• Bill Clinton,  Jerry Brown,  Meg Whitman

    CA-Gov Video: Jerry Brown Rips on Bill Clinton for Telling the Truth

    California Attorney General Jerry Brown Dissing President Bill Clinton

    Jerry Brown can LIE, but Governor Moonbeam cannot hide – from the truth that is.

    Here is the devastating ad from Republican Meg Whitman exposing Jerry Brown’s tax rasing policy while he was California Governor during the 1970’s and 80’s.

    Here are the facts from Factcheck.org and the State of California Department of Finance.

    I don’t think California voters are going to think too highly of Jerry Brown for:

    1. Lying about former President Bill Clinton who, by the way, remains very popular in California.

    2. Lying about his tax raising policies and rewriting his history as California Governor.

  • California Teachers Association,  Jerry Brown,  Meg Whitman

    CA-Gov Video: California Teachers Association Runs Anti-Whitman Ad

    The California Teachers Association is part of the reason why California state government is bankrupt. But, this is par for the course for this big far left labor union.

    By the way, didn’t Jerry Brown cut educational funding while he was California Governor and preside over a failing school system while Mayor of Oakland? But, never mind that, he is a darling of the unions for signing legislation allowing collective bargaining for public employees in 1978.

    Meg Whitman for her part has proposed reforming the abysmal California schools.

    On the campaign trail, Whitman has not said she wants to cut school funds but has proposed redirecting money from school administrative costs to the classroom. She’s also proposed creating more charter schools and setting up a bonus system to reward teachers and administrators.

    Frankly, I don’t think either Whitman or Brown will do much for public education in California. The system is controlled by local boards of education whose members are in turn dependent upon the California Teachers Association for campaign cash and volunteers. They spend, spend, spend on failing schools and the California Legislature controlled by the Democrats obliges them.

    Kind of like the inmates running the asylum.

  • Bill Clinton,  Jerry Brown,  Meg Whitman

    CA-Gov Video: Meg Whitman Channels Bill Clinton to Attack Jerry Brown

    Meg Whitman is using Bill Clinton to attack Jerry Brown in her latest campaign ad

    OUCH! This is going to leave a mark.

    Meg Whitman has enlisted a new spokesman in her attacks on Jerry Brown — former President Bill Clinton.

    In a new ad hitting the airwaves today, Whitman uses footage from a 1992 presidential primary debate between Clinton and Brown.

    “He raised taxes as governor of California,” Clinton says. “He had a surplus when he took office and a deficit when he left. He doesn’t tell the people the truth.”

    And, there is no love lost between Bill Clinton and Jerry Brown to this day.

  • Gay Marriage,  Meg Whitman,  Proposition 8

    Will Meg Whitman Campaign on California Proposition 8, Gay Marriage and The Rule of Law?

    California Republican Governor candidate Meg Whitman discusses gay marriage around 5:15 in this Los Angeles television interview

    Patterico raises the issue.

    Republican Meg Whitman now has a wedge issue in the California governor’s race, if she chooses to use it.

    She also has a more subtle but much stronger issue: the responsibility of elected officials to defend the people’s laws.

    Here’s why. The Ninth Circuit’s briefing schedule calls for the last brief to be filed by Prop. 8 supporters on November 1, 2010. The court has ordered the parties to discuss whether the
    proposition’s defenders have standing on their own, given that the Attorney General and the Governor failed to fight for the law in court.

    But here’s the thing: come November, there will be a new Attorney General in California  and perhaps more important, a new Governor. They will probably be sworn in before the appeals are decided. And the identity of the new Governor will probably decide whether California’s elected officials are going to join the appeal. (This assumes that procedural time limits don’t prevent them from joining an ongoing appeal by intervenor defendants. I dont know the answer to this question, but my educated guess is that there would be no procedural bar, as long as the appeal is still live.)

    Our current Attorney General, Jerry Brown, refused to defend Prop. 8 and would continue this path as Governor. Meg Whitman, by contrast, was a Prop. 8 supporter. Presumably she would move to join the appeal if elected.

    Since Meg Whitman campaigned for California Proposition 8 and presumably donated money to the cause, I would think this issue will raise itself sometime during the campaign. Moreover, Whitman is very close to LDS-Mormon former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and the California LDS community.

