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Shawn Steel

Report RNC Summer Meeting

New Primary Dates The RNC Summer meeting adopted proposed new significant rules that will change the way we select delegates in the 2012 RNC presidential convention.

The Republican primary season was effectively over when John McCain defeated Mitt Romney in Florida on January 29, 2008. Rudy Giuliani then endorsed McCain effectively ending the primary cycle.

Members of the RNC are concerned as more states force earlier primaries we are facing a National Primary. A National Primary would concentrate the nomination process to major urban areas, campaigning would be only via national TV and end the vetting candidates through state by state retail politics would end.

The rules change is a modest proposal. Three components are:

Prohibit states from having primaries before March. Grant early carve outs to Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada. Penalties would include reducing delegate strength of early start state by a … Read More

Jon Fleischman

Largest Jury Verdict Of 2010, Against Skilled Healthcare, May Get Tossed Due To Jury Tampering

Last week I penned a column where I was extremely critical of a decision by a jury up in tiny Humboldt County to hammer Skilled Healthcare, which owns and operates nursing homes, with the largest monetary verdict in America this year – the better part of a billion dollars. I’m back writing about this case again because, based on information that has been shared with me, it looks like Skilled Healthcare, and the integrity of our judicial system, may have been the victims of jury tampering and a dishonest juror. If the judge in the case agrees, it will lead to him setting aside this stunningly large and egregious verdict, and requiring an entirely new trial.

Let me first ‘set the table’ a bit… The reason why this particular court case involving Skilled Healthcare, which is a large nursing home owner and administrator here in California, caught my eye in the first place was that the company was hit with a staggering $671 jury verdict – what I call an ‘extinction event’ for Skilled since they… Read More

Barry Jantz

Sunday San Diego: A Taxing Sunday in Paradise

A myriad of opinions on the City of San Diego sales tax increase… In economic hard times, the measure will appear on the November ballot, because the city is alsohaving a hard time and needs those in pain to share some more:

U-T editorial: City Hall rolls the dice — Reform-and-tax plan headed for ballot is high-stakes gamble Voice of San Diego: What Caused San Diego’s Ballooning Pension Payment? by Vlad Kogan

SD Rostra: Our Own Microcosm of Freedom vs. Tyranny: The City Hall Machine vs. The Rest of Us SD Rostra: Top 10 Flaws in the San Diego Sales Tax Hike by Carl DeMaio

Read all of SD Rostra’s entries on the tax machinationsRead More

James V. Lacy

FPPC to regulate Facebook? This is getting ridiculous.

A just released California Fair Political Practices Commission report is now speculating on the need of that agency to regulate content of speech all across the internet, including Facebook accounts, Twitter, YouTube, and other networking sites. The logic behind this move is that the founding fathers of political regulation in California could not "have anticipated that these types of communicating a campaign message would ever exist." Big deal. I’m sure Ben Franklin never contemplated gay marriage as a fundamental constitutional right, either, and that didn’t take changing the constitution.

The regulatory posture of the FPPC is sadly going in a different direction than Federal court cases and one wonders where the dreamers-up of this type of stuff will go next. I, for one, think outlawing tweets that contain express advocacy for or against a candidate for public office has no rational basis or legitimate state interest. But don’t tell Judge Vaughn Walker that.… Read More

James V. Lacy

My Proposition 8 Decision Conspiracy Theory

As I mentioned in an earlier post, lawyer Ted Olson, who mapped the legal strategy, got exactly what he aimed to get out of the U.S. District Court in San Francisco. Yesterday Judge Vaughn Walker issued an opinion declaring gay marriage to be a fundamental right under the U.S. Constitution. Many gay activists were skeptical of even filing such a lawsuit, fearful of the legal repercussions if the case was lost.

Analysis of Judge Walker’s decision is ongoing today, and I’ve offered mine. However, I want to offer a slightly different analysis here, because I think the probabilities are that the Proposition 8 decision had as much to do with "inside baseball" and relationships between people as it did with the facts and law.

Let’s examine what Ted Olson, the architect of the legal victory, and Judge Walker have in common: 1) the both were born in Illinois in the early 1940s; 2) they both went to law school in the San Francisco Bay Area (Walker, Stanford; Olson, Berkeley); 3) after law school they both went to work for major California law firms (Walker: Pillsbury,… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Steve Cooley On Prop. 8 Decision

GOP Attorney General nominee on the Prop. 8 ruling: "Barring a law that is unconstitutional on its face, the proper role of an Attorney General is to enforce and defend the will of the People as manifested through the initiative or legislative process. The will of the People should be respected and not overturned easily or lightly. Today’s decision by a federal judge overturning Proposition 8 should be appealed and tested at a higher level of our legal system. The California Supreme Court upheld Proposition 8 by a 6 to 1 vote and declared it to be constitutional. Likewise, if the voters had approved an initiative legalizing same-sex marriage and a federal judge had ruled against it, I would also support an appeal of that decision."Read More

James V. Lacy

A simple analysis of Prop. 8 court ruling

The 136 page ruling issued by U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker on Wednesday on California’s ban on same-sex marriage, known as Proposition 8, contains a number of findings of fact as well as conclusions of law. It is a ponderous document. But I’ve reviewed the substantive "conclusions of law" declaring Prop. 8 as unconstitutional, and I have have an opinion, and some experience in winning Federal civil rights cases, so here it is….

My biggest problem, and perhaps the biggest legal hole in the decision, is Judge Vaugh’s conclusion of law that Proposition 8 involves a fundamental constitutional right. The reality is, the U.S. Constitution doesn’t mention marriage anywhere, let alone gay marriage. It was certainly not a factor in the discussions of our Founding Fathers. ( I’m pretty sure Benjamin Franklin would have busted his corset if it was ever brought up.) Gay marriage has never before been found to be a constitutional right in any court in the United States. So what Vaugh has done is set the stage for ground-breaking further legal review and a final… Read More

Jon Fleischman

John Eastman Weighs In On Prop. 8 Decision…

Read his FlashReport column here.… Read More

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