By George Neumayr on 4.26.02 @ 12:02AM
Here everyone was calling the Republican Bill Simon extreme when the real wacko turns out to be Gray Davis himself.
An extremist exists in the California governor's race. But it is
not Bill Simon. Unlike the low-key businessman and philanthropist,
Gray Davis is a high-strung ideologue, pursuing an agenda straight
out of the pages of the Nation magazine.
Consider Davis's bout of extreme liberalism this week. Appearing
with the racial huckster Jesse Jackson at a San Jose shake-down
conference, Davis spoke about possibly extending reparations to
minorities in California. "Clearly, we want to right any wrongs and
do justice to people who were taken advantage of," said Davis.
Playing up his liberal credentials to the Jesse Jackson wing of
the Democratic Party, Davis noted that he signed the legislation
commissioning the California Department of Insurance study on
insurance practices that date to the days of slavery.
Jesse was most appreciative. Davis and state Insurance
Commissioner Harry Low, Jackson said, are "laying out the predicate
...which will go a long way toward a national remedy of this
crisis. If we correct a wrong, and make a crooked way straight,
everybody wins."
Particularly him. The San Francisco Chronicle reports
that Jackson "said he would not expect reparations to be paid to
individuals but to nonprofit groups, educational programs, arts
facilities or other groups that help minorities." In other words,
him.
Davis's willingness to advance this off-the-wall reparations
agenda is quite telling. Californians would do well to remember
that Davis cut his teeth in politics as chief of staff to Governor
Moonbeam, Jerry Brown. The hard-left ideology of Brown still
appeals to Davis.
He frequently says that Simon is out of ideological step with
California, even as he takes positions far to the left of average
Californians. Davis is more careful in the image-maintenance
department than his old boss Jerry Brown, but he is just as
liberal, with a great weakness for entertaining wacky
proposals.
Sometimes the tension between his left-wing ideological
sympathies and moderate political instincts yields comical results.
Look at his recent support for granting driver's licenses to
illegal aliens with the proviso that they only use them to drive to
their illegally-procured jobs. You see, he's no pansy in the war on
terrorism. He isn't about to let them use their auto licenses to
commit crimes.
This is what passes for "triangulation" in his mind. He is sure
that every idea, no matter how dogmatically liberal, can be
shoehorned into a "moderate" position. He wants, for example,
in-state illegal aliens to pay $10,000 less a year in tuition at
University of California schools than out-of-state Americans,
provided that the illegal aliens promise to observe the law in the
future.
He casts himself as the perfect instrument of the will of the
people. But on matters like affirmative action, which the
Californians rejected through a popular initiative, he obstructs
their will. If Simon can wipe the moderate gloss off Davis's
policies, Californians will see the degree to which the governor
holds their common-sensical views in contempt.
The abortion issue, which Davis feels confident to demagogue
almost daily, could backfire on him if Californians grow weary of
his hectoring. Most Californians favor some regulation of abortion;
Davis (a practicing Catholic) favors none. To many Californians,
even ones ambivalent on abortion, Davis sounds more pro-abortion
than "pro-choice." Such is his enthusiasm for the right to abortion
under any circumstances and at any age that he almost sounds ready
to perform the abortions himself.
The California media are studiously uninterested in Davis's odd
passion for abortion, while simultaneously searching frantically
for passion against it in Simon. The less he talks about the issue,
the more the media focus on it. Californians are told incessantly
that Simon disagrees with them on abortion. But the media never
bother to inform them that Davis's support for abortion is far more
liberal than theirs, even covering the partial-birth abortions
Californians abhor.
The media seek to wring out of Simon a pledge to protect
abortion, never mind that that decision is beyond his reach. Would
that they showed the same level of attention to the no-new-taxes
pledge. Simon made it, but Davis won't. He hems and haws on the tax
issue, falling back into weasely ambiguity about not foreseeing the
need for new taxes.
But who is he kidding? If he gets a second term, taxes will rise
to offset ballooning deficits from his first one. Besides,
according to Davis, Californians owe minorities "reparations."
topics:
Taxes, Education, Business, Abortion, Law