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Jim Battin

Welfare Needs To Be A Safety Net, Not A Hamock

The Senate Republican Caucus is blessed to have some very talented and committed professionals working with us as staffers. They regularly write very compelling and dead-on policy commentary.

Here is an example of their great work.

I’d love to claim credit for the words below, but it’s only right to give credit where it is deserved. WelfareNeeds ToBeA Safety Net, Not A Hammock

A little more than 10 years ago, California and the nation embarked on an ambitious effort to enact real welfare reform, turning away from an entitlement culture that promoted irresponsibility and indolence to a system designed to transition welfare recipients into the workforce.

The undertaking was roundly criticized by liberals, often with apocalyptic scenarios about children by the millions being pushed into poverty. What actually resulted was extraordinary. Since 1996, welfare caseloads have dropped 56 percent. As recipients left the bread line to become breadwinners, the child poverty rate decreased as well – from 20.8 percent in 1995 to 17.8 percent in 2004. Within six… Read More

Today’s Commentary: Quick – Can You Name the Republican Member of Congress from California who had the Largest GAIN in their 2006 Election Result Over That of the 2004 Campaign?

Well, he may no longer be chair of the House Committee on Rules (due to the GOP’s majority defeat) but Congressman David Dreier can take great comfort in the fact that he is one of the few Republican members of the House of Representatives to see his winning margin and his net percentage actually increase over his Democratic opponent in 2006 over the result of 2004. While this may seem like political trivia (Hey, maybe you can impress your friends), it’s hardly trivia info, given the fierce fight that seemed to loom on the horizon for Congressman Dreier just one year ago today.

In campaign 2004, Congressman Dreier was on the receiving end of a significant negative attack campaign waged against him from the political left and right. In a bizarre marriage of political convenience, Dreier’s 2004 Democrat opponent joined forces with conservative talk radio icons Ken and John of Los Angeles-based station KFI. The John and Ken show is among the most popular… Read More

Quick – Can You Name the Republican Member of Congress from California who had the Largest GAIN in their 2006 Election Result Over That of the 2004 Campaign?

Well, he may no longer be chair of the House Committee on Rules (due to the GOP’s majority defeat) but Congressman David Dreier can take great comfort in the fact that he is one of the few Republican members of the House of Representatives to see his winning margin and his net percentage actually increase over his Democratic opponent in 2006 over the result of 2004. While this may seem like political trivia (Hey, maybe you can impress your friends), it’s hardly trivia info, given the fierce fight that seemed to loom on the horizon for Congressman Dreier just one year ago today.

In campaign 2004, Congressman Dreier was on the receiving end of a significant negative attack campaign waged against him from the political left and right. In a bizarre marriage of political convenience, Dreier’s 2004 Democrat opponent joined forces with conservative talk radio icons Ken and John of Los Angeles-based station KFI. The John and Ken show is among the most popular… Read More

Shawn Steel

Liberation in North Korea in LA

In Los Angeles there are hundreds of active prospering Korean churches, with tens of thousands of members. Many of the Korean churches have taken over from declining white congregations, revitalizing churches with packed houses. I’ve watch this phenomena for a generation.There is emerginga "real world" political awareness growing within the Korean Christian community.

My wife and I are members of the 5000 member Faith Korean Presbyterian in Torrance. When the Defense of Marriage Act [DOMA] was debated in 2000, I was completely surprised by spontaneous actions taking place at my church’s parking lot with an intense petition drive. ManyKorean churches actively supported DOMA. This was a breakthrough for conservatives by proposing something tangible for fellow citizens and a striking breakout for the ordinarily insular Korean community. It marked promiseto strengthenthe conservative movement with the energy and resources of theexpanding Korean population in California.

If conservatives could attract conservative Asians, we could help turn California to the right. All the elements are there. Values for education,… Read More

James V. Lacy

Lawyers resign from Jerry Brown lawsuit?

Dana Reed tipped me to Bill Bradley’s recent post on New West Notes that “the law firm” that represented Plaintiffs in the case to disqualify Jerry Brown as Attorney General has apparently resigned. I am on vacation in San Francisco and will check this out with the court in Sacramento on Monday. Readers will recall that the case, originally brought just before the November general election by a group of GOP volunteers led by Contra Costa GOP Chair Tom Del Becarro, sought to disqualify Brown as a candidate for Attorney General on the grounds that he did not meet the “black letter” statutory requirements to serve as Attorney General because he shifted his bar dues status to “inactive” for a period of time while he served as Mayor of Oakland, and was therefore technically not praticing law for a continuous period before his election as Attorney General. Brown, however, has been a lawyer for over 40 years. As a former Secretary of State and Governor, there really isn’t any question about his ability to serve as Attorney General, regardless of what one thinks about his politics.

I think the original lawsuit, in which the… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Today’s Commentary: “Pro-Criminal” Speaker Nunez Dumps GOP’s Spitzer From Public Safety Committee

One of the arguments that is used by advocates of getting rid of, or substantially relaxing California’s term-limits law is that we lose experienced lawmakers from policy committees just as they are developing extensive subject-matter expertise. This was the thought in my mind when I first started to hear the ‘buzz’ — that Speaker Fabian Nunez, a term-limits foe, had removed Assemblyman Todd Spitzer (pictured to the right) from the Public Safety Committee. Spitzer, who is entering his third and final term in the legislature is regarded as the GOP’s top ‘subject-matter expert’ on criminal safety issues. Spitzer, a former police officer and prosecutor and county supervisor, has made public safety the number one priority of his legislative career. Why would the Speaker remove Spitzer — especially when he was due to become the Vice Chairman? We have heard from more than one source that Assembly… Read More

Jon Fleischman

“Pro-Criminal” Speaker Nunez Dumps GOP’s Spitzer From Public Safety Committee

One of the arguments that is used by advocates of getting rid of, or substantially relaxing California’s term-limits law is that we lose experienced lawmakers from policy committees just as they are developing extensive subject-matter expertise. This was the thought in my mind when I first started to hear the ‘buzz’ — that Speaker Fabian Nunez, a term-limits foe, had removed Assemblyman Todd Spitzer (pictured to the right) from the Public Safety Committee. Spitzer, who is entering his third and final term in the legislature is regarded as the GOP’s top ‘subject-matter expert’ on criminal safety issues. Spitzer, a former police officer and prosecutor and county supervisor, has made public safety the number one priority of his legislative career. Why would the Speaker remove Spitzer — especially when he was due to become the Vice Chairman? We have heard from more than one source that Assembly… Read More

Duane Dichiara

I Wouldn’t Write the Obituary of Political Parties Quite Yet

I was reading the Union-Tribune the other day and stumbled on a column by Ruben Navarette, who envisions a ‘cafeteria style’ system, wherein voters pick and chose from amongst various parties and candidates based on each voters preference. In theory, that’s a wonderful system. I dream columnists and professors love to discuss at length. And I have no doubt that among some small subgroups of the population this is and has nearly always been the case. But it simply isn’t the case todayand unless we undergo a cultural revolution, isn’t going to be the case for the lion’s share of the population tomorrow. While some Americans may follow politics day to day at every level in their jurisdiction, most voters follow politics as a ‘background’ to their day to day lives. Political parties offer the invaluable service of offering the majority of the voting population a shortcut of figuring what candidate best represents their basic political philosophy. After all, particularly with the long ballot, how many people are really going to research six dozen or more candidates and measures? Not many Ruben, not many…… Read More