though, since his mind was made up.

To him, hundreds of black students marching in Tallahassee proved how those ungrateful
blacks didn't appreciate that the governor was only trying to do what was best for 
them.

The governor has numbers that show an infinitesimal increase in minority enrollment, 
and
his opponents have numbers that show an infinitesimal decrease in minority enrollment.
Nobody disputes that a dramatic change hasn't taken place. In other words, Bush's plan 
has
done virtually nothing to improve higher-education opportunities for blacks.

It appears that the only affirmative action Bush believes in is the kind that gets C 
students
from prominent families into Yale.

4. Presidential Election 2000: Crime Pays

Democrats, Republicans, independents, Greens -- insert the name of a party here. No
matter what the political affiliation, every Floridian should still be seething over 
the 2000
presidential election.

Some countries have oil. Some have coffee. We have the right the vote. It is our 
greatest
resource. When it gets taken away, nothing's left. Don't be fooled by the absence of 
Justice
Department commandos swooping in to arrest Gov. Bush. His handling of the 2000
presidential election was criminal.

The governor broke the law in August 2000 when he ordered 40,000 felons who had served
their time and had their civil rights restored in other states to apply for his 
permission to
vote in Florida. In his book, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, author Greg Palast 
quotes
Tawana Hayes, a clerk who processes clemency requests in the governor's office, as 
saying
the ordeal is "sometimes worse than breaking a leg." It can take months and sometimes
years.

Two years ago, it all came down to whether Bush felt like giving American citizens a 
right
that they had all along.

Two state court decisions and the National Voter Registration Act say Bush broke the 
law.
He proved he was aware of his crime when he tried to hide his order in November after a
post-election U.S. Civil Rights Commission investigation was underway.

He will never be arrested, but this flagrant denial of the most fundamental 
constitutional
right is alone sufficient reason not to reelect him.

Prior to Bush's 1998 election, the Republican Legislature decided to do what no other 
state
in the union has done: turn over the very serious job of removing ineligible voters 
from
voting rolls to a private corporation. Not just any corporation, but one with so many
Republican connections a black widow would be impressed with the web.

Although the company was being paid millions, supposedly for their unique ability to 
verify
and cross-reference the data, they fucked up the purge by failing to verify and cross-
reference the data. They did this with Secretary of State Katherine Harris' blessing 
and
Bush's knowledge.

Bush did "recuse" himself from the election recount process to avoid a conflict of 
interest,
but he didn't insist that Katherine Harris do the same. How is it not a conflict of 
interest for
the person in charge of ensuring the state's free and open election process also to 
serve as
the state coordinator of a presidential candidate's campaign?

5. Prisons Over People

Bush is not big on second chances, even if they save the state money. Prisoners and 
addicts
who are able to further their education and get adequate drug treatment return to 
prison at
a far lower rate than those who don't. Instead of providing programs that decrease 
prison
spending by keeping prisoners out of jail, Bush would rather spend money by making room
for those prisoners who come back.

Unless the prisoner in question is his daughter.

When Noelle Bush got busted trying to score Xanax with a bogus prescription, she handed
her dad a plum opportunity to do what other parents have done when something horrible
happens to their kids --turn a private tragedy into a public crusade. He could have 
publicly
acknowledged that the answer to drug addiction is treatment rather than prison -- 
whether
the addict is his kid or someone else's. He could have led the way to a more 
enlightened
drug policy that builds people up instead of making it necessary to build more prisons.

He missed that chance.

While Bush did say that treatment was difficult and necessary, he didn't advocate more
funds to pay for it. While Noelle took advantage of a program that allows nonviolent 
drug
offenders to opt for treatment rather than jail time, Bush eliminated $13-million in 
drug
treatment funding to balance the budget. He later restored $9-million, but the loss 
was still
significant.

The drug courts currently can see only half the addicts who want to take advantage of 
the
treatment option. Those who do appear before the court often have to find -- and pay 
for --
a rehab facility themselves.

If Noelle makes it through rehab, she'll emerge with a clean criminal record, even 
though
she spent three days in jail for snagging pills from a nurse and later got caught with 
crack
cocaine in her shoe. The rehab residents wanted to see her arrested, but the treatment
staff refused to file a report. When a judge said that treatment staff could not be 
forced to
testify against Noelle, Daddy Bush lauded the ruling. But don't expect Governor Bush to
sympathize with the constitutional rights of future defendants in Florida, where a 
first-time
arrest for crack possession can result in a 10-year prison sentence.