    My bet is that Whitman uses targeted direct mail to the Pro-Proposition 8 Protect Marriage list shortly before the early voting/absentee voter ballot request time. Also, flyers will appear at many Christian, especially Roman Catholic and LDS churches during this time. Undoubtedly, there will be a sermon/homily or two.

    So, the answer is yes.

  • Carly Fiorina,  Chris Christie,  Day By Day,  GOP,  Meg Whitman

    Day By Day July 8, 2010 – Call It

    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    Chris, the party of old white men, the GOP has diversified, no?

    Or is the appeal of the RIGHT = ideas and policy which have attracted a broad spectrum of Americans?

    It will be interesting to watch Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina in California push back against the old LEFT of Jerry Brown and Barbara Boxer. A new day for the GOP in California and wins by one or both will have implications for the Presidential race to replace Obama in 2012.

    And, Chris Christie in New Jersey will lead a resurgence of the Republicans in the East.

    Interesting times for a GOP which was called a southern regional party less than two years ago.

    Previous:

    The Day By Day Archive

  • Jerry Brown,  Meg Whitman

    CA-Gov: Jerry Brown – A Lifetime in Politics: A Legacy of Failure

    The Meg Whitman for Governor Campaign launched a new statewide ad today titled, “The Real Story.” This is the launch of the Campaign’s focus on Jerry Brown’s long, failed history in California politics: “A Lifetime in Politics, A Legacy of Failure.”

    This ad is especially for all of the younger California voters who do not remember Governor Jerry Moonbeam Brown.

    Brown was a horrid Governor and I don’t think Californians will give him another bite of the apple.

  • Carly Fiorina,  Meg Whitman,  Tom Campbell

    CA-Sen: Anti-Israel Claims Hurting Tom Campbell Fundraising or Did Meg Whitman Pull the Plug?

    Former e-Bay CEO Meg Whitman, running for California Governor and former Congressman Tom Campbell formerly a candidate for Governor and now a U.S. Senate candidate

    The case for the anti-Israel cause for Tom Campbell’s fundraising failures is made over at the Frum Forum.

    Now that Campbell has switched over to the Senate race, his current level of fundraising puts him on par with primary opponents Carly Fiorina and Chuck DeVore, who have both raised similar amounts despite having four or five more months to fundraise.

    On the other hand, the latest fundraising numbers may be an indicator of how donors feel about the anti-Israel allegations lobbed at him in early February.

    Campbell’s campaign announced in February that they had raised $700,000 in one month. It’s taken them an additional month to raise the remaining $300,000 needed to hit the million dollar mark, which means that fundraising dropped by more than half in February.

    Actually, Carly Fiorina has ONLY been fundraising since the first week of November while Chuck DeVore has been at it for over fifteen months. And, remember, that Fiiorina loaned her campaign an additional $2.5 million from her personal wealth at the end of December. The cash on hand comparisons even at this point, place Fiorina far ahead in cash available to mail ads and go on television.

    But, there has been a fall off in Tom Campbell fundraising. Look at the conflicting statements from the Campbell campaign.

    Reached for comment, Campbell spokesman James Fisfis said that their fundraising target was still set at $5 million. Fisfis also dismissed the suggestion that the drop-off had anything to do with the anti-Israel allegations…”

    At his current fundraising pace, Campbell is on track to raise about $1.5 million total for the primary, and instead I point out that in an AP story on January 29, Fisfis pegged Campbell’s fundraising goal a little higher…like $2 to $5 million higher:

    “Campbell is prohibited from transferring any of the money he had raised for the governor’s race but estimated he would raise between $7 million and $10 million during the GOP Senate primary.

    “’And based on our initial fundraising response, we’re sticking with that,’ Fisfis said.”

    And, in February, Team Campbell told the SF Chron that they were sticking by that $7 to $10 million figure…

    So, why the fall-off in campaign cash?

    Was it Tom Campbell’s association with convicted Islamic terrorists like Sami Al-Arian?

    Or was it something more local – like his donor sponsor sugar mommy California Governor Meg Whitman who is the uber-rich former CEO of e-Bay pulling the plug?

