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Congressman Doug LaMalfa

Assembly Bill To Build Prison Spaces Passes This Morning

AB 900, pulled together after months of discussions among the 4 leaders and many others, passes today by a vote of 70-1. This was a "between a rock and a hard place" decision for all of us under the ultimatespecter of unacceptablewholesaleearly releases of criminals by the federal judge because of the courts’ view of overcrowding. Thiscarried the most weight for Republicans, as our caucus believes that public safety is our duty and first obligation to the people of California. It provides for, via $7.4 billion in bonds, the building of 53,000 new spaces and for the expansion of the "pipeline" to train the personnel needed to staff the currently understaffed spaces andnew spaces to be built. Much will need to be done in the coming months to make this work with regard to recruiting the staff and building the new spaces needed in correlation with each other.

As our population increases by a million in this state every 2 years,many of us have realized for yearsthat we’ve needed to keep up with theseprison space needs. Instead, unfortunately, our reality is crisis-management instead oflong-term planning… Read More

James V. Lacy

Important “soft money” case argued before Supreme Court

Wisconsin Right to Life was argued before the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this week, an important case that will decide the constitutionality of the McCain-Feingold "electioneering comunications" restrictions on advocacy groups, at a minimum, as applied to Wisconsin Right to Life, an IRS Section 501(c)(4) pro-life advocacy organization. WRTL had published a communication critical of the two senators from Wisconsin for their pro-abortion votes in Congress, but because one of them wasrunning for re-election in the time period of the communication, the FEC argues the communication was an illegal electioneering communication, even though there was no mention of an election in the communication.

At issue in the case is whether a controversial provision in McCain-Feingold, that regulates ANY broadcast communications mentioning a Federal candidate’s names 30 days before before a primary and 60 days before a general election, whether or not the communication comes from a political committee and regardless of the lack of words of express advocacy, or the intention of the group to not intervene in an election.

Liberal election lawyers are… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Newport Beach City Council: Ready, Fire, Aim?

IMAGINE THIS SCENARIO You decide to invest your retirement savings and buy a home in Newport Beach, a couple of blocks from the beach. Your plan, someday, is to retire there. But for now, you can’t afford that, so you prepare your home to rent out for the upcoming summer. As a matter of fact, a heavy factor in deciding whether you could afford this home was the anticipated revenues from rental income in the lucrative summer rental market. You even timed the sale so that you’d own the property just in time. You go down to Newport Beach City Hall to file a permit to use the property as a rental and you told you are REJECTED.

Huh? Yes, rejected. You see, in their infinite wisdom, the Newport Beach City Council voted 6-0 to place a 45 day moratorium on the granting of any permits for short-term rental housing. That’s right, in the heart of America’s most Republican County, we have a City Council that is enacting policies that make the folks in Berkeley look conservative…… Read More

Mike Spence

How not to be corrupt.

There are lots of jokes about politicians being less than honest. There are lots of jokes about politicians not being too bright. A councilman in Hawthorne has managed to combine them all in a real life drama. He lives in a house owned by a developer, and then votes to help the developer on a land issue. Duh! See the story here.… Read More

Jon Fleischman

It’s long past time to cut up the state’s credit card – now we have another 6 billion in debt obligations…

Every time legislative Republicans provide the votes to use the state’s credit card — borrowing through the issuance of bonds — it’s a big win for Democrats, and very bad news for California taxpayers. For decades now, the state budget has continues to grow and grow to the point where it is now well over $100 BILLION annually. Translation: California taxpayers are paying way too much in all of the various types of taxes and fees that go to finance state government activities and programs. With strong majorities in both houses of the legislature for many decades (with a small blip for a moment in the mid-90’s where we had a Republican majority in the Assembly for one session), it has been voracious appetites of liberal Democrats that have let us to this unfortunate spot ("Best Supporting Actor" awards go to those GOPers who roll to provide the 2/3 votes needed to pass a budget). Republican Governors were not successful at stopping this growth in… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Today’s Commentary: Guest Commentary: Ryan Clumpner, Newly Elected Chairman of the CA College Republicans

Report from the Battlefront What to expect from California College Republicans in the coming year

By Ryan Clumpner, Chairman, California College Republicans

A week and a half ago, the California College Republicans (CCR) convened to hold the first competitive leadership elections since 2004. Uncontested elections are a sign of organizational unity and CCR has flourished for the past few years. However, like any healthy organization, competition was inevitable and this year the process brought fresh vitality and a renewed interest in the direction of the organization. CCR emerged from the decisive election united and committed to an aggressive agenda for the coming year. [Their new Executive Board is pictured.]

College Republicans face some… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Guest Commentary: Ryan Clumpner, Newly Elected Chairman of the CA College Republicans

Report from the Battlefront What to expect from California College Republicans in the coming year

By Ryan Clumpner, Chairman, California College Republicans

A week and a half ago, the California College Republicans (CCR) convened to hold the first competitive leadership elections since 2004. Uncontested elections are a sign of organizational unity and CCR has flourished for the past few years. However, like any healthy organization, competition was inevitable and this year the process brought fresh vitality and a renewed interest in the direction of the organization. CCR emerged from the decisive election united and committed to an aggressive agenda for the coming year. [Their new Executive Board is pictured.]

College Republicans face some… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Debra Saunders may have had a good point… It’s the spending…

A couple of weeks ago, I had a lengthy conversation with my friend Debra Saunders, a columnist over at the San Francisco Chronicle. We were talking about the fact that all of the Republicans in the State Legislature (save one) had just signed the Americans for Tax Reform no new taxes pledge.

Debra was making the case to me that she thought that it didn’t make a lot of sense to sign a pledge against ever raising taxes, using the argument that if you spend the money, you have to be able to pay for it — and that spending more than you have (deficit spending) was a worse alternative.

Debra made a point that the focus is always on not raising taxes, rather than on not increasing spending.

As Debra and I spoke, somehow we ended up talking about the fact that what is really needed in California is a "no new spending" pledge. This is so true.

Tomorrow there will be a lot of news coverage of a "deal" struck on prison reform, to deal with the massive prison overcrowding issue, and the looming specter of a federal judge doing who-knows-what if we don’t solve the problem.

Given that the starting-off point… Read More

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