EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Transcript: Today's Live Q&A With NSA Leaker, Edward Snowden
- 'Tip of the Iceberg': Senators Warn Far More Data May Not Be Safe
- Playing the Obama Bumper Sticker Game
- Intentional and Evil: Court Marshall Sexually Assaults Woman, Then Arrests Her When She Protests
- David Brooks, Tom Friedman, Bill Keller Wish Snowden Had Just Followed Orders
- Transcript: Today's Live Q&A With NSA Leaker, Edward Snowden
- The Terror Con
- Remembering Satyajit Ray’s Hirok Rajar Deshe: On Edward Snowden, Resistance and Inverted Totalitarianism
- Pentagon Bracing for Public Dissent Over Climate and Energy Shocks
- Bank of America Lied to Homeowners and Rewarded Foreclosures, Former Employees Say
Popular content
Today's Top News
Brown vs. Democracy
With the California Financial Crisis at stake, the impartiality of the California Attorney General has come under scrutiny.
Proponents of the California Democracy Act, a ballot initiative that would restore a majority vote for revenue and budget in the legislature, are asking Jerry Brown, the Attorney General, for a new title and summary. An exhaustive poll has shown that Brown's title and summary changed the meaning and intent of the proposed initiative by one of the largest margins ever seen in a poll.
The poll was conducted by David Binder Research, one of California's most respected polling firms. The poll showed that the actual initiative for majority on revenue and budget is supported by likely California voters by a 73-to-22 percent margin - a 51 percent lead. But Attorney General Jerry Brown personally wrote the title and summary with wording that shifts that favorable margin to a 38-to-56 percent unfavorable margin - a 69 percent shift!
The poll was conducted March 6-11,
with a random sample of 800 likely voters with a margin of error of
±3.5 percent. The summary appears on www.CaliforniansforDemocracy.
If unchanged, Brown's wording, not the actual initiative, would appear on the ballot, leading voters to misinterpret it and vote against it. Brown's wording, if not changed, could kill the initiative, despite overwhelming voter support.
The effect is crucial, since the lack of majority rule in the legislature has made it impossible for the legislature to raise the revenue the state needs to prevent financial meltdown. It is the single biggest factor in the state's budget crisis.
The California Democracy Act is one sentence long.
All legislative actions on revenue and budget must be determined by a majority vote.
Its intent is "to bring democracy to the California legislature by ensuring that all legislative actions on revenue and budget must be determined by a majority vote. The current 2/3 vote requirement for revenue and budget allows 33.4% of either the Assembly or Senate to block the will of the majority, which violates an essential tenet of democracy." The issue is democracy. And on an initiative, a simple majority can end the 2/3 vote rules.
Attorney General Brown's rewording states:
Changes Legislative Vote Requirement to Pass a Budget or Raise Taxes from Two-Thirds to a Simple Majority. Initiative Constitutional Amendment.
It changes the legislative vote requirement necessary to pass the budget, and to raise taxes from two-thirds to a simple majority. Unknown fiscal impact from lowering the legislative vote requirement for spending and tax increases. In some cases, the content of the annual state budget could change and / or state tax revenues could increase. Fiscal impact would depend on the composition and actions of future legislatures.
The Attorney General's wording uses the word "taxes" four times, associated with the words "raise" and "increase". It includes the conservative language "spending and tax increases," usually used to vilify liberals. His title and summary raises voters' fears that their taxes could be raised. It replaces the intent of the initiative to promote democracy via majority vote by a purported but untrue intent to raise taxes on individual voters.
The Binder report notes that taxes in general, as opposed to their taxes, are not a real concern of most voters. Democrats are overwhelmingly opposed to raising taxes on lower and middle income Californians, as are Republicans. No one in the legislature wants to raise taxes on most voters.
When taxes on the lower and middle income brackets are not at issue, 64 percent of voters support "solving the budget crisis by closing tax loopholes on corporations and charging oil companies an extraction fee without raising taxes on lower and middle income Californians." 55% agree with the statement that "we could raise revenue and balance the budget without raising taxes on lower and middle income Californians." Tax experts, such as Jean Ross of the Californian Budget project and Lenny Goldberg of the California Tax Reform Association agree.
