Excerpts From Debate Between 2 Democrats
- Share via
Following are excerpts from Sunday’s Democratic gubernatorial debate between former San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein and Atty. Gen. John K. Van de Kamp:
Malathion spraying
Feinstein: “There are no circumstances under which I would resume urban (aerial) spraying. . . . When you had a reported Medfly, you’d go into an area, you’d ground strip, you’d remove the fruit. If the fruit is contaminated, you’d spray in that immediate area. . . . “You would do it by ground with the knowledge and permission of the property owner rather than through this massive invasion of spraying like ‘Apocalypse Now,’ which I think is very bothersome to people.”
Van de Kamp: “I’m against malathion spraying. I think we should stop it and if I’m elected it will be stopped. But I was very interested in something Mrs. Feinstein said the other day, and it gets to snooping. She suggested we inspect first-class mail for Medflies. Tell me that you’re against that.”
Reducing auto insurance rates
Van de Kamp: “My opponent and I disagree with respect as to how to go about that. She’s in favor of no-fault. She’s in favor of giving the insurance industry antitrust exemptions which would be expanded. . . . I want to see the new insurance commissioner get off to a good start, I want to see rate rollbacks, I want to see affordable insurance in California, I want to see the insurance companies brought to bear in a decent regulatory structure.”
Feinstein: “. . . I am not wed to no-fault. What I am wed to is a rate rollback, what I am wed to is providing insurance for Californians, one-third of whom in this basin have no insurance and are driving criminally.”
Their family wealth
Van de Kamp: “Our family’s been lucky, in fact our family in some ways in the last number of years has been representative of the American dream. . . . And I’ve stayed in public service all my life, one of the reasons because I have a deep dedication to the people of this state. . . . My family has a trust fund that’s been set up for my mother. I’ve never drawn a dime out of that trust fund.”
Feinstein: “My husband, incidentally, is totally self-made, he inherited no funds, he made what he had himself and that in a sense is the American dream and I’m proud of it.”
Abortion counseling
Van de Kamp: “For my own daughter? I’m sure I’d have a heart-to-heart with her and talk about the future of that potential life. . . . I’d counsel her to carry the child. . . . If another person who was distant from me came to me . . . I feel less comfortable making the kinds of arguments that I would to my own child.”
Feinstein: “Not too long ago I went to watch an Operation Rescue operation at a health clinic. And I watched women absolutely humiliated who couldn’t get through the line to get into a doctor’s office.”
State budget
Van de Kamp: “The one thing that’s clear tonight is Mrs. Feinstein would put the cost-of-living adjustments on the table for the needy, blind and the disabled. . . . I will not. And I will balance the budget through a series of cuts and revenue enhancements, taxes if you will, in some areas that will make sure we have a balanced budget.”
Feinstein: “ . . . As I said before, I think everything goes on the table. I think you protect the poor, the needy, the disabled in the negotiations once everything is on the table. . . . We have to look at the traditional ways, freezing things like travel, new cars, looking to see what can be eliminated.”
Death penalty
Feinstein: “I don’t ever see you being vigorous in terms of carrying out that law. . . . I think the thing that I have a problem with is if you don’t believe in (the death penalty) and the governor has broad clemency powers, why wouldn’t you just commute every single case?”
Van de Kamp: “With respect to the question of clemency, I’ve said repeatedly that the death penalty is a settled issue. . . . The death penalty, I believe, is here to stay for maybe upwards of the next 10 years.”
Opponent’s weaknesses
Van de Kamp: “ . . . Managerial skill, understanding of the state budget situation, obviously even tonight we’ve found that she is still pretty weak, she doesn’t have a program but she speaks in some generalities and some numbers that frankly are pretty far off base. . . .”
Feinstein: “ . . . John, you demean your opponent and puff yourself up. The fact is you’ve never really put together a budget, you’ve never really grappled with a shortfall. I have--nine years in a row. . . . Yet you’re so willing to sit back and criticize me. You know, John Van de Kamp, the D word is for distortion.”
Closing lines
Feinstein: “I think in this election you have a choice between a lawyer and someone who wants to be a leader. I want to represent women. I want to open the door. I want to see that minorities take their place in this society in a meaningful way.”
Van de Kamp: “I’m not the style candidate in this race. In endorsing me, the Sacramento Bee called me flagrantly unexciting. But if I’m governor, I pledge to you the most exciting period in California history.”
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox three times per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.