Jeb Bush wants compassion and prayer for his kid, but he doesn't care what happens to
anybody else's. He's a staunch opponent of the Right to Treatment initiative, which
supporters want to put before voters as a constitutional amendment requiring the state 
to
find treatment for all who qualify.

To be fair, this isn't entirely his fault. Voters like politicians who appear to be 
tough on
crime, even if that tough attitude isn't actually making them safer. But Bush's skills 
extend to
pandering, not political courage. It takes real leadership to tell the public the 
truth: Denying
prisoners the opportunity to become productive citizens isn't making the public any 
safer.
He doesn't have the skills to lead Florida in that direction.

6. DCF Shouldn't Stand for 'Dead Child Found'

When Bush ran for governor four years ago, children who were wards of the state were
being abused, lost and killed. Caseworkers were handling too many files, being paid too
little and leaving their jobs too often.

Bush promised to fix the system. Four years later, Bush is running for re-election. 
Children
are still being abused, lost and killed. Caseworkers are still overworked and 
underpaid. But
now they're scapegoats too.

That's not the kind of change we were looking for. After his election, Bush promptly 
forgot
about the kids, until one of them turned up dead. He didn't raise the salaries of
caseworkers, nor did he hire more. He mostly did nothing until Rilya Wilson, a 
4-year-old
entrusted to the state, became national news when it turned out she had been missing 
for
a year and no one at the Department of Children and Families knew it.

When department Secretary Kathleen Kearney resigned, Bush didn't mount a search or take
much time before he named her successor: ultraconservative Jerry Regier.

Controversy about Regier's religious views ensued immediately, but what about his 
record
as the head of the Department of Human Services in Oklahoma?

Oklahoma is even worse than Florida in protecting children in state care, according to
federal statistics. While 5 percent of kids in Florida return to foster care within 12 
months of
being returned to their families, 17 percent return within that time in Oklahoma. 
While child
abuse reports are investigated in an average of 14 hours in Florida, it takes an 
average of
377 hours for investigators in Oklahoma to respond.

OK, fewer victims of child abuse actually die in Oklahoma than they do in Florida. In 
1999,
Oklahoma reported 47 dead while Florida reported 57. That's hardly a distinction to be
proud of.

Regier claims he wasn't directly responsible for abused children in Oklahoma and says 
the
state's abysmal record can't be blamed on him.

At best, he's inexperienced. At worst, he's incompetent.

Regier does seem to listen to reason, though. Regier recently called for a budget 
increase
to pay for more background checks for caseworkers, better pay and training. Why didn't
Bush think of that?

7. Democracy: It's Not Optional

Nowhere is Bush's quest for absolute dominance more obvious than in his repeated 
success
at seizing control of the judicial branch of government. It wasn't enough that the 
governor
made the appointments. Bush insisted on controlling the entire membership of the
nominating commissions that submitted to him the short list of qualified candidates. 
The
commissions used to include people appointed by the Florida Bar, whose members are
most familiar with the judgeship applicants. Now, they're all Bush appointees, with a
distinctly rightward tilt.

He also took control of judgeships that used to be elected. Florida voters soundly 
rejected a
proposed constitutional amendment to have all judges appointed. But when the 
Legislature
created 18 new trial court judgeships in last year, Bush lobbied for the right to 
appoint them
instead of making them elected positions. The eventual deal let him choose nine and let
citizens vote on the other nine. Bush also seized more direct control of universities. 
He and
the Legislature dissolved the state Board of Regents, then packed the new local boards 
of
trustees with Republican supporters and conservative businessmen. University presidents
who criticized the move shut up and fell in line behind their new bosses.

While he's seizing more and more authority, he's less and less interested in anyone who
disagrees with him.

That basically excludes anyone who's not rich, white and conservative. Unless it's an
election year.

In 1998, Bush visited farm workers in Immokalee and promised that, as governor, he 
would
help them to get the pay and rights that they deserved. He's refused to talk to them 
since.

Bush is so hostile to the ideals of democracy that he tried to choose his Democratic
opponent in November's election, running anti-Bill McBride TV advertisements during the
primary.

With four more years in office, our self-appointed monarch may need advice from arch-
nemesis Fidel Castro on how to keep the masses at bay.

8. Privatization: If It Ain't Broke, Give It Time Welcome to Florida Inc.

With CEO Bush at the helm, there's little need for government workers here. We can get 
rid
of those pesky state employees with their health insurance and job security and all 
that
liberal pap.

