Thomas D. Elias
Education Crisis: Besides Money, Leadership Also Is Sadly Missing
The University of California now says it will ask state legislators for $913 million more next year than it received in this year's budget. The California State University system will ask for an increase of $884 billion.
California Is Much Healther Than Pessimists Claim
Read the polls and you’d think the end was near for this, America’s largest state. One recent survey published by the state’s largest newspaper and repeated on every major radio and television outlet in California reported that 79 percent of the state’s residents believe their state’s best days are behind it.
Constant Misreadings of Boxer Help Explain Her Longevity
Just as they have in her two previous reelection campaigns, once again this year Republicans and so-called experts list Barbara Boxer as one of the most vulnerable U.S. Senate Democrats running in next year’s mid-term election.
Campbell, with Modest (Fiscal) Underpinnings, Stays Afloat Via the New Media
If there’s one surprise so far in the budding campaign for governor of California, it’s the fact that the candidate with the least cash on hand is somehow staying extremely competitive. So much so that the leading fear of his super-rich intra-party rivals is that he will somehow, somewhere come up with significant funds – and blow them out.
A Latino Census Boycott That Makes Little Sense
There's an old saying in politics: "If you don't vote, you don't count."
In short, areas where voting turnout is low lose influence in government and the money and services that come with it.
In short, areas where voting turnout is low lose influence in government and the money and services that come with it.
Will Whitman’s Rebuff of Tax Collectors Hurt Her with the...
Did Meg Whitman abet and encourage tax evasion during the decade she headed the Internet auction house eBay?
That emerged this week as a key question because Whitman, who has virtually no record in public life and little history of even casting votes, repeatedly cites her eBay tenure as a principal qualification to become governor of California. Essentially, she wants to become the state's chief tax policy maker, among many other functions.
That emerged this week as a key question because Whitman, who has virtually no record in public life and little history of even casting votes, repeatedly cites her eBay tenure as a principal qualification to become governor of California. Essentially, she wants to become the state's chief tax policy maker, among many other functions.
Arnold’s Likely Legacy: Little Positive Residue
Just a little over one year from today, Californians will elect a successor to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. How will they remember him after that successor takes over?
The Truth About Illegal Immigrants
For most of the last 20 years, anti-illegal immigration activists have steadfastly maintained that many of the undocumented come to America mostly for public benefits ranging from schools to welfare to the automatic citizenship bestowed on every child born in this country.
The most extreme among them call the illegals’ presence an invasion, often claiming it’s a government-backed movement by Mexicans to take back the vast American Southwest, lost to Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo that ended the Mexican-American War in February 1848.
When Is a Genuine Tax Not a Tax? When Republicans Say...
Few state lawmakers felt they had accomplished more in the Legislature’s last regular session than the Republicans who make up just over one-third of both the Senate and Assembly.
They went home proud of the fact they had kept their pledge and assessed no new taxes, as Democrats and a very few of their GOP cohorts did last winter.
They felt happy that no more of them would be subjected to the perils of possible recall campaigns and serious 2010 primary election challenges like those that either now afflict or soon will hit most of the dissidents among them who voted for February’s budget compromise, with its temporary increases in income, sales and vehicle taxes.
Recession Has Shrunk Kauai’s Costs but Not Its Nonpareil Beauty
HANALEI, Kauai, HI – They call this greenest of all islands, The Garden Island, for good reason. But today, the island of resilience would be just as accurate a tag.
Trouble has found this paradise-like land several times over the last two decades – and each time Kauai emerged in many ways even better than before.