governor of california
Garamendi Coy in Altadena About Gubernatorial Run in 2010
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
By Sharon Kyle and Dick Price
Speaking before supporters in Altadena this week, Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi tiptoed lightly around talk of running for governor of California next time around. “We’ll have an announcement about that in January,” he said, though the reception was titled “Garamendi—2010” and nobody present stuck their fifty bucks in the envelope to support his run for anything short of California’s top spot.
Instead, Garamendi spoke about four issues that have consumed his first year as lieutenant governor: the environment, transportation, education, and health care.
“Europe took Kyoto seriously. They made major changes,” he said, regarding the Kyoto Climate Change Conference he worked on as Deputy Secretary of the Interior Department during the Clinton Administration in the mid 1990s. “Germany now gets 25% of its energy from renewable sources, up from almost nothing 10 years ago.” In the meantime, the United States—which has not adopted the Kyoto Accords—has fallen behind even China in average gas mileage.
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Schwarzenegger Applauds Obama for Legislation Modeled after California's Low Carbon Fuel Standard
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
Full Transcript of Remarks by Senator Obama in Detroit as He Takes on Auto Industry

By Frank D. Russo
Arnold Schwarzenegger has yet to endorse a single Democrat since he became Governor of California. Despite having said at an unguarded moment right after the primary election last June that he would consider putting his stamp of approval on a Democrat for one of the many state offices in play in November, he has consistently endorsed Republicans. He couldn't even bring himself to go for Dianne Feinstein, one of the most popular Democrats in the state who rolled up a larger vote margin in November's election than even Schwarzenegger himself. He has already announced in the press that he will endorse a Republican for President, and he's expected to work hard to influence who gets the GOP nomination.
So, even though he bills himself as a post-partisan politician, it is surprising to receive a press release from the Governor that states:
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