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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Gubernatorial Candidates Focus On State's Future

Gubernatorial Candidates Focus On State's Future


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SAN RAFAEL: Final Gubernatorial Debate Features Heated Exchanges
Updated on: 2010-10-13 13:38:12

Story posted 2010.10.13 at 12:22 AM PDT

KTVU mobile News

California's gubernatorial candidates engaged in heated exchanges over taxes, job creation and public employee unions in a final debate Tuesday that quickly degenerated into verbal jousting and personal attacks on issues that have dominated the campaign.

Republican Meg Whitman and Democrat Jerry Brown had their first testy exchange a few minutes into the debate at Dominican University in San Rafael as the conversation turned to Proposition 13, the 1978 measure approved by California voters that rolled back and capped property taxes.

Brown accused Whitman, the billionaire former eBay chief executive, of promoting a plan to cut regulations and taxes that would benefit her and her wealthy friends. He singled out her proposal to eliminate the capital gains tax. Brown said that would benefit millionaires and billionaires most.

"I'd like to ask you how much money will you save if this tax break went into effect?" Brown asked Whitman.

She demurred, saying her business was creating jobs, and Brown's business is politics.

Whitman then accused Brown, the state attorney general, of leaving the state in worse shape than when he began as governor during his tenure from 1975 to 1983.

"You have been part of the war on jobs in this state for 40 years," she said.

The candidates began the debate saying California must live within its means before it can be turned around, each saying that they are hopeful about its future.

"The California dream is broken," Whitman said, adding that "tough trade-offs" were needed to control the size of government.

Brown acknowledged the state, saddled with persistent budget deficits, must realize its limits.

The debate quickly changed course, though, as the candidates debated issues that have been front-and-center in the campaign, including the cost of public employee pensions, education, the environment and immigration. At times the two talked over moderator and former NBC anchor Tom Brokaw as they offered rebuttals to their opponent's claims.

One of the most colorful exchanges came when Brokaw asked Brown about an audiotape released last week in which a female aide used the word "whore" in describing Whitman's attempt to curry favor with the union representing Los Angeles police officers.

"It's unfortunate, I'm sorry it happened, and I apologize," Brown said.

Whitman said the term was not befitting of a gubernatorial campaign. She and Brown then argued over whether Whitman should demand an apology from her campaign manager, former Gov. Pete Wilson, who used the term in 1995 in reference to what he felt was Congress' role in helping public employee unions.

Whitman said that situation was completely different, prompting Brown to fire back, "It's not."

The debate was their final opportunity before a statewide audience to promote their plans for turning around the economically troubled state. It comes just three weeks before Election Day, with some voters beginning to cast their ballots and others just starting to tune in.

In one exchange, Brown defended his record as governor, saying Whitman's accusations about state spending during that time were "demonstrably false." He said taxes went down when he was in Sacramento, but regulations have been added in the nearly three decades since he left.

Whitman called Brown's response a "classic politician answer."

"It's a half-answer and therefore a dishonest answer," she said. Whitman said unemployment nearly doubled under Brown's tenure, and she accused him of spending beyond the state's means.

Brokaw then interjected with his own fact-check, noting the end of Brown's term came in the midst of a national recession, and four states that had Republican governors then had higher unemployment rates.




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Víctor Lei

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