The "land of the fruits and nuts is just plain fruity and NUTTY"
 
 
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-calvote8jun08,0,5103877.story?coll
=la-opinion-leftrail

California votes...on Iraq?

Democrat Perata wants voters to voice their disapproval of the war in
February -- and oh by the way, relax the term limits.
June 8, 2007

CALIFORNIA'S FORM of direct democracy - its propensity for voting on matters
most states handle by legislative action - has been praised for empowering
average people and pilloried for elevating sloganeering over thoughtful
policy. It also has been hijacked now and again by base political interests.
A new proposal to let Californians vote their disapproval of the war in Iraq
manages to accomplish all of the above.

Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata (D-Oakland) is behind a bill - which
passed the Senate on Wednesday and was ably analyzed by our colleague,
George Skelton - that would ask voters this question: "Shall President
George W. Bush, in support of the men and women serving in the Armed Forces
of the United States, end the United States occupation of Iraq and
immediately begin the safe and orderly withdrawal of all United States
forces; and, further, shall President George W. Bush and the Congress
provide the necessary diplomatic and nonmilitary assistance to promote peace
and stability in Iraq and the Middle East?"

The senator can rest reasonably assured that state voters will answer the
question the way he wants it answered if it appears on their February
ballot, as he hopes it will. Opposition to the war, significant and growing
throughout the country, is overwhelming here. One recent poll found that
nearly three-quarters of Californians disapprove of Bush's handling of the
conflict. But if the measure merely expresses through the ballot what
Californians already have said through the polls, why bother? Here enter the
political calculations of Perata and his fellow legislative leaders.

Every ballot is an act of design, and February's presidential primary is a
study in the art. California moved up the date of its primary to maximize
its political influence, and Perata's bill would give liberal Democrats
another strong reason to vote - the chance to poke the president in the eye
presumably being too much for many to pass up. Perata's other agenda,
however, is tucked elsewhere in that ballot, where the Legislature intends
to give voters the chance to revise California's term limits, making it
possible for leaders such as Perata to serve longer terms in one house of
the Legislature. And there's the strategy: Liberals tend to be more
accommodating when it comes to term limits, so advocates of the proposal
like the idea of driving them to the polls with Iraq and then taking
advantage of their presence to win support for revised term limits.

Altogether, then, Democrats could pile on Bush and Perata could extend his
time in office - a neat two-step for a senator who opposes the war and likes
his job. If it's also a confluence of self-interest and populist policy,
even a political stunt - well, that's democracy in California. 

 



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