By Jeremy Lott on 9.24.03 @ 12:02AM
Just when you thought California couldn't get any weirder…
Oy. The full ninth circuit has now reversed the ruling of three
of its more creative members and allowed the October 7 statewide
California recall election to proceed as scheduled. Punch card
voting, it turns out, is not a violation of civil rights. This came
as a relief to the hundreds of thousands of voters who had already
cast absentee ballots.
And, if we needed any evidence that the three ring circus had
resumed, Darrell Issa, bankroller of the recall campaign, has now
come out against his own effort, unless one of the two
Republicans does the gentlemanly thing and fall on his own sword.
In the current divided field, the election of hated lieutenant
governor Cruz "what Chicano
activists?" Bustamante is a real possibility.
But the choice of who should go is almost Solomonic in its
complexity. As Matt
Welch, associate editor of the Los Angeles-based
Reason magazine, observed yesterday, this election is
functionally a part of the local Republican civil war that has
raged since the primaries of 2002, when both the local Democrats
and the national GOP wouldn't butt out and let the local elephants
make up their own minds. The Bush-backed establishmentarian Richard
Riordan was trounced by the conservative political neophyte Bill
Simon, who then went on to narrowly lose to Davis in the general.
Massive recriminations followed.
Welch frames both megastar Arnold Schwarzenegger and state
senator Tom McClintock as good representatives of the two state GOP
factions -- call them country clubbers and cavemen. He believes
that the balance may be shifting toward the Neanderthal this time
around: "You have one candidate who's completely frivolous --
gangbangs, pot, God knows what. And you have one candidate who has
horrendously specific knowledge of the issue at hand, which is the
budget crisis."
Nor, with two weeks left to go, does Welch see an easy solution
to the current impasse. Both Arnie and McClintock think, with the
other guy eliminated from the race, he could win, and their
constituencies may prove unwilling to follow their candidate's
advice if he drops out at the eleventh hour. The situation is not
unlike a high stakes game of chicken in which neither side has any
intention of swerving, and the results may be just as ugly.
Bruce Bialosky, southern California chairman of the Republican
Jewish Coalition, confidently predicts "Gray Davis is going to lose
and a Republican is going to be elected. … You can just smell
it." But his olfactory sense must be more acute than most. In
truth, there are all kinds of scents wafting through the warm
southern California air: conflicting polls, lawsuits, scandals
primed to explode, an unpredictable media that suddenly has to
cover statewide politics, a legislative process that has broken
down, independent voters who aren't yet sure just what they're
going to do. In this carnival-like atmosphere, events can make a
hash of forecasts overnight, or even over a short lunch.
At this point, if someone forced me to make a gun-to-the-head
prediction, I'd repeat what I've said since the beginning of the
recall campaign: Davis takes it. He assembles an ad hoc
coalition of liberal Dems, who hate the recall and can't stand
Republicans, and Anglos and Republicans, who worry that Cruz would
be much, much worse, and who are probably right about that. This
unhappy result would put the Tarnished State back to square one,
with a profligate legislature, a ghost of a governor, and no end in
sight for the people's woes, fiscal or otherwise.
Jeremy Lott is assistant managing editor of The
American Spectator.
topics:
Law, NATO