    Remember it was Meg Whitman who persuaded Tom Campbell to leave his year-long campaign for California Governor and in January switch to the United States Senate race. And, remember there were plenty of rumors as to the political machinations behind the switch.

    Bill Bradley has the poop.

    While Whitman’s operatives employed coercion in their backfiring bid to get Poizner out of the race, they employed persuasion to remove Campbell from the equation. While consultant Mike Murphy played the heavy with Poizner, several sources say that another former consigliere for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bob White, the longtime chief of staff to former Governor and Senator Pete Wilson who now heads a powerful corporate consulting firm in the state capital, played the lead role for Whitman on the Campbell project. Wilson is Whitman’s campaign chair.

    In December, according to well-informed sources, Whitman operatives began trying to influence people in the orbit around Schwarzenegger to persuade Campbell to switch out of the governor’s race and into the Senate race. Campbell, whose varied career has included stints as a Stanford law professor and head of the UC Berkeley business school, had been the state finance director in the Schwarzenegger Administration.

    The blandishments for Campbell included the promise of new backing and help with fundraising.

    Campbell, though running relatively well in the polls for governor — and probably the most dangerous candidate for presumptive Democratic nominee Jerry Brown in a debate — had raised barely a million dollars. His only realistic hope of winning the Republican gubernatorial primary was to slide through if Whitman and Poizner savaged one another.

    In the Senate primary, he could start off in the lead with residual name ID from two earlier Senate runs. There he would face only one rich candidate, ex-Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, and far right Orange County Assemblyman Chuck DeVore.

    Campbell listened to this and began seriously mulling the prospect of switching races. He did just that last month.

    And when he made the move, he had newfound support.

    George Shultz, secretary of state in the Reagan Administration and secretary of the treasury in the Nixon Administration, was suddenly Campbell’s new campaign chair. Shultz put aside his differences with Campbell on abortion, gay rights, and the Middle East (Campbell is far less pro-Israel) in making the move.

    Campbell picked up a fundraiser, too. Kristin Hueter, a top Whitman fundraiser, made the move to the new Team Campbell. Hueter had previously worked for Schwarzenegger.

    When I reached him, Bob White acknowledged that he was involved in the effort to get Campbell to switch from the governor’s race to the Senate race. But he said that his role wasn’t as central as other sources said it was.

    White had been very involved in bringing former Secretary of State Shultz, now ensconced at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, into the Schwarzenegger orbit when the action movie superstar mounted his swiftly jury-rigged campaign for governor in the 2003 California recall election.

    White and his old boss, former Governor Wilson, who like Shultz is a Hoover Institution fellow, played a major role in bringing Shultz into one of the seminal events of Schwarzenegger’s career, his ballyhooed economic “summit” at an LA airport hotel. Schwarzenegger already had his longtime friend, Democrat Warren Buffett, on board, but needed a big name Republican. Shultz and Buffett co-chaired Schwarzenegger’s economic task force meeting behind closed doors, then played good-natured sidekicks on stage after at Schwarzenegger’s massively attended press conference, allowing themselves to be publicly dominated by the Hollywood showman. (That was the event at which Schwarzenegger chastised his longtime friend Buffett for musing in the Wall Street Journal that California’s Prop 13 needed to be changed, telling him next time that happened he’d have to do 500 sit-ups.)

    As a congressman, Campbell was an ally of then Senator Pete Wilson. As a state senator following his first race for the U.S. Senate in 1992, he was an ally of then Governor Pete Wilson. And, naturally, of Wilson chief of staff White.

    After Bill Bradley’s story broke and Steve Poizner started beating Meg over the head with her attempt to force him from the race, Tom Campbell’s money suddenly dries up.

    Fancy that.

    But, it makes sense, doesn’t it that Meg Whitman told her donors to ratchet back the association with Campbell – at least until the last minute where reporting would not be as visible to disclosure? I mean she doesn’t want to look like a uber-rich bully king-maker, does she?

    Now, we have to wait and watch.

    Has Tom Campbell’s fundraising dried up because Whitman pulled the plug, have donors become uncomfortable with an anti-Israel candidate who associates with Islamic terrorists or has Meg Whitman temporarily suspended funraising for her boy, Campbell, until late in May when disclosure will be hopefully lost in the fray of television ads and campaign hoopla?

