Wednesday, September 24, 2003

The list of questions for the debate that is going to occur in California. They are fairlying interesting and are generic enough to work on a national and global scale. So here they are:


  1. How would you propose enhancing revenue and/or what specific cuts would you propose to achieve a balanced budget?
  2. Leaders in the business community are convinced that this state is losing jobs and unable to attract new businesses. If you agree, what are two things you would change to make this a more business-friendly state? If you disagree, what are the misconceptions you would like to correct?
  3. How are you going to ensure that all Californians have adequate health care?
  4. Everybody talks about wanting a colorblind society, but what does that actually mean to you? In other words, how do we know when we have succeeded?
  5. What should be the top priority for California right now?
  6. If elected governor, will you support the expansion of charter schools in California?
  7. What do you expect to accomplish in the time remaining on Gray Davis' term that he could not?
  8. What is the single most important piece of legislation either signed or vetoed during this past legislative session?
  9. Do you support reducing the Vehicle License Fee (car tax), and if so, where would you find the revenue to replace the loss to the budget?
  10. What services will your administration expect local governments to provide and what stable source of revenue will you give them to do it?
  11. Under governors Pat Brown and Ronald Reagan (news - web sites), California spent up to 20 percent of its general fund on infrastructure -- such as roads, bridges, colleges, hospitals and water systems. Now we spend closer to 1 percent. Proposition 53 on the ballot raises that figure to 3 percent. What are your positions on Proposition 53, and what will you do to invest more in California's aging infrastructure?
  12. As our population continues to age, the demand for government services to seniors will increase dramatically during the next decade. What do you intend to do to proactively manage this demand?

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