Californians typically embrace the notion that their state is so special that the normal rules here don’t necessarily apply. With population centers far from other states, and a climate and geographic variety unmatched throughout the nation, California residents don’t often seek political or other advice from beyond their borders.
As writer John McFarland put it, Californians “make few friends with their catalogues of grandeur: the economy that outranks Italy’s; the kitchens in which popular culture is cooked up and the skills at orchestratingnational trends, all of this privileged by an asserted immunity from the demands history makes on more mundane beings.”
Yet the demands of history – a struggling economy, a comingwave of municipal bankruptcies, dysfunctional government services, and a union-dominated Legislature that has resisted, until this week, any semblance of pension reform – are taking their toll. It’s the rare Californian who denies that the state is gripped by some level of fiscal crisis, even if it’s even rarer to find widespread agreement among Californians on how to fix the problems.
The situation has become so dire that on Monday morning, at the St. Petersburg, Fla., hotel where California’s Republican delegation is staying through this week’s GOP national convention, a large crowd boisterously applauded as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie assured us that we should cling to hope here in the Golden State.
What a bizarre turn of events. I grew up in Morrisville, Pa., across the Delaware River from New Jersey, but close enough to the Garden State to smell its factories. A main bridge across the river still sports alarge sign with these words, “Trenton Makes, The World Takes.” We all thought the sign was ironic given how rough a town Trenton was in the 1970s, and how little the city now makes.
New Jersey isn’t nearly as bad of a state as critics make it out to be. But while Californians define our locales by, say, proximity of our homes to the Pacific Coast, the redwood forests, the Mojave Desert or the Sierras, New Jerseyans refer to their community by the number of the exit they live off of from the Garden State Parkway.
And there Gov. Christie was offering us hope.
“My message to California is, ‘There is hope. There is hope.’”
Christie, known for his budget toughness in the face of union opposition and commitment to reforming New Jersey’s bloated pension system, told the assembled Californians that the state is indeed governable despite the evidence to the contrary. California continues to face large budget deficits and the final weeks of the legislative session in Sacramento are putting a spotlight on the dysfunctional nature of state leaders who believe that the answer to Californians problems is higher taxes rather than governmental reform.
“When I became governor of New Jersey they said the same things to me that I heard people in California say when I went out there to visit recently: We don’t know if it can be fixed,” Christie said. “The problems are too big. The challenges are now too grave. Maybe we just gave California away to the public-sector unions, to the masters of big spending and huge government.’ But it doesn’t have to be that way.” He mentioned that New Jersey is as much of a Democratic bastion as California.
Christie told the story of California Gov. Jerry Brown confronting him at a governor’s meeting. Brown told Christie to stop saying that Brown wants to raise taxes. Brown said he wanted merely to put the tax measure on the ballot and let the people decide.” “That’s leadership!” Christie mused. Christie was introduced by Meg Whitman, the Republican gubernatorial candidate who was defeated by Brown in 2010.
The rest of the talk was a stump speech for the GOP’s Romney/Ryan ticket.
But whatever one’s views about the national Republican candidates, there’s no question that Christie was on point – California’s leadership has failed to address the serious fiscal crises that are undermining public services and eroding California’s economy.
There’s much to be hopeful for, few problems that can’t be fixed, but only if our state’s voters eventually choose a reform-minded group of leaders.
(Steven Greenhut is vice president of journalism at the Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity. Originally posted on CalWatchdog.)
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie Offers Californians Hope http://t.co/QwgrS5p3
Brown is residing in Sacramento because corrupt unions placed him there. He has no back bone, The Unions guide him like a puppet on a string.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie Offers Californians Hope: http://t.co/yzXVDsRA
Unfortunatley the large population centers of L.A., the S.F. Bay area and Sacramento carry not only the State as far as votes but are infested with the majority of “Votes for Entitlements” mentality that has pulled this State down. Coupled with the “MeMe” of the big business of Union Control our Leader gave the Unions back in the seventies and the demands they put on our Representatives we are mired down. It has gone way too far to pull this State back up to reality. Sometimes you have to use “Tough Love” and just let them sink…
You’re right. CA is going —–and will be finished . There is no respect for conservative thinking-and there are illegals all over getting all handed to them. Then there are mosques and we all know they are for jihad. The valley going south from Sac. is deprived of water. On hwy.99 orchards are dead (thank you Jerry Brown) .Stockton is bankrupt and this woe goes on and on.
As long as we have the union controlled democratic majority in office, and career politician “Moon Beam” as Govenor, I just don’t see California rising from the ashes, or even blowing out the match. The greedy public unions “demand” that the taxpayers are the ones who are at fault, and only increased taxes will resolve the problem.
Until the public is willing to grab the bull by the horns, as Christie has done in New Jersey, the demoncrats and public unions will continue on with business as usual, and then retire into a life of luxurious retirement and perks, compared with the common Californian, all at taxpayers expense. Truly a dispicable situation at best.
As a life long resident of Taxifornia I hate those in LA and SF that control this state. CA needs to be broken up into at least 3 states. You can check out Downsize California.org, they are trying to do it but the only way it can be done is for the counties to get together and secede from CA and the Union and then come back into the Union as a new state. otherwise all of California is doomed.
“It’s not that the problems have become so large, it is that the politicians have become so small.”
The answer to Brown the clown is IMPEACHMENT