Arnold Schwarzenegger says because California’s budget crisis
remains unresolved, he’ll be skipping the Republican National
Convention in St. Paul. Bad move. With his poll numbers plummeting
and his days in office dwindling, Schwarzenegger could use a
friendly audience, even if he has to fly halfway across the country
to get it.
Arnold’s absence will also leave unanswered a question making
the rounds in GOP circles: Just what exactly could he say? When it
comes to dishing out Republican red meat, Arnold has put his
political brethren on a strictly vegetarian diet.
How was the action hero who roared into office behind the recall
of Gray Davis — who pledged to blow up the boxes of bureaucratic
state government and blasted Twisted Sister’s “We’re not gonna take
it!” at campaign events — confounded by a system he pledged to
reform and rejected by Republicans who believed him their
savior?
The answer lies in Arnold’s first decision after his election,
in which he instituted an almost symmetrical bipartisan government
that repeatedly acceded to the Democrat powers that be in
Sacramento. What followed was ultimately ruinous to his desire for
change and catastrophic to his supposedly Republican base.
What does he have to show for his outreach? After nearly 1,800
days in office, Schwarzenegger and California find themselves right
where they met: Drowning in red ink, dragging a massive and growing
budget and dominated by the Democrats’ gerrymandered majority.
Upon taking office in 2003, Schwarzenegger was urged to pressure
nervous Democrats and demand reapportionment reform. He was also
advised to lead a public preference for part-time politicians,
compel the end of a full-time Legislature and rewrite a budget
system that consigns California to an almost-permanent
boom-and-bust economic cycle.
He didn’t.
Instead, he proposed a complicated debt-restructuring
arrangement, providing short-term relief at best, another layer of
debt at worst.
Schwarzenegger’s partner in this scheme was then-State
Controller Steve Westly, a Silicon Valley Democrat who made a
fortune off of EBay. The Arnold and Steve show barnstormed the
state, both men shoulder-to-shoulder at campaign events.
Less than a year later, as Schwarzenegger geared up for
re-election, the leading Democrat opposing him was — you guessed
it — Steve Westly. Admirably, Arnold wasn’t offended, but
manifestly drew the wrong conclusions about Sacramento’s
hyper-partisan environment.
Although his recall election was opposed by every prominent
Democrat, shortly after taking office, an order came down (from
Maria Shriver, it is rumored) as the new governor staffed up:
“appoint more Democrats.”
While every governor appoints individuals from across the aisle,
Arnold took it to an unprecedented level. His current chief of
staff, secretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency
and head of the state’s Air Resources Board are all Democrats who
held even less prominent positions in the Gray Davis
administration.
THIS IS NOT TO SAY Schwarzenegger failed to attempt big things. In
2005, he sponsored initiatives to achieve authentic budget reform,
a fair reapportionment and an end to California’s quick teacher
tenure. But that campaign was destroyed by more than $100 million
in television ads, courtesy of the state’s teachers, trial lawyers
and public employee unions.
In response, Schwarzenegger used his State of the State address
shortly thereafter not to decry the nine-figure power play that
snuffed out his pet causes. Instead, he took to the podium and
apologized for supporting the ideas in the first place.
Changing tactics, Schwarzenegger next dangled the prospect of a
political Fountain of Youth — a rewriting of California’s tough
term limits law — and tentatively reached a deal to combine it
with an end to the guaranteed re-elections enjoyed by virtually
every state official.
Democrats, however, sent to the ballot only a repeal of term
limits and told Arnold what he could do with his reapportionment.
Meekly, Schwarzenegger endorsed the idea.
Voters were not as agreeable and rejected the obvious power
grab. Arnold has been in political free fall ever since.
Schwarzenegger is an obvious improvement on Gray Davis. But the
recall that put him in office was not intended merely to replace a
failed politician with a better one. It was a desperate attempt at
lasting reform, which is only possible through a partisan political
process in which consequential issues get debated, one side wins
and one loses.
Still, Republicans cling to their own audacity of hope: The
one-time Mr. Universe will understand that while he has sought to
rise above the fray and appeal to a sense of statesmanship, this
won’t work in Sacramento, a town with nothing but contempt for
honest brokers.