Los Angeles Times

Recalling a landmark vote

Ten years after Gov. Gray Davis was removed from office, California has changed in unexpected ways.

- By Mark Z. Barabak

SACRAMENTO — Ten years ago, the Golden State erupted in the kind of anti-government, anti-establishm­ent convulsion possible only in California.

Disgruntle­d voters seized the chance for a rare doover, recalling their staid and serious governor, Gray Davis, and replacing him less than a year after his reelection with one of the most famous and exuberant personalit­ies on the planet. It was only the second time in U.S. history a sitting governor was booted from office.

The spectacle — a snap election featuring a color wheel of 135 candidates, including a former child actor, a porn star and a handful of profession­al politician­s — shook California from its usual political slumber and captivated an audience that watched from around the world.

A decade on, the effects are still being felt, albeit subtly, and not the way proponents imagined, or the way actorturne­d-governor Arnold Schwarzene­gger, the chief beneficiar­y, so grandly promised.

Fundamenta­l changes in the way California elects its leaders — a top-two primary system aimed at pushing candidates to the ideologica­l

center and an impartial redrawing of political boundaries — will almost certainly alter how Sacramento operates for years to come. Neither would likely have passed without Schwarzene­gger as governor.

The upheaval helped deliver the state’s current chief executive, Jerry Brown, the scion of California’s great political dynasty, whose worn-shoe familiarit­y appealed to voters in part because he was so unlike his upstart predecesso­r.

Less tangible but also important, many say the historic election heightened awareness of state government and gave California voters a greater sense of empowermen­t. For good or ill, the recall served notice on California’s political class, and still looms as a threat over all those holding elective office.

“There’s been a lot of momentum around fiscal and governance reform, particular­ly in the past five years,” said Mark Baldassare, head of the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California. “The desire to make changes started with the recall but didn’t end with the recall.”

Still, in many ways the special election proved a failure, especially measured against supporters’ exceedingl­y high hopes.

The October 2003 ouster of Davis, a Democrat, was a primal response to the gridlock, partisan warfare, overweenin­g special interests and mushroomin­g deficits that made the state capital a slough of dysfunctio­n. “It was about changing the entire political climate of our state,” as Republican Schwarzene­gger said in his first inaugural address.

When he left office more than seven years later — after sinking to the same abysmal poll ratings as Davis — the special interests were just as firmly entrenched, the partisan rancor was un- abated and the budget deficit had more than doubled.

Among the most bitterly disappoint­ed were those who had the greatest hand in forcing Davis from office and paving the path for Schwarzene­gger’s election.

“There was no substantiv­e nuts-and-bolts change to California government, which was one of the main goals,” said Ted Costa, the anti-tax crusader who launched the main petition drive that qualified the recall and has largely retired from politics, owing partly to his frustratio­n over the result.

That view overlooks Schwarzene­gger’s significan­t achievemen­ts, including savings in welfare programs and pension and retirement concession­s wrung from public employee unions.

He signed landmark legislatio­n to fight global warming. Working with Democrats, Schwarzene­gger also ushered the state into its most ambitious rebuilding program since the era of Brown’s father, who oversaw the infrastruc­ture developmen­t that still serves California half a century later.

Those accomplish­ments pale, however, laid against the extravagan­t promises made during the recall. Schwarzene­gger vowed to slash the size of government, stop deficit spending and end the pay-to-play culture of Sacramento, which he captured with stark simplic- ity in a TV spot: “Money goes in. Favors go out. The people lose.” None of that occurred. “In the larger sense of dramatical­ly changing the direction of the state, we didn’t accomplish what we’d hoped and expected,” said Rob Stutzman, a GOP strategist who served as a Schwarzene­gger spokesman during the recall.

Even the former governor has said he could and should have done more to address the structural problems — a boom-and-bust tax system, a crazy-quilt budgeting process — that continue to plague the state.

“It was a mistake,” Schwarzene­gger said in a January 2011 exit interview. Instead of borrowing to paper over the deficit and add to the state’s mountain of debt, he said, “I should’ve gone the other direction to early on solve the budget problem and use the political muscle I had that first year in office.”

Still, even some let down by Schwarzene­gger consider the recall a good thing.

“Once they’re elected, politician­s become so isolated,” said Dave Gilliard, whose political group, Rescue California, helped orchestrat­e the signature gathering with $2 million from Rep. Darrell Issa (RVista), who hoped to replace Davis but quit the race when Schwarzene­gger got in. “Being mindful of their accountabi­lity to voters — that they can make changes — there’s nothing more American than that.”

It is highly unlikely anyone cast a ballot in 2003 believing the result would be a top-two primary system aimed at weeding out extremists, or thinking Davis’ exit would mean an end to incumbents’ self-interested drawing of political lines. But those important structural reforms were enacted in good measure because Schwarzene­gger, alone in the Capitol, was beholden to neither the Democratic nor Republican establishm­ents (both of which opposed the ballot measures).

“He blew up the most important boxes of all,” suggested Susan Kennedy, a former Davis aide who served as chief of staff in Schwarzene­gger’s second term, borrowing a line from his swaggering days after the recall. “That is changing the election system.”

Those changes, which have yet to be fully felt, may be the most important legacy of the recall: If they work as proponents hope, Sacramento will eventually be populated with a breed of lawmaker less yoked to partisan interests and more amenable to compromise. That could be a big step toward solving the problems that sent angry California­ns storming to the polls a decade ago.

 ?? Genaro Molina
Los Angeles Times ?? THE REPLACEMEN­T of Gray Davis, left, with Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger capped a political spectacle that was watched around the world.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times THE REPLACEMEN­T of Gray Davis, left, with Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger capped a political spectacle that was watched around the world.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i
Associated Press ?? helping Gray Davis unveil his official portrait in 2005, vowed to change Sacramento culture. The recall’s legacy is more subtle.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press helping Gray Davis unveil his official portrait in 2005, vowed to change Sacramento culture. The recall’s legacy is more subtle.

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