California’s Crazy Quilt of Politics Frays
Arnold Schwarzenegger announces he’s running for governor -- on the “Tonight Show.” From his wheelchair, Larry Flynt says he’ll be the next governor because Californians are progressive enough to elect a pornographer. Angelyne, Hollywood’s self-made billboard celebrity, has taken out papers.
The New York Times, Newsweek and National Public Radio have all called this state and its inhabitants crazy in recent weeks. ABC anchor Peter Jennings routinely refers to “the craziness in California,” and CNN stories carry the graphic, “California’s Crazy Recall.”
Californians, after many generations of practice, are usually inured to insults from the jealous throngs who don’t get to live here. But the recall-sparked crescendo of craziness has landed with unsettling force because so many of California’s own residents have been throwing around the C-word.
Even the state’s most loyal protectors -- well-practiced at reminding critics that California has the world’s fifth-largest economy, as well as its most advanced multicultural society -- seem shaken.
“I have defended California in season and out, but I’m throwing in the towel this time,” says Kevin Starr, the state librarian and author of several California history books.
“We sort of deserve it this time, don’t we? You’ve got a leading candidate deciding or not deciding on Leno. This is a society melting down into deliberate self-parody.”
Californians like Starr say the labeling of the state as crazy would be funny, if the instability wasn’t taking such a toll. The price of California’s bonds is way down, making it more expensive for the state and local governments to borrow money to cover deficits or build schools and roads. August commentators say the recall could make it easier for national Republicans to marginalize California.
“Yes, it’s usually good to be talked about, even for the bad,” says Hollywood nightclub owner Gene La Pietra, who is such a devotee of the just-spell-my-name-right school of publicity that he told a reporter Wednesday: “If I don’t give you a good, juicy quote, you have my permission to make one up.”
But La Pietra, who led a quixotic effort to get Hollywood declared its own city, says: “When the bankers on Wall Street are talking about lowering our bonds, when investors are talking about sitting out California, it’s time to worry.”
Few Californians admit to being any zanier than anyone else. Author D.J. Waldie calls the perception of the state’s madness “a tired cliche that hangs over California like June gloom, impossible to dispel because it is ingrained in the American culture.”
Political analysts point out that California has elected moderates to statewide office. And “there are a large percentage of voters discontented with Gray Davis, and they are going to see about an alternative,” says Michael Barone, coauthor of the “Almanac of American Politics.” “That’s not insane.”
On streets across the Golden State, many agree.
Strolling down Montana Avenue in Santa Monica, Dana Stevens of Brentwood points out that Minnesota elected former professional wrestler Jesse Ventura governor.
At Universal City Walk, Yvonne Renard, an El Cajon native who now lives in Louisiana, says her fellow church members in Shreveport “think Californians are crazy because of the freedom out here. Free loving, free living, free doing.”
Immigrants and foreign visitors sometimes point out that compared to most of the world’s governments, California politics are remarkably stable.
“An elected politician unable to complete his term is not something that we find so unusual,” says Francesco Sciortino, the consul general for Italy in San Francisco.
“Italians feel perhaps closer to Californians than to people in other states. We like the California way -- we find it not so far from our own.”
Even while arguing that they aren’t crazy, some Californians secretly embrace the label. The idiosyncrasies of the state and its people set it apart, providing it a distinction and an identity.
Besides, craziness sells.
Gary Mittin, an online entrepreneur, has already sold 200 “Arnold 4 Governor” T-shirts on his Web site, and has developed an “I like Dick” logo for Riordan backers.
(Mittin also purchased the rights to the www.riordanforgovernor.org site for $8.95, and he says he won’t sell, even to the former L.A. mayor himself.)
Development Counselors International, a New York marketing firm, made headlines last year with a survey of business executives that found 57% calling California the worst state in which to do business. This year, the company opened a new office -- in Los Angeles.
“California’s always on the edge of quirkiness and setting trends. Now it’s just at a different level with politics,” says Sacramento public relations man Fred Sater, who was spokesman for the state Division of Tourism before it was eliminated by budget cuts in June. “The quirkiness, the nuts, fruits and flakes are all part of the appeal.”
Adds San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau spokeswoman Laurie Armstrong: “People love California because it is a crazy place. Why would you want to visit someplace normal?”
Viewed in that light, the recall makes more sense as an example of California’s exceptional nature, not craziness. After all, both supporters and opponents of removing Davis seem to agree on at least one thing: the grandeur of their cause.
Recall opponents frame the effort as an attempt to end democracy and turn California into a banana republic. Supporters say California’s first recall election is historic and necessary.
Then there are the hundreds of people who have taken out candidate papers to run to replace Davis if he is recalled. From Flynt to Angelyne to the filmmaker trying to win attention for his work, the candidates appear to be a self-aggrandizing lot, say political observers.
“This is the political equivalent of streaking: You show up, you run across the room naked and you get attention,” says Stan Oftelie, executive director of the Orange County Business Council. He cites California’s celebrity culture as part of problem. The marriage of that culture was on display last night on the stage of the “Tonight Show” in Burbank.
A movie star entered the governor’s race on the show of a TV comedian, upsetting the plans of former L.A. Mayor Riordan -- a lawyer who made a fortune and has spent much of it turning himself into a well-known politician -- who might otherwise have been a candidate.
Perhaps, some suggest, California’s image troubles result not from an epidemic of insanity but from a contagious preoccupation:
Vanity.
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Officially seeking a place on ballot
These Californians had filed for the Oct. 7 recall ballot as of Wednesday. The secretary of state will certify candidates next week.
Badi Badiozamani, Independent, San Diego
John W. Beard, Republican, North Hollywood
Audie Bock, Democrat, Piedmont
Peter Miguel Camejo, Green, Oakland
Gary Coleman, Independent, Culver City
Leo Gallagher, Independent, Agoura
Howard Allen Gershater, Independent, Camarillo
Gerold Lee Gorman, Democrat, Martinez
Richard Gosse, Republican, San Rafael
Sara Ann Hanlon, Independent, La Mirada
Jim Hoffmann, Republican, San Joaquin
S. Issa, Republican, Arcadia
Michael Jackson, Republican, Long Beach
Edward T. Kennedy, Democrat, Weaverville
D.E. Kessinger, Democrat, Riverside
Eric Korevaar, Democrat, La Jolla
Calvin Louie, Democrat, San Francisco
Robert Mannheim, Democrat, Agoura Hills
Tom McClintock, Republican, Thousand Oaks
Carl A. Mehr, Republican, San Diego
Leonard Padilla, declined to state, Sacramento
Heather Peters, Republican, Santa Monica
Ned Roscoe, Libertarian, Napa
Darrin H. Scheidle, Democrat, El Cajon
Diane Beall Templin, American Independent, Escondido
Brian Tracy, Independent, Solana Beach
Source: Los Angeles Times
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