According to the Department of Labor statistics, Bush has rid the state of more than 
2,000
jobs and eliminated more than 10,000 government positions, farming some of their
functions out to the private sector. Not all of the 10,000 jobs were filled and some 
of the
employees in positions that were eliminated found other jobs in state government. 
They'd
better be careful among the departments that were eliminated completely was the 
Division
of Safety.

Then there's the matter of paying corporate taxes. While the rest of the country is 
aghast at
business corruption and creative accounting procedures, Bush still has faith in his 
corporate
comrades. Bush wants to use corporations' own audits as the basis for corporate taxes 
--
yes, the same audits that gave us Enron, Tyco and the rest. Hey, it will save the state
money. The Department of Children and Families is one agency that clearly needs more
openness and oversight, but instead Bush is entrusting some of its duties to the 
private
sector. Charter schools run by corporations are flourishing in Florida and they don't 
have to
succumb to the school grading system that Bush claims is so vital in keeping schools
accountable.

9. The Environment: While We Still Have One

Bush likes to do the environmental two-step. He takes one step forward, then two steps
back.

He supports having a fund to buy unspoiled land, but then he uses that money as a rainy
day fund for budget emergencies.

He claims he really wants to rehabilitate the Everglades, but he made it harder for
environmental groups to challenge developers who want to build on sensitive land. To
challenge a permit, a group must now live in the area being developed, have at least 20
members and be in existence for at least a year.

Since groups often form around individual development projects and developers can't be
counted on to alert citizens of their plans to destroy the environment, this will 
equate to a
gag order on whiners who insist on heading outdoors instead of going to the mall.

The governor seemed willing to take on his brother over allowing oil drilling in the 
Gulf of
Mexico, but did he really have a choice? Not much in a state that relies on the tourism
industry and beaches that, while not unspoiled, are at least free of oil slicks.

The problem with Bush's record on environmental issues is not just that it's 
inconsistent,
but that it's clearly based on political motivation and not a real appreciation for 
Florida's
ecosystem. Would anyone who really cared about the environment even consider injecting
untreated wastewater into Florida's aquifer? The idea would have endangered the
environment and put the state's water supply at risk of contamination, but Bush is 
still
thinking about it anyway. He's willing to consider all ideas concerning water issues, 
he said,
and the injection scheme is still on the table. Of course controlling growth is 
another way to
address water concerns, but Bush doesn't feel that that's an idea worth mulling over. 
The
governor seems to feel that protecting the environment is fine as long it doesn't mean
actually making sacrifices.

10. Taxes: Just Another Way to Keep the Rich Man Down

Senate President John McKay (R-Bradenton) tried to do one good deed as term limits 
ended
his political career: institute tax reform.

Unfortunately, Bush has neither reached the edge of the term limit cliff, nor is he 
inclined to
do one good deed.

What would have been ballot Amendment Five sought to create a legislative committee 
that
could do away with individual sales tax exemptions and would have resulted in billions 
in
revenue for the state. The committee would evaluate each exemption and decide whether 
it
should stay or go. If they decided it should go, the exemption would have been yanked 
right
away, but the Legislature still would have had two years to overturn the decision.

Of course, the industries that saw their tax-exempt status in peril, like the 
accountants,
lawyers and Realtors, rallied against the amendment, and Bush rallied right along with
them.

In a touching display of concern for voters, Bush claimed that the amendment's wording
was too confusing. Of course instead of killing it, he could have tried to clarify it, 
as he did
with the class-size amendment. Except instead of a price tag, voters would have seen an
estimated windfall printed next to the amendment's worded explanation. That would have
made the amendment abundantly clear.

Of course in spite of his statements to the contrary, Bush is completely aware of the 
budget
crisis the state is facing. Even TaxWatch, the conservative, corporate-backed "think 
tank" is
ready to concede that some of those tax exemptions may have to go. Florida has spent 
too
many years funding recurring programs with funds that don't recur. A new revenue stream
generated by yanking some tax-exemptions is a reality that Bush wants to pretend he can
avoid till just after the election. What he'll really do is blame cutting tax- 
exemptions on the
class-size amendment and all of those citizens who voted for it. More of that Bush
leadership.

But not if he's gone.

Contact staff writer Rochelle Renford at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or call her 
at
813-248-8888, ext. 163.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R
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