Arnold Gives Another $700K of His Own for Redistricting
If Californians see the petition circulators outside their grocery stores smiling this week, you'll know the reason: Gov. Schwarzenegger. The Sacramento Bee's Capitol Alert is first to report that the governor has kicked in another $700,000 to the redistricting initiative. As reported here first Sunday, the per-signature price paid to gatherers goes up, from $2 to $2.25 this week, making it the best-paying of the three major measures still on the street.
This continues Schwarzenegger's pattern of putting his money where his mouth is. For all of the criticism he's received for his more than $100 million in fundraising since launching his political career in 2003, Schwarzenegger has been the number one donor to his own career -- more than $25 million -- and most of that money has been spent not on his own election but on ballot measures to advance his agenda. Governing has never been so expensive in California.
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redistricting
I would like to know what Tom Mc Clintock's position is....thx, ann
I'll find out
I don't know but will put in a call this morning to find out. Joe Mathews Irvine senior fellow, New America Foundation www.newamerica.net/blog/blockbuster-democracy/
McClintock Neutral
I talked to McClintock's campaign this morning. He is officially neutral on the Schwarzenegger redistricting initiative -- he hasn't taken a position yet, and his campaign says he won't take one at least until the initiative has qualified for the ballot. (It's still on the street as of this morning). I also called two people who know McClintock well. Their view -- one had a conversation with him about redistricting, the other is merely supposing -- is that he supports the idea of taking reapportionment power away from the legislature but is likely to be lukewarm at best about the particulars of this measure. McClintock actively campaigned for Prop. 77, Schwarzenegger's ill-fated redistricting initiative in 2005, and may prefer a concept more like that -- which used retired judges -- to the current initiative -- which establishes a citizens commission. Joe Mathews Irvine senior fellow, New America Foundation www.newamerica.net/blog/blockbuster-democracy/