Monterey Herald

Hercule Poirot — the murder of high-speed rail

- By Joe Mathews Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

“Stop where you are,” declared the mustachioe­d detective, in a European accent, as he entered the Assembly chamber.

“There has been a murder here in the Capitol!”

Legislator­s looked puzzled. Had they entered an Agatha Christie novel?

A progressiv­e Democrat said: “Who's your victim?”

The detective held up a handkerchi­ef bearing the monogram, “HSR.”

“That can't be!” shouted the governor, who had rushed to the chamber upon hearing that internatio­nal media might be present. “The only HSR we know is highspeed rail, America's most ambitious project. And it's not dead.”

The detective arched an eyebrow. “How can you be so sure?”

“Because I'm saving it,” the governor said, “by downsizing the San Francisco-to-L.A. project into a Merced-to-Bakersfiel­d route.”

“Governor, you have just confessed!” the detective replied. “Proposing a $100 billion train between two cities without a Michelin star restaurant between them demonstrat­es homicidal intent toward the very concept of passenger rail.

“Next question: Governor, did you act alone?”

“Are you accusing me, Detective?” the Assembly speaker said from the dais. “Who are you anyway? How did you get here?”

“I'm M. Hercule Poirot and I was on the express to Istanbul when Interpol called. I flew Turkish Airlines to SFO, took

BART to catch the Amtrak to Sacramento, which was lovely but empty. Then I made the mistake of trying Sacramento light rail, which smelled like a crime scene … but, Mr. Speaker, you haven't answered my question.”

“Well,” the speaker replied, “you can't be suggesting that the Democratic lawmakers from Southern California killed it. We're simply trying to make high-speed rail better, by repurposin­g some of the money from the Central Valley to regional rail projects.”

Poirot furrowed his brow. “Repurposin­g? A curious choice of words. And you are doing this by denying the project $4.2 billion in voter-approved bond funds. Mr. Speaker, the legislatur­e tops my list of suspects. I don't care about your campaigns; none of you may leave Sacramento.”

“Why are you crediting the Democrats for the murder?” interjecte­d the Republican leader. “We've been working to kill highspeed rail for years.”

“What good is a confession from a party that claims the last election was rigged. High-speed rail is a big economic stimulus for the Central Valley, which many Republican­s represent. How does killing it make any sense? You are engaged in self-harm. I'm having you held for observatio­n and psychologi­cal evaluation.”

The detective surveyed a legislativ­e chamber full of suspects. He thought for a minute.

“This reminds me of a case from much earlier in my career, written up in a book called `Murder on the Orient Express.' A train got stuck, and a man was murdered.

“I had a wide variety of suspects. The passengers all made a great show of saying they were trying to save the victim. But in the end, all were guilty.

“The difference between California high-speed rail and that railway murder is that on the Orient Express, those killers had the grace to acknowledg­e what they'd done. So, I showed them mercy.

“A recent poll shows California­ns still want high-speed rail, so you refuse to confess. You've killed HSR already. But you can't admit the crime.”

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