Schwarzenegger leaves mixed legacy in California

2010-12-26 06:06:27

By JULIET WILLIAMS, Associated Press Juliet Williams, Associated Press Sat

Dec 25, 1:25 pm ET

SACRAMENTO, Calif. Arnold Schwarzenegger landed in the governor's office

after announcing his upstart bid on late night TV and railing against

government spending during raucous campaign rallies at one playing a spirited

round of air guitar to the rock anthem "We're Not Gonna Take It."

Then the world's best known action star, Schwarzenegger conveyed an image of

invincibility, persuading Californians that anything was possible if only they

had the right mindset.

"I know how to sell something," he said then.

As he would come to learn, selling a political idea is one thing. Delivering on

it is quite another.

In high Hollywood style, Schwarzenegger made bold commitments to cut through

Sacramento's dysfunctional political system and put the state on a path to

prosperity. But his celebrity quickly ran aground on the shoals of bureaucracy,

entrenched politics and something Schwarzenegger had never faced before angry

detractors who didn't hesitate to attack him publicly.

After initially deriding nurses as "special interests" whose "butts" he was

always kicking, he was brought down to earth by the nurses union, teachers and

other public employee groups, which staged protests and helped derail his "year

of reform" agenda during a special election in 2005.

His outsize personality wasn't enough to see through many of his dreams and

promises, especially once the recession hit in late 2007 and led to a steep

decline in tax revenue.

The 63-year-old governor leaves office next month with a mixed record, winning

praise for his precedent-setting environmental activism and criticism for his

failure to tame the fiscal mess, as he promised when Californians recalled Gov.

Gray Davis and installed him instead.

Optimism for the future abounded in the wake of the historic recall; even

skeptics were willing to give Schwarzenegger a shot. He had unprecedented

goodwill, a blazingly positive attitude and arrived as an outsider who said he

would not be beholden to special interests.

"What the people want to hear is ... are you tough enough to go in there and

provide leadership? That's what this is about, and I will be tough enough,"

Schwarzenegger said during the campaign.

But on the job, he often didn't have the patience to get the changes he wanted.

He regularly changed course on major initiatives when he encountered

roadblocks. He backed down from his massive proposal to restructure government,

the California Performance Review, even though it projected savings of $32

billion over five years. Democrats howled, and the governor feared they might

block his other efforts.

"I had very high hopes for him. Maybe it's a case of my expectations and

people's expectations were too high in the first place," said Lou Cannon, the

author of five books about former President Ronald Reagan, who served two terms

as California governor.

After besting an eclectic and improbable parade of 134 other candidates,

including former child actor Gary Coleman and porn star Mary Carey in the first

successful recall of a sitting governor in California history, Schwarzenegger

followed through on a campaign promise to wipe out an increase in the car tax

on his first day in office, punching a $6 billion annual hole in the state

budget.

He kept his promise to be a different kind of governor than Californians had

seen before.

The perenially tanned seven-time Mr. Olympia confidently strode the halls of

the state Capitol in designer suits and snakeskin cowboy boots as adoring

children and adults jostled for photos. The crowds still clamor for a shot with

Schwarzenegger, even as his approval rating has fallen to 32 percent about

the same as Davis' when he was recalled.

Deals were brokered over stogies and schnapps in a swank smoking tent he

erected in the garden of the governor's office in the state Capitol. In the

hall outside his office, where his name is emblazoned in gold lettering,

reporters one day found a 250-pound bronze bear had been installed. Never one

to shy from a camera, Schwarzenegger posed for pics with a 7-foot python coiled

around his neck at the state fair.

Bones were broken and stitches were needed when the "Austrian Oak" (a nickname

from his bodybuilding days) crashed on his Harley-Davidson while riding without

a proper motorcycle permit, then later shattered his femur while skiing in Sun

Valley, Idaho. He also was hospitalized for a rapid heartbeat and had surgery

to repair a knee he injured while working out, but says he still lifts weights

every day.

When lawmakers didn't go along with him, he called them "girlie men" for

failing to stand up to special interests he said controlled their agenda. He

once sent the Democratic leader of the state Senate a metal sculpture of bull

testicles the size of a football, urging him to have the "fortitude" to make

deep cuts to social service programs.

In one of hundreds of events to promote cutting government spending, he

appeared in front of a giant faucet spewing red-colored water symbolizing red

ink in a stunt straight out of the movies.

He alternately praised and vilified fellow Republicans, telling delegates to a

convention of his own party in a public speech that the California GOP was

"dying at the box office." They ignored him, and the minority party's slide

continued into this November's election, when Republicans failed to win a

single statewide office.

