Official transcript of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's 2009 State of the State address
Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you very much, Lt. Gov. Garamendi, for the nice introduction. Chief Justice George, President Pro Tem Steinberg, Speaker Bass, Senate Republican Leader Cogdill, Assembly Republican Leader Villines, members of the Legislature, ladies and gentlemen:
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Audio: State of the State address
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Budget dominates Gov. Schwarzenegger's speech
First of all, I want to congratulate the four that have been responsible for creating, really, the Martin Luther King holiday. So I want to say thank you because Martin Luther King has been a great hero who has given his life for justice and for equality and has been a great inspiration not only to Americans but to people all over the world. So congratulations to all of them. Let's give them a hand, again, for the great work that they have done. (Applause)
I also want to take this opportunity to just thank a few people, because all this hard work is not done just by me or the Horseshoe, there are a lot of people involved. First of all I want to say thank you very much to my wife and the first lady of California for her extraordinary work on the Women's Conference or on promoting earned income tax credit or the volunteers, California Volunteers, or the Hall of Fame or the California Museum and the list goes on and on and on. Let's give her a great hand for the great work that she is doing. (Applause)
Then I also want to take this opportunity to say thank you to my staff that has been working so tirelessly, not only during the day but sometimes at night and on the weekends and so on and especially also my chief of staff, Susan Kennedy. Thank you very much for all the great work that all of you are doing. Thank you. (Applause)
Your Vote
In 2009, Sacramento legislators' first priority should be:
Creating new jobs
Reducing the budget deficit
Improving the education system
Creating universal healthcare
Boosting environmental protection programs
And I also want to say thank you to the staffs of the Legislature, because we are not by ourselves down there; you guys, you have terrific staff, hard-working staff that come down there and work with us also again many hours during days, nights and weekends, so we want to say thank you also to them for all of that. (Applause)
Now, we meet in times of great hope for our nation, although we hear the drumbeat of news about bailouts, bankruptcies and Ponzi schemes, the nation with great anticipation is also awaiting the inauguration of a new president. Our nation should be proud of President-elect Obama's election and what it says to the world about American openness and renewal.
You know, President Reagan used to tell about a letter that he got from a man who said that you can go and live in Turkey but you can't become a Turk. You can go and live in Japan but you can't become Japanese. And he went through various different countries like that, but the man said anyone from any corner of the world can come to America and become an American. (Applause)
I know that we know that any American child now also, no matter what corner of the world his father or mother comes from, can even become president of the United States. What a wonderful national story for us. This nation rightfully feels the hope of change.
Californians, of course, desire change here in their own state as well. Yet they have doubts, if that is possible, because for months in the face of a crisis we have been unable to reach agreement on the largest budget deficit in our history. We are in our third special session and we have declared a fiscal emergency and every day that goes by makes the budget problem that much harder to solve.
As a result of all of this, California, the eighth-largest economy in the world, faces insolvency within weeks. The Legislature is currently in the midst of serious and good-faith negotiations to solve this crisis, negotiations that are being conducted in the knowledge that we have no alternative but to find agreement.
The importance of the negotiations' success goes far beyond the economic and human impact. People are asking if California is governable. They wonder about the need of a constitutional convention. They don't understand how we could have let political dysfunction paralyze our state for so long. In recent years they have seen more gridlock in Sacramento than on our roads, if that is possible.
I will not give the traditional State of the State address here today because the reality is that our state is incapacitated until we solve the budget crisis. The truth is that California is in a state of emergency.
Addressing this emergency is the first and most important and greatest thing that we must do for the people of California. The $42-billion deficit is a rock upon our chest and we cannot breathe until we get it off. It doesn't make any sense for me to talk here today and stand in front of you and talk about education or infrastructure or water or healthcare reform and all of those things, when we have this huge budget deficit. I will talk about my vision for all of those things and much more as soon as we get the budget done. So, no, I did not come here to deliver the normal list of accomplishments and proposals. I came just simply to encourage this body to continue the hard work that you are doing behind closed doors. I know we're going to get it done.
There is a context, of course, and a history to the negotiations that are underway. It is not that California is ungovernable; it is that for too long we have been split by ideology. Conan's sword could not have cleaved our political system in two as cleanly as our own political parties have done. Over time ours has become a system where rigid ideology has been rewarded and pragmatic compromise has been punished. And where has this led us? I think you would agree that in recent years California's Legislature has been engaged sometimes in civil war. Meanwhile, the needs of the people became secondary. Our citizens do not believe that we in government are in touch with their needs.
Now, these needs are not unreasonable, may I remind you. At the end of the day most people do not require a great deal from their government. They expect just simply the fundamentals. They want to live in safety, they want good education for their children, they want jobs, they want to breathe clean air, they want water when they turn on the faucet, they want electricity when they turn on the switch, and they want those things delivered efficiently and economically.
One of the reasonable expectations that the public has of government is that it will produce a sound and balanced budget. That is what the legislative leaders are struggling to do right now. There is no course left for us but this: to work together, to sacrifice together and to think of the common good and not our individual good.
Now, of course, no one wants to take money from our gang-fighting programs or from Medi-Cal or from education. Of course not. No one wants to pay more taxes or fees. But each of us has to give up something, because our country is in an economic crisis and our state simply doesn't have the money.
In December we even had to suspend funding that affects 2,000-plus infrastructure projects that were already underway. So now the bulldozers are silent. The nail guns are still. The cement trucks are parked. This disruption has stopped work on levees and housing and schools and roads, on everything. It has thrown thousands and thousands of people out of work at a time when our unemployment rate is rising and when people really need the jobs. How could we have let something like this happen?
I know that everyone in this room wants to hear again the sound of construction. No one wants unemployment checks replacing paychecks. So I'm encouraged that meaningful negotiations are underway. And as difficult as the budget will be, good things can come out of it. Because in spite of the budget crisis, when we have worked together in the past, we have passed measures, extraordinary measures that move the state and even the country forward.
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