Recall debate in the golden state
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I can’t help but comment that it is certainly not headline news that
Arnold Schwarzenegger gained with local debate watchers when you go
to his local headquarters, take the pulse of the people and also to a
meeting in Newport Beach. You probably were at the Arches restaurant,
which has Arnold signs outside -- that would not be a surprise.
I watched the debates. I thought that people were rude and that
the debate leader, Stan Statham, was inept. What the debate showed me
is that I am already happy to have cast my vote and mailed my ballot.
None of these people are any more qualified to be governor than the
person who is already there.
The problem with this state is that the income declined because of
the dot-com decline and the general malaise in the nation. We are
just one of 47 other states that have financial problems. It’s sad
that we are wasting $67 to $70 million on this carnival that could go
to help in some other area. So I don’t think that story warranted a
headline “Arnold gains ... .” It was the public that gained by seeing
those people in that charade.
SHARON BOUDREAU
Costa Mesa
In the early 1900s, I was born into a Democratic family. I have
served the Democratic party well, as evidenced by my being anointed
Democrat of the Year in Ventura County for a half dozen years.
I believe in the virtues of the Democratic party, but I was
disappointed in presidential candidate George McGovern, President
Jimmy Carter and by all the Democratic presidential candidates except
Joe Lieberman. Lieberman won’t get the nomination, just as Sen. John
McCain stood no chance in the Republican run-off. But this is how our
two-party system operates.
Then I got disenfranchised by Gov. Gray Davis being anointed and
elected for a second term by a solid Democratic majority that was
really voting against Bill Simon, not for Davis. Now I am
disappointed by Diane Feinstein, who I always admired, because she is
toeing the party line and supporting Davis -- a totally incompetent
governor.
In my quest for America’s and California’s survival, I must
support President Bush in his re-election bid to free America of
world terrorism and Tom McClintock’s bid to be California’s next
governor. McClintock’s record of 25 years in the California
legislature verifies his ability to trim the dead wood out of
Sacramento, balance the budget and create jobs.
ROBERT A. FELBURG
Costa Mesa
The recent publication of “Reagan: A Life in Letters” serves two
important purposes: First, it poignantly reminds us how influential
the former president was; and second, it underscores the impact he
still has on our lives today. If it hadn’t been for Ronald Reagan,
some argue, George W. Bush still would be living in Texas.
Reagan’s letters are, like their author, quintessential American.
They are upbeat, optimistic and curious about the future. It doesn’t
seem to matter if one’s written to a head of state or a
seventh-grader. They all have a point Reagan wishes to make. With
this thought in mind, one wonders what the “Great Communicator” would
say about the upcoming recall election in his beloved California?
More to the point, we wonder which Republican candidate -- Arnold
Schwarzenegger or Tom McClintock -- Reagan would endorse? Not that he
actually can now, what with his advanced Alzheimer’s disease, but in
theory, to which of these two self-avowed conservatives would the
Gipper pen a letter?
Both Schwarzenegger and McClintock have wrapped themselves in the
Reagan mystique. To their credit, each has received endorsements from
organizations that typically supported the former president (and
governor) at the drop of a hat. Each would have voters believe that
he, not the other guy, is the rightful heir to the Reagan legacy, no
pun intended.
We’re not savvy enough to know which of the two contenders is the
true blue conservative worthy of a Reagan endorsement. We are smart
enough to know that a letter from Reagan -- even if it turned out to
be from Nancy -- would mean Christmas had arrived early for one of
them!
Better than a slap on the back from Howard Jarvis himself, a
Reagan endorsement is the political equivalent of the Good
Housekeeping Seal of Approval. That’s because Reagan’s reach is both
wide and deep. His endorsement would mean something to young
Republicans who remember him when they were in grade school. It also
would mean something to GOP baby boomers and seniors -- all of whom
equate the 1980 Reagan slogan “Morning in America” with the second
coming of you-know-who.
Like the ACLU attorneys appearing before the 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals, you can argue the merits of the recall till the cows come
home. The fact is there’s going to be an election soon. Since all the
polls show Schwarzenegger and McClintock splitting the Republican
vote, conservatives have to be praying one of them sobers up soon and
makes way for the other.
A letter from the Reagan camp would clear things up rather
quickly, don’t you think? A letter from Ronald Reagan also would
remind us, one last time, just how far his influence stretches. From
California in the 1960s to Washington in the 1980s and back home
again today, it would be clear the Great Communicator still is in
command.
DENNY FREIDENRICH
AND PAUL FREEMAN
Laguna Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Freeman is arguably best known in the Costa Mesa
community as the spokesman for developer C.J. Segerstrom & Sons.
Freidenrich is his business partner at First Strategies LLC in Laguna
Beach.
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