    California voters will be watching.

  • Carly Fiorina,  Meg Whitman,  Steve Poizner,  Tom Campbell

    Updated: CA-Sen: Did Meg Whitman Entice Tom Campbell to Switch to Senate Race?

    Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, running for California Governor and former Congressman Tom Campbell formerly a candidate for Governor and now a U.S. Senate candidate

    The answer is YES, according to Flap’s fellow blogger William Bradley. But, first some background on Meg Whitman and her campaign tactics

    You remember the Flap between California Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner and Meg Whitman.

    GOP gubernatorial candidate Steve Poizner today said he has reported “threats” made by the Republican rival Meg Whitman’s campaign adviser to law enforcement officials.

    Poizner said at a press conference that Whitman campaign strategist Mike Murphy issued “crystal-clear” threats to his staff in an attempt to effectively “cancel the election” by pushing him to drop out of the race.

    “This is not an attempt to be hardball and to be aggressive, but this is an attempt to effectively manipulate the election process, the integrity of the election process, by issuing these threats behind the scenes to get me not to run,” he said.

    The campaign provided a copy of an e-mail in which Murphy asks an unidentified Poizner campaign consultant if there is any chance Poizner, who is trailing Whitman in the polls and in campaign funds, will reconsider his run.

    The e-mail, provided by the campaign to reporters and in a letter to law enforcement officials, says the Whitman camp can spend $40 million “tearing up Steve if we must.”

    “I hate the idea of us each spending $20 million beating on the other in the primary, only to have a damaged nominee,” Murphy wrote, according to the e-mail.

    In the e-mail, Murphy offers that the campaign could “unite the entire party behind Steve right now to build a serious race” for U.S. Senate in 2012.

    In a letter sent to the FBI, U.S. Attorneys Office, Fair Political Practices Commission and state Attorney General Jerry Brown, Poizner also claims Murphy told a senior adviser that the campaign would “put (Poizner) through the wood chipper” if he did not drop out of the race.

    So, Poizner has accused Whitman of trying to force him out of the race by threats and then an enticement (helping him run for U.S. Senate in 2012 against Senator Diane Feinstein. Here is some video:

    Whitman strategist send e-mail saying he would use $40 million to “tear up Steve” if he did not drop out.

    With this as background, now the question is what did Meg Whitman offer Tom Campbell to drop out of the race for Governor and leave the field to Meg and Poizner? Bill Bradley has the poop.

    While Whitman’s operatives employed coercion in their backfiring bid to get Poizner out of the race, they employed persuasion to remove Campbell from the equation. While consultant Mike Murphy played the heavy with Poizner, several sources say that another former consigliere for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bob White, the longtime chief of staff to former Governor and Senator Pete Wilson who now heads a powerful corporate consulting firm in the state capital, played the lead role for Whitman on the Campbell project. Wilson is Whitman’s campaign chair.

    In December, according to well-informed sources, Whitman operatives began trying to influence people in the orbit around Schwarzenegger to persuade Campbell to switch out of the governor’s race and into the Senate race. Campbell, whose varied career has included stints as a Stanford law professor and head of the UC Berkeley business school, had been the state finance director in the Schwarzenegger Administration.

    The blandishments for Campbell included the promise of new backing and help with fundraising.

    Campbell, though running relatively well in the polls for governor — and probably the most dangerous candidate for presumptive Democratic nominee Jerry Brown in a debate — had raised barely a million dollars. His only realistic hope of winning the Republican gubernatorial primary was to slide through if Whitman and Poizner savaged one another.

    In the Senate primary, he could start off in the lead with residual name ID from two earlier Senate runs. There he would face only one rich candidate, ex-Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, and far right Orange County Assemblyman Chuck DeVore.

    Campbell listened to this and began seriously mulling the prospect of switching races. He did just that last month.

    And when he made the move, he had newfound support.

    George Shultz, secretary of state in the Reagan Administration and secretary of the treasury in the Nixon Administration, was suddenly Campbell’s new campaign chair. Shultz put aside his differences with Campbell on abortion, gay rights, and the Middle East (Campbell is far less pro-Israel) in making the move.

