No way to argue with this craziness
A while back, some Pilot letter writers got upset with me because I
suggested that there has long been a perception in the rest of the
country that an inordinate number of political nut cases have
flourished in Orange County. I offered examples -- some of them local
-- in support of that thesis.
Now, I’m ready to pass that mantle on to the entire state. Like
any citizen anxious to cast a thoughtful, well-researched vote, I
spent an hour reading through the Los Angeles Times’ brief
biographies of the 158 candidates (I counted them) for the office of
governor of California. I consider this list a spectacular upgrading
of our political history, far exceeding any of my earlier examples,
and I congratulate the public servants who brought this about for
thinking big.
It also occurred to me that the political lessons we are now
learning in California might well serve as case histories for those
backward countries where we are trying to introduce democracy. The
Iraqis and Afghans, especially, should study some of the finer points
of participatory democracy illustrated in our recall election.
Probably the most important point is that elections can be bought.
This is not a new concept, of course. What is new about the
California recall is that money created an election where one didn’t
exist.
Our Iraqi and Afghan students need some background here. The
Republicans lost the governor’s office a year ago by finding and
running probably the only candidate in the state even less attractive
than the unpopular incumbent. So after he lost, his party then came
up with a creative new political concept now known as Issa’s Law: if
you lose an election, just keep buying new ones until you win.
There were two problems here. Normally, proof of malfeasance in
office is necessary to recall or impeach a public official. Since --
as a recent Los Angeles Times editorial pointed out -- “there is no
evidence that Davis is guilty of malfeasance,” Issa’s Law had to be
extended to include public officials who are arrogant, duplicitous
and personally unpleasant.
That this might well include half our office holders doesn’t have
to be a deterrent. It certainly wasn’t in this case.
The other problem was tougher. There wasn’t nearly enough interest
in the recall of Gov. Gray Davis to get the necessary petition
signatures. That’s where the money came in.
The sugar daddy behind the recall bought the services of a corps
of mercenaries who had no interest in the issues involved, but were
trained simply to get signatures -- and are quite good at it. After
enough signatures were obtained to force a recall, the angel who put
up the money in the hope of becoming governor himself, was then
dismissed by the party heavyweights.
He was allowed a public podium to make a tearful withdrawal while
the heavyweights scouted around the movie business for a
name-recognition candidate who could win. Fluency in English was not
required.
Several new sets of problems presented themselves after a date for
the recall election was set. It turned out a whole flock of citizens
had been fantasizing about being governor some day and suddenly found
an opportunity to be heard. All it took was $3,500 and a handful of
signatures. So, at the time I wrote this, 158 incipient governors had
applied for the job.
Then, some serious technical problems emerged. Creating ballots
long enough for all those names and counting them -- sometimes by
hand -- will be awkward and expensive. Estimates of the cost of the
election are running near $70 million in a state already scavenging
for money by cutting back on sorely needed social services,
especially in health and education. But that’s the way it goes
sometimes in a democracy. First thing’s first.
What we have to look forward to now is the campaign. The normal
procedure would be a series of candidate forums to discuss individual
differences on public issues. This will be possible locally only if
the candidates make a semicircle across the outfield in Anaheim
Stadium. To keep the program under two hours, each candidate would
then have 30 seconds to present his or her program for resolving
California’s economic and social problems so that we voters might
make a rational choice.
The forum moderator would, of course, be Jay Leno, who would have
to be cautioned against giving special candidate attention to porn
actresses, stand-up comics, reality TV producers or Austrian
weightlifters while he is warming up the audience.
Some of the debate possibilities are exciting. Schwarzenegger up
against Arianna Huffington, for example -- Austrian accent against
Greek. Or Bill Simon, debating with himself, in an effort to come up
with a complete declarative sentence. The problem here is that if
select candidates are given special media treatment, the other 150
are likely to demand equal time.
And finally, of course, there are the clowns. Every circus has its
clowns, and democratic elections are not exceptions. The problem
comes when the clowns take over the show. And our students in Iraq
and Afghanistan need to ask if that is what has happened in the
California model they are studying. So do we.
A TV satirist named Bill Prady is already sure. When he filed
candidate papers, he lashed out at the politicians involved in the
recall, telling a Los Angeles Times reporter: “As a person who makes
a living off of making mockery, I resent them intruding into my
world.”
Not me. I like a good circus. If these guys who have pushed our
democratic system over the rational edge and will be spending many
millions of badly needed public dollars to do it can bring this off,
I tip my hat to them. The state will probably be in worse chaos
afterward, and the system may have taken a body blow, but they will
have demonstrated a cardinal precept in this country today that we
need to look straight in the eye: that money can buy anything --
especially power.
There is still a chance that in this instance, money may have
bought an election, but not a victory. That will soon be in our
hands. And our resolution may well be the first and the final lesson
for our students of democracy.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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