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David Boaz

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Governor Veto

Posted: 09/08/11 02:10 PM ET

During his two terms as governor of New Mexico, Gary Johnson got the nickname "Governor Veto" as he vetoed 750 bills sent to him by the legislature. Now California's Jerry Brown is bucking for that title. In June he vetoed the state budget, something that apparently had never happened before. In his veto message he wrote that the budget "continues big deficits for years to come and adds billions of dollars of new debt... contains legally questionable maneuvers, costly borrowing and unrealistic savings."

And this week, facing a flurry of bills landing on his desk, he's giving his veto pen a workout. On Wednesday he vetoed 12 bills, 11 of them sponsored by Democrats in the heavily Democratic legislature. As John Myers of KQED noted, he offered pithy and philosophical arguments in some of his veto messages. Take the bill to impose a $25 fine for kids who ski or snowboard without a helmet. Brown vetoed it, saying, "I am concerned about the continuing and seemingly inexorable transfer of authority from parents to the state. Not every human problem deserves a law."

He also vetoed a bill that would require initiative signature gatherers to wear a button if they're being paid, saying:

If it is acceptable to force paid signature gatherers to place identifying badges on their chests, will similar requirements soon be placed on paid campaign workers? I choose not to go down this slippery slope where the state decides what citizens must wear when petitioning their government.

He had earlier received the "John Lilburne Award" from the Citizens in Charge Foundation for vetoing another attempt to restrict petitioning.

Brown's libertarian streak isn't entirely surprising. When he became governor the first time, in 1975, he talked about "an era of limits" and increased state spending less than his predecessor, Ronald Reagan. He opposed Proposition 13 but then embraced it after the voters did and rode its implementation to easy reelection. Running for president, he supported a balanced budget amendment. He liberalized the state's marijuana law, decriminalized homosexuality, and vigorously opposed the antigay Briggs Initiative. He declared on "Meet the Press" that his goal was "To stand up to the special pleaders who are encamped, I should say, encircling the state capitol, and to see through their particular factional claims to the broad public interest."

I had high hopes that the 73-year-old newly elected governor, with no more dreams of higher office, would aggressively confront California's out-of-control spending and special-interest deals. Brown watcher Tim Cavanaugh of Reason says that any hope that Brown would actually take on the spending interests, many of them public employee unions that helped him win office again, ended with his sweetheart contract for the prison guards union. But I'm still hopeful. Governor Brown knows his state is in debt up to its eyeballs, he knows where the money goes, and he knows that the special pleaders are still encircling the state capitol. And he's still skeptical about the "inexorable transfer of authority . . . to the state" and the idea that "every human problem deserves a law." That's a good basis for a new era of limits on power.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rda1911a1
God Bless John Browning
09:07 PM on 09/11/2011
and the public sector unions have had how many wage rollbacks again? California is doomed simply watch the busineses flea every month along with growing welfare rolls and decreasing productivity
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Drew Puli Wolf
dog trots freely in the street and sees reality
05:38 PM on 09/09/2011
Nice to see a rational evaluation of Gov. Brown from a libertarian, rather than the normal irrational Republican talking points that do not reflect the reality of the Governor’s actions or beliefs. This was a governor who took a lot of heat for talking about the age of limits, how small was beautiful, refusing to live in the ostentatious Governor’s Mansion that Reagan had built, and drove around in an old Blue Plymouth.
03:21 PM on 09/09/2011
It bears mentioning that Brown has a more friendly legislature than Schwarzenegger did (although his inkless veto pen might have them turn on him). Even so, I don't care. If Moonbeam believes he can be be more like Milton Friedman, I won't complain.

It's great to see that HuffPo is expanding the discussion to include your voice, David.
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James Peron
05:24 PM on 09/08/2011
Jerry Brown has impressed me. During the campaign I preferred him to the fake "small government" Republican. Brown is doing what has to be done as governor. He is much better than Gov. Terminator who was too timid to terminate much. And Brown is committed to social freedoms and equality of rights. His refusal to defend Prop 8 and his stand on the budget show him to be a decent man doing what is right. I'd love to see him team up Gary Johnson for an independent race for the White House. We need a Johnson/Brown ticket and a new party embracing the decent ideas both those men extol, even if they are in different parties.