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Copyright 2004, Los Angeles Times
Saying he has no secrets, Schwarzenegger reveals appointment records. Corporate
executives and union leaders have been frequent visitors.
(Los Angeles Times 12/23/04) -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger released 350 edited
pages of private calendar and appointment records Wednesday, showing that he
met frequently with corporate executives and union leaders in his first year
in office, took part in dozens of fundraisers and spoke to various special interests
whose fortunes could depend on state action.
Until now, the governor has made public the barest information about his daily
schedule, typically through terse press releases that stated he spent the day
in private meetings.
But saying he has nothing to hide, Schwarzenegger chose to comply with a request
submitted by the California First Amendment Coalition under the Public Records
Act.
After combing through the records, the coalition's executive director, Peter
Scheer, said he was pleased that Schwarzenegger chose to make public appointment
logs that previous governors have fought to keep secret. But he also said that
the governor withheld relevant information that should be publicized.
None of the governor's outside political advisors, including chief strategist
Mike Murphy, is listed by name as having met with him. Some of the advisors
represent private companies with an interest in pending legislation and administration
policy.
The coalition has not ruled out filing suit to compel the governor to disclose
still more material, Scheer said.
"It's fair to say that a door that had been double-locked shut for 13
or 14 years now in California has been pried open at least a crack," Scheer
said. "It's a very important step. There is lots of information here. It
would also appear however that a lot of information is not here.
"There seems to be lots of meetings that are marked as private, when in
fact they may well have involved discussions of government policies and government
actions."
Schwarzenegger told reporters on a trip to Tokyo last month that he was happy
to make public his calendars because he has no "secrets."
An exception is where he's spending the holidays; Schwarzenegger left California
on Wednesday for an 11-day vacation, leaving Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante
in charge. Aides would not reveal where Schwarzenegger went. Last year, he spent
the holiday season at his home in Sun Valley, Idaho.
Schwarzenegger's aides are known to schedule his activities down to the minute.
The documents show little of that specificity. But they portray a governor whose
day is busy -- meeting with prime ministers and ambassadors, talking policy
with aides, vetting job candidates, lunching with Cabinet secretaries and giving
interviews to TV shows including "60 Minutes" and "Access Hollywood."
Three separate appointments were devoted to posing for a Vanity Fair photo shoot.
The reports depict a governor engaged in some of the most volatile political
fights of the day. On Aug. 23, he met with his legal secretary, Peter Siggins,
about the "CalPine contract," records show. At the time, CalPine Corp.
of San Jose, the state's largest independent electricity generator, was leading
a fight to persuade the governor to veto AB 2006, a bill that would have allowed
investor-owned utilities like Southern California Edison Co. to build their
own power plants.
CalPine hired Schwarzenegger's lead political consultant, Murphy, to run that
campaign. Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill in September.
Business leaders have gotten considerable access. Schwarzenegger met three
times with Yazaburo Mogi, chairman and chief executive officer of the soy sauce
company Kikkoman, including once in Tokyo. The company has two plants in the
U.S.: one in Wisconsin, the other near Sacramento.
The governor also met frequently with telecommunications companies that are
regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission. His schedule showed
that he held a private meeting with Verizon chief Ivan Seidenberg on Oct. 19;
with SBC Chairman Ed Whitacre on Feb. 4 and again the next day; and with officials
from Cingular Wireless and other industry officials April 22.
SBC and Verizon are both campaign contributors to the governor.
There are few meetings listed with consumer, public interest or healthcare
advocacy groups. Rosemary Shahan, president of Consumers for Auto Reliability
and Safety, said that she has been unable to get in to see the governor's aides,
much less the governor.
"The people's governor is not the people's governor," Shahan said.
"The big business guys get face time and we get the back of the hand."
Schwarzenegger has made time for unions. On June 30, he invited in a bargaining
unit of the state firefighters union.
On Feb. 6, he and his chief of staff, Patricia Clarey, met with the Teamsters
Union. Four days later he and Clarey met with Doug McCarren, president of the
National Carpenters Union.
The calendars also show that in the span of nine days last December, Schwarzenegger
held four fundraising events. The following month, he attended fundraisers for
President Bush, U.S. Senate candidate Bill Jones and U.S. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
(R-Huntington Beach).
By Peter Nicholas and Marc Lifsher
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