    Campbell picked up a fundraiser, too. Kristin Hueter, a top Whitman fundraiser, made the move to the new Team Campbell. Hueter had previously worked for Schwarzenegger.

    When I reached him, Bob White acknowledged that he was involved in the effort to get Campbell to switch from the governor’s race to the Senate race. But he said that his role wasn’t as central as other sources said it was.

    White had been very involved in bringing former Secretary of State Shultz, now ensconced at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, into the Schwarzenegger orbit when the action movie superstar mounted his swiftly jury-rigged campaign for governor in the 2003 California recall election.

    White and his old boss, former Governor Wilson, who like Shultz is a Hoover Institution fellow, played a major role in bringing Shultz into one of the seminal events of Schwarzenegger’s career, his ballyhooed economic “summit” at an LA airport hotel. Schwarzenegger already had his longtime friend, Democrat Warren Buffett, on board, but needed a big name Republican. Shultz and Buffett co-chaired Schwarzenegger’s economic task force meeting behind closed doors, then played good-natured sidekicks on stage after at Schwarzenegger’s massively attended press conference, allowing themselves to be publicly dominated by the Hollywood showman. (That was the event at which Schwarzenegger chastised his longtime friend Buffett for musing in the Wall Street Journal that California’s Prop 13 needed to be changed, telling him next time that happened he’d have to do 500 sit-ups.)

    As a congressman, Campbell was an ally of then Senator Pete Wilson. As a state senator following his first race for the U.S. Senate in 1992, he was an ally of then Governor Pete Wilson. And, naturally, of Wilson chief of staff White.

    So, there is the connection between Meg Whitman, former Governor Pete Wilson, Bob White and Tom Campbell. Meg was clearing the Governor’s race primary field and Tom Campbell bit at the chance. No wonder prior to the Christmas holidays Campbell was almost non-chalant about switching to the Senate race (remembered he first denied it) and traveled to Panama for extensive Spanish lessons. When he returned after the first of the year, little movement was seen on the fuindriaisng front or PR front.

    Why?

    Meg Whitman and her supporters have promised Campbell campaign help and financing for his campaign.

    Now, is there anything wrong or illegal about this move?

    Probably not as Steve Poizner has found out although he handled Whitman’s clumslily handled clearing the filed strategy poorly. But, what about disclosure? Do California voters understand that Meg whitman is staking Tom Campbell in a U.S. Senate race?

    Probably not until Bradley’s piece aired.

    Even former San Francisco Mayor and long time Democrat California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown has weighed into the flap.

    I firmly believe now that Meg Whitman and her camp encouraged Campbell to exit the gubernatorial race – a move that greatly helped Whitman – in return for her help in his Senate bid.

    With Campbell out of the way, Whitman is all but skipping over the Republican primary fight with Steve Poizner and instead is concentrating on running against Democrat Jerry Brown in the fall.

    Her first TV ad, which went on the air last week, sets her up for that. It’s a high-gloss, positive ad that one usually doesn’t see until the general election.

    At this point, Poizner does not appear to know what do to. He tried making hay with Whitman consultant Mike Murphy’s e-mail threatening a $40 million media blitz against him, but it went nowhere. Poizner’s call for an FBI investigation was pure amateur-hour politics.

    If Poizner really wanted to cause some damage to Whitman, he should have reported it to the FBI, then leaked that the feds were running an investigation.

    Reporters would have called the FBI, the FBI would have said “no comment” the way it always does, the reporters would have taken that as confirmation that there really was an investigation, and Meg would have found herself in the hot seat.

    He didn’t, and now she is in the driver’s seat, with her new friend Campbell riding shotgun.

    Late this afternoon, I received an e-mail from the Carly Fiorina Senate Campaign regarding Meg Whitman’s involvement in the Senate race. The campaign is calling on the media to ask questions of Tom Campbell and Meg Whitman as to what promises have been made.

    The questions:

    • What did Tom Campbell know and when did he know it?
    • What conversations did he have with the Whitman campaign/Whitman’s supporters?
    • Was there some sort of quid pro quo in this situation?
    • And, last but certainly not least, what was he promised for jumping out of the Governor’s race?