Many of Schwarzenegger's promises never came true.

He pledged to "blow up the boxes" of government, but his structural reforms

have been modest. The boards and commissions he railed against remain largely

intact, and he continued the political legacy of rewarding termed-out lawmakers

by naming them to six-figure jobs on obscure boards that meet infrequently.

He promised to get state government to live within its means, and then used

borrowing and accounting gimmicks to close budget deficits.

In his first full year in office, Schwarzenegger persuaded Californian voters

to borrow $15 billion to refinance the deficit, adding to future budget

problems. Later, he added more than $37 billion in borrowing for roads,

schools, levee repairs and affordable housing projects. He is supporting an $11

billion bond for water conservation and storage projects that will be on the

2012 ballot.

He defends the infrastructure borrowing as an investment in the future.

After encountering so many roadblocks, the centrist Republican sought, and won,

some major political reforms that are expected to bear fruit in the future.

They include a voter-approved measure that removes the power to draw

legislative districts from lawmakers and gives it to an independent commission.

He also championed an open primary system approved by voters in which the top

two primary vote-getters will appear on the general election ballot, regardless

of party affiliation. Both changes are designed to favor more moderate

politicians and, in theory, send fewer party ideologues to Sacramento.

"Whatever success or lack thereof the governor had blowing up the boxes and

changing the state's financial fortunes, he does deserve credit for leading the

charge on three important political reforms which in the aggregate will help

the next governor bring the state's financial affairs into balance," said

former Gov. Davis.

He cited legislative redistricting, the open primary and Schwarzenegger's

pursuit of a rainy day fund, which will appear on the ballot in 2012.

Schwarzenegger's tack to the center came after he lost some of his swagger in

the wake of the disastrous 2005 special election, when Californians rejected

all four measures he placed on the ballot, with teachers and nurses leading the

fight against him. The governor seemed contrite in the aftermath.

"If I would do another 'Terminator' movie I would have Terminator travel back

in time and tell Arnold not to have a special election. I should have also

listened to my wife who said, 'Don't do it,'" he said at a press conference

after the fiasco.

Schwarzenegger's call for a special election just two years after the recall

caught lawmakers by surprise, angered voters who were tired of going to the

polls and undermined the goodwill he had cultivated since replacing Davis.

After the drubbing, he replaced most of his top aides, named a Democrat as his

chief of staff and aligned himself closer with the Democrats who controlled the

Senate and Assembly. In the year before the recession hit, he signed what has

become his biggest legacy in office a law sponsored by Democrats that has

made California a global leader in combating climate change.

It is expected to transform how people travel, how utilities generate power and

how businesses use electricity in the coming years. Last month, voters refused

to suspend the law because of the poor economy.

Schwarzenegger won re-election that year after a campaign in which he pledged

coalition-building, for which he coined a new political term,

"post-partisanship."

"Post-partisanship is Republicans and Democrats actively giving birth to new

ideas together," Schwarzenegger said during his 2007 inauguration speech.

Schwarzenegger continued to dream big, seeking an overhaul of the health care

market in California. The package of bills eventually collapsed, in part

because the cost to the state was projected to hit $3 billion a year.

In retrospect, 2006 and 2007 represent a lost opportunity for Schwarzenegger.

At its core, the recall election was about voter disgust with California's

budgeting system, and Schwarzenegger promised to fix it.

He largely avoided the matter during the heart of his tenure to focus on

infrastructure spending, global warming and health care reform. By the time the

recession was squeezing the state ever tighter in 2008, it was too late to

build the political capital needed for major budget and tax reforms.

The recommendations of a bipartisan tax commission, for example, fizzled last

year.

Now, Schwarzenegger leaves incoming Gov. Jerry Brown in virtually the same

fiscal position he inherited but with fewer options to fix it. After successive

years of gimmicks to close the gaps, California's deficit is estimated at $28

billion over the next 18 months.

Its schools and infrastructure are stressed, state government workers are

disheartened and seven in 10 residents believe the state is on the wrong track.

Gridlock and hyper-partisanship has replaced political discourse in Sacramento,

and unemployment has been above 12 percent since mid-2009. Schwarzenegger

recently won some concessions from unions on pensions, but not the sweeping

changes he had sought.

Cannon said that after a promising start, Schwarzenegger failed to engage

rank-and-file lawmakers who could have helped him broker deals.

"A lot of the work of a governor, as a long line of governors starting with

Earl Warren showed, is how you're able to negotiate with the Legislature ...

the governor and the Legislature together never really got their hands dirty on

the fiscal issues," Cannon said. "He was elected to do that. That's what he

campaigned on."