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Katy Grimes

Really good state budget transparency bills – will they be killed?

In 2012, the state Legislature passed 80 budget “spot” bills — empty bills with no details. Such measures just sit on a shelf and await last-minute bill language, then are put forward for late-night passage on the last day of the budget session.

These are often the most controversial bills of each session. When lawmakers use them to avoid the legislative process, which requires committee hearings for all bills, it is clear that their goal is to avoid transparency and public involvement.

This has long been the norm. It has arguably been encouraged since the 2010 adoption of Propositions 25 and 26 into the state Constitution, allowing the Legislature to pass a budget on a simple majority vote and requiring a supermajority vote to pass fees and taxes by the Legislature, respectively. Lawmakers routinely take major policy changes and potential tax increases and drop them in trailer bill language.

Gorell and other Assembly Republicans target ‘waste, fraud and abuse’

To counter this practice, Assembly Republicans are pushing budget reform and transparency measures.… Read More

Kevin Dayton

California High-Speed Rail’s Approval Rating Should Be 30%

In November 2008, 52.7% of California voters approved Proposition 1A, which authorized the state to borrow $9.95 billion for the “Safe, Reliable High-Speed Passenger Train for the 21st Century” by selling bonds to investors. Support has slipped since then.

A 2011 Field Poll and a 2012 USC/L.A. Times poll showed 59% of California voters would reject Proposition 1A if put back on the ballot. A 2013 Public Policy Institute of California poll indicates that 54% of likely voters outright “oppose” the high-speed rail project as it stands now.

Frankly, these polling results are astonishing. Why does a significant minority of Californians STILL support California High-Speed Rail after all of its financial and management fiascoes?

Well, there’s a sizeable group of Californians who regard high-speed rail as an evolutionary step toward enlightened collectivism. Another group recognizes it as an opportunity to make a lot of money off of taxpayers through its design, engineering, construction, or operation.

Their minds are made up. That leaves another group of California voters who still support high-speed rail but don’t have an… Read More

Katy Grimes

Caltrans boondoggles; director to be re-confirmed

Today, it appears the California Senate will reconfirm Malcolm Dougherty, the director of Caltrans. This will be done after only one Senate hearing, where instead of asking Dougherty to answer for the giant problems in his agency, lawmakers were silent or complimentary.

What timing. I hope Senators are paying attention today. Because yesterday, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission announced the opening of the new San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge may be delayed a few more weeks or even months. The latest delay of the 10-year construction project is due to the discovery of more than 30 faulty giant bolts holding the bridge together — apparently they need to be replaced before the bridge can open to the public.

Under construction for more than a decade, the Bay Bridge project has not only taken much longer to build than planned, cost overruns have escalated the total… Read More

Assemblywoman Melissa Melendez

Melendez: On Tax Day, a Choice for Sacramento Democrats

From Assemblywoman Melissa Melendez:

Another year, another tax day approaches. April 15th can be a depressing day, but especially for Californians.

Here in California we have some of the highest tax rates in the nation, we downright love to pay our taxes here. At least that’s what it would look like from the outside looking in. Year after year the state legislature passes fee increase after fee increase, taxing every single part of our lives, from the cradle to the grave. Californian’s high rate of taxation doesn’t stop at the state level either; there are still city and county taxes to factor in as well.

On April 15th, the day synonymous with paying taxes, I will have my bill AB 718 heard before the Revenue and Taxation Committee proposing a Sales Tax Holiday. I don’t have a single doubt that the bill will be killed in Committee by Assembly Democrats, never even reaching the Assembly Floor.

The month of April has historically been one of the slowest retail sales months of the year. With a consumer based economy and high unemployment, it’s important to encourage consumer spending to grow our economy and create more… Read More

Wendell Cox and Joseph Vranich

Study: If the California High-Speed Rail System Is Built, Taxpayers Will Get Stuck With $124-$373 Million In Losses — Every Year

As Gov. Jerry Brown seeks funding for California’s high-speed rail system in China, it is remarkable that the state’s train project is still alive.

California’s past legislatures have continued to fund the California High-Speed Rail Authority in a business-as-usual manner despite the plethora of findings demonstrating the quality of CHSRA’s work is below par, that the high-speed train’s project risks have been under-estimated, and that the statutory requirements of AB3034 and Proposition 1A are being violated.

The CHSRA’s excuses about program flaws are similar to rationalizations used on other similar boondoggles in which costs had been unrealistically minimized and benefits exaggerated, inducing public officials and the electorate to proceed, usually after cancellation is no longer feasible. If realistic, genuine projections had been made from the start, the California train project would likely have been cancelled long ago.

Our new Reason Foundation study concludes that the California High-Speed Rail Authority’s 2012 Business Plan has no more credibility than did… Read More

Jon Fleischman

U.S. Rep. McKeon (CA-25) Quietly Telling Key Folks That He May Retire


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In the past few weeks United States Congressman Howard “Buck” McKeon (CA-26), Chairman of the powerful House Armed Services Committee, has been talking with prominent political leaders in his district, informing them that he may be retiring at the end of his current term. I’ve personally spoken to several of the folks who spoke with McKeon, who confirmed for me that they had spoken with the senior Republican who was first elected in 1992, and is currently serving in his 11th term in the House.

I spoke with Congressman McKeon last evening in advance of publishing this story, and the Congressman would only say on the record that he has not yet made a decision about whether he would seek re-election in 2014.

Because of “committee term limits” within the House Republican Conference, the 74-year-old McKeon is in his last two year stint as Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. McKeon is the senior member of the House Education and the Workforce Committee, and has served on top GOP spot on that committee for a term, but would be allowed, if chosen to do so, to serve two… Read More

Richard Rider

Pathetic leftist rally of 100 paid participants fawned over by national media

For your edification, here’s your media bias story of the day. The national media made a story out of a nonstory — a mini-rally of tiny proportions. Typical was NPR’s piece describing the rally as the “counterweight to the Tea Party” — a protest outside the White House. Backed by numerous heavyweight leftist groups such as the AFL-CIO,MoveOn.org, the National Organization for Women, Progressive Change Campaign Committee, Democracy for America, and National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, the story got great media play, as all such political mega-rallies in DC deserve.

But there were only 100 people at this heavily sponsored rally. And that’s the “counterweight to the Tea Party”????

SUURRREEEEE.

BTW, the photo below is a TEA PARTY rally, tens of thousands strong — not the media-ballyhooed pathetic gathering of 100 — mostly paid staffers of the sponsoring left wing outfits.

——… Read More

Duane Dichiara

The Grand Experiment

The American Republic was and is a “Grand Experiment”. Before and after the Constitution was written and adopted, some of the Founding Fathers were overtly concerned about the rise of factions or political parties. One of the more famous quotes from John Adams ran “There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the Republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.” However, once electoral reality set in, many of the Founding Fathers became intimately involved in the formation of the primeval American party system.

I believe that political parties are an important ‘check and balance’ in the American Republic, and that the intellectual movement that advocates a system largely based on independent officeholders is idealistic – well meaning but misguided. Please note that when I refer to “independent candidates” I am referring to candidates without a political party, who are truly independent, not to candidates who run as part of some… Read More

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