Monday, November 23, 2009

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Schwarzenegger Signs California Budget, Ending 85-Day Standoff

Signing the budget ended bitter partisan deadlock on how to close the $15.2 billion deficit

Posted September 24, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO—Whew, it's finally over. After a record 85-day impasse, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the state's budget yesterday, ending a bitter partisan deadlock over how to close the state's $15.2 billion deficit—but raising the specter of another battle when next year's budget negotiations begin.

The governor refused to sign the budget in the Capitol rotunda, where signing ceremonies are normally conducted, opting to hold a quiet ceremony in his office, instead, with a few local officials. "Why I didn't feel like celebrating in the rotunda is that it is inexcusable to have a budget that's three months late," Schwarzenegger said afterwards. "It's three months late because both of the parties stayed in their ideological corners and refused to come out."

California legislators have been at loggerheads since early this summer over how to solve the state's perennial budget problems. Democrats have been suggesting a variety of spending cuts and tax increases, while Republicans have refused to consider raising taxes. The budget was supposed to be delivered by July 1, but the deadline passed with no agreement in sight.

Schwarzenegger spent months trying to find middle ground between the two sides, without success. In January, he suggested a massive across-the-board 10 percent spending cut across all state agencies. Then, a few months later, he proposed that the state borrow against its future lottery earnings to close the gap. When no compromise seemed likely, in July, he laid off more than 10,000 state employees and dramatically slashed the pay of more than 200,000 government workers to $6.55 an hour, the federal minimum wage.

Even that didn't seem to work. John Chiang, the state controller, refused to implement the cut and didn't back down even after the governor's office sued him to make him comply. In August, with budget negotiations stalled completely, Schwarzenegger, a longtime opponent of raising taxes, proposed a temporary 1 percent sales tax increase to end the standoff. Republicans stood their ground, though, Democrats demanded a permanent tax hike, and Schwarzenegger's approval ratings plummeted. Barely 1 in 3 voters here say they approve of the job he is doing, down from nearly 60 percent last year. The state's powerful prison guards' union announced this month that it would launch a recall campaign to remove him from office.

So, was it all worth it? The version of the state's budget Schwarzenegger signed yesterday includes $7.1 billion in spending cuts. The rest of the budget gap will be closed with a variety of accounting changes—some experts call them "gimmicks"—that will generate new revenue by collecting some taxes earlier in the year than normal, removing a few corporate tax deductions, and hiking the penalties charged to companies that underpay their taxes. Lawmakers also acceded to Schwarzenegger's demands to build a sturdier rainy-day fund into the budget and gave him the power to make spending cuts during the year.

Neither Democrats nor Republicans seemed pleased with the final product, especially after Schwarzenegger's last-minute, line-item veto of $510 million in funds for HIV/AIDS education and a tax rebate program for low-income elderly renters, among other programs. "I would like to say it's finally over with, but really the state is no better off than it was before," said Senate Majority Leader Don Perata. "We have simply rolled the problem into next year... There isn't much to be proud of."

In only a hundred days, California lawmakers will begin negotiations on the next budget.

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Reader Comments

EVERYONE LIKE LUCY

LUCY u are a very sad person this is are chidren u are talking about. everyone works hard for a better life maybe some in a different way an god is the only one who can judge an for u to say screw the children.LUCY u have loses screws. GO GET SOME HELP.

Arnold must RESIGN!

LUcy: "He did everything in his power to bring the budget in line, more than anyone else did or would have done."

That's a lie. As soon as Arnold took office, he cut taxes and he borrowed money. He ran up a huge debt and deficit. He is allowed to borrow without approval from the legislature, and he has borrowed so much money that he has ruined our credit rating. He wasn't even born here and he thinks he can wreck the place. I wish we could deport him!!

Arnold is a disaster and he is ruining our state. Sadly, we are at his mercy because Obama will not help us. I will not vote for Obama in 2012.

Arnold would never have won if not for stand-by-your-man-even-if-he's-a-cheating-liar Maria Shriver telling everybody that he would not cut education and healthcare. LIES.

re: pissed off of CA

Your outlook is way too simplistic and instead of leveling off some political party platform you really should look at specifics. You can't spend what you don't have, the $10. extra vehicle registration fee doesn't amount to a hill of beans at this point. Sub-prime lending, foreclosures, reduced property tax, state income tax, and sales tax have plunged the state's overall revenue and you simply cannot have all the things you want when there's no money; it doesn't make a whole lot more sense to raise taxes on people who can't afford to keep their houses, lost their jobs, and don't spend extra money on anything. So, raising taxes really only hurts the people you're claiming to want to help. There is no way out of this mess except with pain and suffering and drastic measures for the next couple years. Let's not pretend like Gray Davis would have done any better because he couldn't find his way out of a paper bag. Regardless of political offiliation these knuckleheads in Sac. don't know what they're doing and we are all paying for it. California is now learning the hard way what many Californians are also learning: if you don't have it, you really shouldn't spend it and if you have to borrow it pay it back as soon as you can. EVERYONE has been living high on the hog and it is as much society's fault as it is Sacramento's that we're in this mess. People wanted what they couldn't afford (just like the government) and they ended up losing it; the really negative thing is that their irresponsibility is making us all suffer even those who spend responsibly. Your last sentence pretty much disqualifies you from having any clue what you're talking about and there are not nearly as many jails as their are schools. Why don't you go smoke something to help you think more clearly.

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