Big blow up today for Arnold
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Deirdre Newman
Arnold Schwarzenegger has never been accused of being subtle. And he
certainly won’t be today after he blows up a car to illustrate his
distaste for the car tax.
The pyrotechnics will be part of an afternoon rally in the parking
lot of the Orange County Fairgrounds sponsored by Schwarzenegger’s
campaign, said Tom Fuentes, chairman of the Republican Party of
Orange County.
The rally is designed for Schwarzenegger to help get out the
Republican vote and encourage volunteers to continue the work they
have been doing so far, Fuentes said.
“This is always the most exciting time because the attention and
focus becomes all the more intense and people who want to participate
in democracy seek venues to touch and be with the candidate they
support,” Fuentes said. “Tragically, so often, contact with
top-of-the-ticket candidates is limited to very expensive
fund-raising occasions.”
The goal of the local branch of the party is to either call or
knock on the door of every Republican voter in the county between now
and election day, Fuentes said.
The fairgrounds have been used frequently in the past for
Republican gatherings, Fuentes added. Candidates Bob Dole and Bill
Simon, for instance, held rallies there, he said.
The rally, referred to as “Arnold’s Car Tax Rally,” focuses on the
tax that restores car registration fees to the level they were at
before they were reduced in 1988 by Gov. Pete Wilson. Wilson included
a condition that the fee would automatically increase when the state
had insufficient funds. The increase went into effect this week, but
Republicans claim that Gov. Gray Davis never had the authority or the
justification to activate the trigger clause.
Special effects experts from “Terminator 3” will be blowing up a
donated car to electrify the crowd, said David Padilla, a “get out
the vote” coordinator at Schwarzenegger’s Orange County headquarters.
If elected, Schwarzenegger will work to get the car tax rescinded,
Padilla said.
“I think he’s going to take a look at the total budget and come up
with a comprehensive solution instead of a solution that’s very
onerous on the working poor,” Padilla said. “I think this solution by
Gray Davis is typical of his leadership. He just reaches for the
first lever and says, ‘What do I do next?’ And he reacts and panics.
Because raising your car tax in the state -- that itself is sort of
political suicide.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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