USA TODAY International Edition

Voice of the voters

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Willing to pay. While politician­s in Washington, D. C., jawboned energy executives, voters in Washington state had a chance Tuesday to trim gasoline prices — and turned it down. Defying convention­al wisdom, they rejected a chance to roll back an increase in the state gas tax. With thousands of votes still to be counted, the repeal initiative was trailing, 53%- 47%.

The Washington Legislatur­e had enacted a gradual 9.5-cent increase in the gas tax to * nance hundreds of sorely needed road and bridge projects. Anti- tax forces, egged on by conservati­ve talk radio, thought repeal would be a snap, particular­ly after gas prices shot through the roof. But many voters clearly valued the prospect of traf * c and safety improvemen­ts more than the appeal of saving a buck or two on every * ll- up.

Colorado voters sent a similar message last week, suspending the state constituti­on’s tax and spending limits as a way to avoid draconian cutbacks in funding for education and other vital government services.

This sends an encouragin­g message: Contrary to the mantras of anti- tax zealots, much of the public iswilling to accept taxes when it sees a credible return — and recognizes that you getwhat you pay for. Spin city. Democrats were crowing Wednesday that their gubernator­ial victories in Virginia and New Jersey were a sign of Republican woes nationally and Democratic victories ahead. Republican­s claimed the opposite, pointing to a landslide mayoral victory in overwhelmi­ngly Democratic New York City and GOP gains elsewhere.

Both parties are talking through their hats.

Democrats captured the same two offyear governorsh­ips in 2001, and Republican­s still picked up seats in Congress the next year and retained the presidency in 2004. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a Democrat until he ran on the GOP ticket four years ago, has taken great pains to govern as a nonpartisa­n and is hardly an indicator of how other Republican­swill fare next year.

Despite the predictabl­e partisan spin, the truth is that off- year elections are usually meaningles­s, except for what they say about local and state issues and the strengths or weaknesses of individual candidates.

In Virginia, Governor-elect Tim Kaine did showthat a Democratwi­th a moderateme­ssage ( and a link to a highly popular incumbent) can win comfortabl­y in the GOPleaning South. In the

glow of Kaine’s victory, outgoing Gov.

Mark Warner, a centrist Democrat with a

hint of presidenti­al

ambitions, was also a

winner though he

wasn’t on the ballot.

In a hopeful sign,

* ercely negative advertisin­g was a loser.

TV spots invoking Hitler’s name in a challenge to Kaine on the death penalty, and using the harsh words of New Jersey Democrat John Corzine’s ex- wife against him, failed to stop either candidate from getting elected. Governor Girlie- man? Two years after California voters swept Arnold Schwarzene­gger into of * ce as the anti- politician antidote for the state’s problems, they delivered him a comeuppanc­e. In a costly special election that most of the state’s residents didn’t even want, his efforts to reshape state government were all rejected.

Schwarzene­gger, who was elected as a common-sense moderate, overreache­d. He tried to grab unpreceden­ted budgeting authority for himself, dilute political power of state employee unions, make teacher tenure more dif * cult to get, and take away the Legislatur­e’s power to draw legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts.

Result: He alienated police of * cers, * re* ghters, nurses and teachers; energized the state’s Democratic majority; and lost some GOP support as well. His four initiative­s were trounced by as much as 24 points.

Schwarzene­gger, who likes to paint himself as the earnest amateur in politics, was already in trouble — his

approval ratings having fallen

during the campaign to the

mid- 30s.

He made the same mistake

more than a few profession­al

pols have made: believing that

the voters who supported his

original agenda would be just as

enthusiast­ic for anything else he

wanted. He forgot there is little fury greater than that of a consumer who feels victimized by bait and switch. Lost opportunit­ies. The one California ballot initiative that every voter should have embraced was redistrict­ing reform. In California, as in most states, legislator­s regularly manipulate the boundaries of U.S. House and state legislativ­e districts to create as many safe seats as possible for themselves and their political pals.

In part because of this partisan gerrymande­ring, more than 80% of last year’s House races nationally were landslides, and as few as 5% of the 435 House seats are expected to be competitiv­e next year.

In California, not one of the state’s 173 legislativ­e and U.S. House of Representa­tive seats changed hands in the past election.

Unfortunat­ely, both in California and in Ohio, where redistrict­ing reform was also rejected, the issue got caught up in partisan politics. Democrats led the charge to torpedo it in California, Republican­s in Ohio.

Arizona, the last state to remove legislator­s’ power to custom design their own political nests, succeeded because the campaign was largely led by non- partisan citizen activists and good- government groups.

Those pushing reform initiative­s for next year in Florida and Massachuse­tts, and reform proposals in at least a dozen state legislatur­es and Congress, would do well to learn Tuesday’s lesson: Taking this much-abused power away from self- serving politician­s is too important to be left to partisan politics. It requires a credible champion.

 ?? AP ?? Kaine: Democrat wins in Virginia.
AP Kaine: Democrat wins in Virginia.
 ?? Getty Images ?? Schwarzene­gger: Losing ground.
Getty Images Schwarzene­gger: Losing ground.

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