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LOS ANGELES TIME EDITORIAL
Fess up, Fabian
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Los
Angeles Times
October 9, 2007
Let's set aside the question of whether the speaker of the
Assembly really has to spend so much of his time and his
donors' money traveling to France, Italy, Spain and other
foreign venues, as reported Friday in a Times story on Fabian
Nuņez's extravagant use of campaign contributions. Let's
grant that a speaker can be expected to rake in lots of cash
from big donors and might spend it lavishly, perhaps on
colleagues and aides amid policy discussions, at restaurants
in Sacramento and Los Angeles and, OK, for some reason, hotels
in Barcelona and Rome and a wine "cave" in Bordeaux.
Let's dismiss as wicked humor his statement to Times staff
writer Nancy Vogel that this luxe lifestyle is not much
different from "how most middle-class people live."
And let's assume, pending completion of an audit by the Fair
Political Practices Commission, that every dollar was properly
spent on something reasonably related to a political,
legislative or governmental purpose, as required by law.
Nuņez still has no legitimate reason to keep from
Californians just why, and on whom, he spent all that money.
The fact that his staggering travel bills weren't paid by
taxpayers does not end the discussion. He was on public time,
even if not the public dime, and is living a tycoon's
lifestyle only because his position as speaker makes him
valuable to contributors who want to sway him. It's troubling
enough that special interests are paying his bills. It's worse
when he wants the public to simply trust, without explanation,
that his $3,199 stay at the Hotel Parco in Rome had some nexus
to his official duties.
The speaker asserted that he wouldn't have to rely on his
$5.3-million "Friends of Fabian Nuņez" campaign
account if he were independently wealthy. That's a non
sequitur. If his expenditures were in fact related to
legislative purposes, he wouldn't pay them out of his own
pocket anyway, so it would make no difference if he were as
rich as, say, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
The governor funds his own lavish foreign travel not from his
bank account but through contributions to a nonprofit group
that hides the names of its donors, who then write off their
donations as tax deductions. That arrangement is troubling in
its own right, but it doesn't make Nuņez's refusal to provide
more details any more palatable. The speaker must raise an
enormous amount of money in order to keep political pace with
Schwarzenegger -- to make it clear, for example, that he can
counter any ballot measure the governor might decide to take
to voters. But there's nothing about that lamentable fact of
political life that makes it necessary for Nuņez to match the
governor meal for meal or hotel for hotel.
By providing details on his expenditures, the speaker can put
an end to speculation that his actions were anything other
than in the best interests of California. Failure to do that
simply enhances the perception that the Legislature is working
for shadowy special interests who can afford to gather in
France around an expensive bottle of Bordeaux.
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Copyright 1999-2007, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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