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Arnold Meets His Match



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  #1  
Old May 26, 2005, 09:52 AM
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 1999
Arnold Meets His Match

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...r=emailarticle


Arnold Meets His Match
By Harold Meyerson
Wednesday, May 25, 2005;

...And in California, Arnold Schwarzenegger's approval ratings have plunged 20 points -- to 40 percent -- in the wake of his singularly reckless attack on the pensions and working conditions of the state's nurses, police officers, firefighters and teachers. Republicans must now even confront the possibility that a Democrat could unseat the Great Orange Hope next year. (Somehow, the governor has retained his metallic glow -- the word "tan" doesn't really describe it -- during the wettest year California has known in a century.)...

...The L.A. GOP has mistaken Arnold's ascension, in the Gray Davis recall election, for a popular mandate to hack away at the public sector. Never mind that Schwarzenegger did not run on any such program, that while he railed at politicians, he never said a word about the public institutions on which Californians depend.

Schwarzenegger's right turn, though, should not have come as a surprise to Arnoldologists. The Governator has always been something of an economic libertarian, though during the campaign and his early days in office, more attention was paid to his social libertarianism -- for instance, his pro-choice stance. Some (chiefly libertarians) have argued that this across-the-board libertarianism was exactly the formula that would revive Republicanism in a state such as California. They couldn't have been more wrong. With the burgeoning Latino population clamoring for more and better public schools, beachgoers insisting on coastal protections, and gridlocked motorists yelping for more roads or more rail, the demand for activist government and adequate public services in California remains high.

One example of this demand is a law, signed by Gray Davis and slated to have taken effect on Jan. 1 of this year, that establishes a ratio of one nurse to every five patients in California hospitals. Two days after last year's November election, though, Schwarzenegger suspended the regulation, incurring the wrath of a number of groups, but none more so than the California Nurses Association (CNA).

This proved to be a huge mistake. For a decade, the CNA had played a gadfly role in California politics, but in its battle against Schwarzenegger, it has become the little union that could. (The CNA has 60,000 members, up from 20,000 10 years ago.) Brandishing banners proclaiming "Hands Off Our Ratios," nurses began demonstrating at Arnold's appearances. Confronted with a gaggle of uppity nurses at his women's conference last December, Schwarzenegger ad-libbed: "Don't mind the special interests. I kick their butts every day in Sacramento."

Nothing could have been better calculated to put the nurses on the warpath. In response they began showing up, in uniforms and in numbers, at every one of Arnold's mega-dollar fundraisers with financiers and industry magnates.

"I've been frustrated with the labor movement for letting workers be defined as special interests," says Rose Ann DeMoro, the CNA's executive director. "By focusing on his fundraisers, the nurses have forced the press to look at who, exactly, are the real special interests."

This spring, when Schwarzenegger threatened to back an initiative that substituted 401(k)s for pensions for public employees (and that eliminated survivor benefits for the widows and orphans of police officers and firefighters killed on the job), the nurses were joined in the streets -- and in television ads -- by teachers and firefighters.
At such demonstrations, the cops have proved particularly helpful, positioning the demonstrators, for instance, in the most mediagenic locations. "It's kind of fun having the police with us," says DeMoro, a longtime troublemaker unaccustomed to such cooperation.

Facing a collapse in the polls, Arnold backed off his pension-abolition plan, though he is threatening to support another initiative this November that would make it more difficult for public-sector unions to raise political funds from their members. (An earlier iteration of this initiative failed at the ballot box in 1998.) His reversal of the nurse-patient ratios seems almost certain to be overturned in the courts -- as it already has been in the court of public opinion.

So, as George W. Bush has run smack into the public's undiminished support for social insurance, Arnold Schwarzenegger has run afoul of its undiminished support for public services and public servants. From sea to shining sea, the Republican offensive has, for now, stalled.
meyersonh@washpost.com

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  #2  
Old May 27, 2005, 02:43 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 1999

On PBS tonight:

Find your local PBS TV schedule - http://www.pbs.org/now/sched.html
http://www.pbs.org/now/science/demoro.html

California Nurses and Gov. Schwarzenegger

Overview
Pollsters have noted a recent decline in California Governor Schwarzenegger's approval ratings, a drop that some have linked to a campaign staged by the California Nurses Association (CNA). A number of the group's protests in — and even outside — of California have gotten so large that the governor has had to enter some venues through a side door.

The CNA was initially alarmed by Governor Schwarzenegger's suspension of a regulation that had been signed into law by former California Governor Gray Davis. The law, which was sponsored by the CNA and had been slated to take effect on January 1, 2005, established a ratio of one nurse to every five patients in California hospitals. Citing a shortage of qualified nurses, Governor Schwarzenegger suspended the law just two days after the November election. The CNA contends that the Governor is actually suspending the regulation as a cost-saving favor to the hospital industry.

The Governor has fired back at the CNA's protests, labeling the union a "special interest" group. In turn, the CNA has taken to targeting the Governor's fundraising events to bring attention to those groups supporting the Governor financially.

The battle heated up further when in the spring of this year Schwarzenegger threatened to alter public employee pension plans — substituting 401(k)s for more traditional pension plans.

The Governor's plan also proposed the elimination of survivor benefits for the widows and orphans of police officers and firefighters killed on the job. This has moved some of those groups, and many of the state's teachers, to join the CNA's fight.

Schwarzenegger has since withdrawn the controversial pension proposal. Additionally, a Sacramento judge and a California appellate court have sided with the union in suspending Governor Schwarzenegger's efforts to undercut the nurse-to-patient ratio rule. The union is now engaged in a lawsuit to permanently restore the law to the books.

Further information:
• California Nurses Association www.calnurses.org
• Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger http://www.governor.ca.gov/state/gov..._homepage.jsp?
• "Arnold Meets His Match," WASHINGTON POST, Harold Meyerson, May 25, 2005 http://www.calnurse.org/?Action=Content&id=894
• "Schwarzenegger action makeup is coming off," editorial by Rose Ann DeMoro, LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS, April 7, 2005 http://www.dailynews.com/Stories/0,1...802103,00.html
• "Nurses Union Leader Is a Tonic for Governor's Foes," Paul Pringle, LOS ANGELES TIMES, April 17, 2005 http://www.latimes.com/news/local/st...ck=1&cset=true

Rose Ann DeMoro Biography
Recently the LOS ANGELES TIMES characterized Rose Ann DeMoro as "a 56-year-old, Missouri-born, Bruce Springsteen-loving executive director of the California Nurses Assn., a 60,000-member labor union." Other journalists have called her Arnold Scwarzenegger's worst nightmare.

Some of DeMoro's detractors point out that she has never been a nurse. Indeed before joining the California Nurses Association staff 19 years ago, she organized Hollywood producers for the Teamsters.

DeMoro began her union organizing career after leaving a UC Santa Barbara graduate program in women's studies.

As head of the California Nurses Association she has presided over an increase in membership when many unions have seen dropping numbers — tripling its membership in the past 12 years.
The Association currently represents 60,000 nurses — 45% of hospital nurses in California; 61% of the 297,000 nurses licensed in the state work in hospitals. In 2005 MODERN HEALTHCARE named DeMoro as one of the "Top 25 Women in Healthcare," citing CNA's leading role in public policy, passage of the landmark law requiring safe nurse staffing in hospitals, and other achievements for nurses and patients.

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  #3  
Old Jun 01, 2005, 05:15 PM
Jessy_RN's Avatar
Jessy_RN (Female)
~NIGHT-SHIFTER~
Join Date: Sep 2004

No more Arn old Please!....



Jessica

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Arnold Meets His Match

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