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Copyright 2004, Los Angeles Times
Where's Arnold?
(Los Angeles Times 10/20/04) -- "I'll be back" is one of Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger's signature lines. It's also about the only thing he tells the
media when he leaves the state.
As The Times' Peter Nicholas reported, the governor frequently takes off on
his private jet without notice and without saying where he is going. Consider
last weekend. The governor's office announced Friday evening that he had "left
the state." It turns out he was in Sun Valley, Idaho, for a weekend of
relaxation. His press secretary declined to say when Schwarzenegger would return.
No one begrudges the governor some private time, or even a real vacation. As
a movie star, Schwarzenegger had good reason to fly under the radar. But a governor
has obligations to a higher authority than the head of Columbia TriStar: the
people of California.
Schwarzenegger gave up a measure of privacy when he ran for office. Generally,
the people have a right to know where their governor is, says Peter Scheer of
the California First Amendment Coalition. After all, another official becomes
acting governor in his absence. As it happened, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, a
Democrat, was in China last weekend, so the mantle of authority fell to Senate
President Pro Tem John Burton (D-San Francisco).
These days, the governor is expected to visit the site of a natural disaster
or major news event quickly. Keeping the governor's location a secret could
at the least complicate a quick state response in such a case, and perhaps leave
people wondering who's in charge.
We're not asking for the governor's personal cell phone number, just to know
where he's going and when he'll be back. After that, it's /hasta la vista/,
baby.
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