GOP Assembly candidates say 'No'
According to Wisckol, the “GOP primary in 70th Assembly District race to replace outgoing incumbent Chuck DeVore is the county's hottest June legislative race….”
Sounds exciting. Wisckol asked ‘em how sending a Republican would even matter in the Democratic-dominated state legislature. A massive two-thirds majority is necessary for budget approval, and so the Dems need a few Republican votes to pass their proposal.
All four candidates agreed “that the first step is to not be one of the few to help Democrats.”
How hot.
Don’s shining moment came when he offered another raison d'être for a Republican in Sacramento:
…Wagner…suggested finding populist issues and turning them into bills – even though Democrats would reject them. ¶ "We don't win the vote, but we take those issues back to some of these districts that aren't so gerrymandered," he said, meaning the tactic might help win Republicans a few more seats. The only specific issue he mentioned of being worthy of such an effort was oil drilling.Oil drilling.
Wisckol, it seems, is easily amused:
I was amused [he said] by an exchange that began when Wagner said that his college district had a larger budget than that of the cities of Irvine or Tustin. [Jerry] Amante later noted that he was chairman of Orange County Transportation Authority, which had a way bigger budget than the college district. That left Wagner with the eventual comeback that Amante wasn't elected to OCTA (cities send representatives to serve on the board, which then selects its chairman).I wonder if Wisckol is suicidal. I’d be.
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