Some moderate and liberal opponents of the Democracy Act believe that the right will attack it as raising taxes nonetheless, and that is no doubt true. Usually such attacks would lower support for an initiative by about 10 percent. The Binder poll took this into account by providing a battery of such attacks and then testing support again. The predicated effect occurred. Support for the original wording dropped from 73-to-22 percent down to 62-to-34 percent, still a 28 percent margin.
In short, the Attorney General's wording raises unrealistic fears in a majority of voters that their taxes might be raised and hides the true democratic intent of the original initiative. That is why proponents of the California Democracy Act are asking for an accurate title and summary from the Attorney General that reflects the democratic intent of the initiative and does not raise unrealistic fears of most voters that their taxes might be raised via the initiative.
Indeed, voters show overwhelming support for such basic democracy. As Binder observes, 71% of voters agree with the statement that "in a democracy, a majority of legislators should be able to pass everyday legislation." And 68% of voters disagree with the statement that "in a democracy, a minority of legislators should be able to block everyday legislation." Percentages this high reflect support from across the political spectrum.
Since everyday legislation requires revenue, a majority vote requirement for both revenue and budget would realize the aspirations of an overwhelming percentage of voters for democracy in their legislature. And it would allow the legislature to pass legislation that would end the budget crisis.
I ask you to write to Attorney General
Brown initiative.coordinator@doj.ca.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...




10 Comments so far
Show AllNice rewrite. Yet a slight misrepresentation of the proposed majority rule there, Mr. Ex-Governor & Gubernatorial Candidate 2010 Jerry Brown.
Wouldn't want such a pesky rule as majority vote on budget to interfere if you came to power, would you? - Might balance the Californian budget rather than favor friends.
Ruling California runs in your family, it seems, with your father a governor (1959-67) before you (1975-83). We all understand how Democracy can be a hindrance to that kind of good government...
As much as I tend to agree with Lakoff, Brown is telling the truth. It's not going to be OK, the California Economy isn't going to fix itself without raising taxes and repealing the requirement, installed with Prop13, that all budgetary decisions be subject to a one third veto, will result in raised Taxes.
Certainly, he could have played it more political and spun it a bit, but Brown has eloquence gaps and this looks like one of them.
And SM, if indeed he's doing this in view of his Governor's run, it's hurting him to be hamstrung by a 2/3 rule. The Orange County and Inland Empire Greeedhead Cons have kept a stranglehold on California's budget, that was used to oust a recently elected Democrat and has defeated Ahhhhnold, who replaced him. These people HATE Jerry Brown. They put Prop 13 through in order to obstruct him. They hated him when he was Gov. before and they still hate him. I can't imagine that he's playing to that crowd or that he wants to preserve this disastrous rule.
SM = Smarter March, the first commenter.
And yes the initiative is trying to repeal the 1/3 veto, and that's why I question Lakoff's interpretation because I can't imagine Jerry Brown protecting this suicidal rule.
California is a preview of the outcome of a filibustered Legislature, a portrait of the Tyrrany of the Minority. They have a State Law that mandates the same condition that the filibuster rule does in the Senate. And it has allowed a handfull of greeedheads to grind California into the ground, leaving the state near the bottom in Health and Education and 20+ billion$ in debt.
Matched against Whitman's wealth I think Brown is already disadvantaged. I doubt that the business community will support him regardless given his political history. I also believe that, despite my admiration for Mr. Lakoff, Brown is simply being truthful here, a refreshing change I think from the typical political rhetoric.
OT Technical Note: CV, "March" is the month, not part of "Smarter"'s nym.
This is an all-too-easy mistake to make, and it happens a lot.
It's not you-- it's the "good enough for comments threads" header formatting.
Thanks, I should have caught that, Obedient Servant March.
Oh, really! Here I thought we were all related......;-}
No surprise that Brown is pandering to the super-rich, even if it means continuing California's downward spiral into a failed state.
Contrast Brown's behavior with the financial straight talk of Laura Wells, candidate for the Green Party's nomination for governor of California:
http://www.laurawells.org/
California has suffered from bipartisan misrule long enough... time to give the Green New Deal a chance.