    California voters have a right to have these questions answered and law enforcement has an obligation to investigate if any campaign finance laws have been broken (remember federal campaign law has different limitations). This may be “just politics” but the last time this pay-off scheme appeared in the race for Senate with Bobbi Fielder and Ed Davis, it ended in disaster for both and the Democrat Alan Cranston was re-elected.

    In 1986, Fiedler did not run for re-election to the House of Representatives, opting instead to make what proved to be an unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination to challenge Alan Cranston for his United States Senate seat. She was charged with political corruption in January 1986 after an undercover investigation allegedly showed that Fiedler offered a rival, State Senator Ed Davis, $100,000 to withdraw from the Republican senatorial primary. The charges were dismissed by the court before the matter went to trial. Despite the dismissal of the charges in February 1986, Fiedler garnered only 7.2% of the vote in the Republican primary.

    Stay tuned as this flap is about to expand…….

    Update:

    Tom Campbell now denies any coordination in a piece in the San Francisco Chronicle.

    Republican Tom Campbell insists categorically there was no deal — and absolutely no coordination — between he and GOP gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman that resulted in him getting into the California 2010 U.S. Senate race.
    “I had no conversations with the Whitman campaign. I did not talk to Meg,” he said in an interview Wednesday with the Chronicle. “I made the decision” to get out of the governor’s race.

    “I contacted several friends and asked if they would support me. I did not contact Meg,” he said. “And among the friends I contacted was Bob White,” the former chief of staff to Gov. Pete Wilson and a leading Sacramento GOP insider.
    White himself also released a strong statement that refuted unsubstantiated reports that he had helped broker a deal: “I had no conversations with the Whitman campaign about getting Tom Campbell out of the Governor’s race. I had a very brief conversation with Tom Campbell — which he initiated — and told him I thought he’d make a great Senator. Tom Campbell is his own man and I couldn’t have altered his decision if I wanted to.”

    Said Campbell: “Nobody tried to get me out (of the governor’s race). And nobody approached me from the Whitman campaign. Period. Nobody.”

    Ok, now we will wait to see the fundraising reports and the reports from donors. Somebody is going to spill the beans because things do not add up.

    Stay tuned……


    Technorati Tags: , ,

  • Carly Fiorina,  Meg Whitman,  Steve Poizner,  Tom Campbell

    CA-Sen: Did Meg Whitman Entice Tom Campbell to Switch to Senate Race?

    Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, running for California Governor and former Congressman Tom Campbell formerly a candidate for Governor and now a U.S. Senate candidate

    The answer is YES, according to Flap’s fellow blogger William Bradley. But, first some background on Meg Whitman and her campaign tactics

    You remember the Flap between California Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner and Meg Whitman.

    GOP gubernatorial candidate Steve Poizner today said he has reported “threats” made by the Republican rival Meg Whitman’s campaign adviser to law enforcement officials.

    Poizner said at a press conference that Whitman campaign strategist Mike Murphy issued “crystal-clear” threats to his staff in an attempt to effectively “cancel the election” by pushing him to drop out of the race.

    “This is not an attempt to be hardball and to be aggressive, but this is an attempt to effectively manipulate the election process, the integrity of the election process, by issuing these threats behind the scenes to get me not to run,” he said.

    The campaign provided a copy of an e-mail in which Murphy asks an unidentified Poizner campaign consultant if there is any chance Poizner, who is trailing Whitman in the polls and in campaign funds, will reconsider his run.

    The e-mail, provided by the campaign to reporters and in a letter to law enforcement officials, says the Whitman camp can spend $40 million “tearing up Steve if we must.”

    “I hate the idea of us each spending $20 million beating on the other in the primary, only to have a damaged nominee,” Murphy wrote, according to the e-mail.

    In the e-mail, Murphy offers that the campaign could “unite the entire party behind Steve right now to build a serious race” for U.S. Senate in 2012.

    In a letter sent to the FBI, U.S. Attorneys Office, Fair Political Practices Commission and state Attorney General Jerry Brown, Poizner also claims Murphy told a senior adviser that the campaign would “put (Poizner) through the wood chipper” if he did not drop out of the race.

    So, Poizner has accused Whitman of trying to force him out of the race by threats and then an enticement (helping him run for U.S. Senate in 2012 against Senator Diane Feinstein. Here is some video:

    Whitman strategist send e-mail saying he would use $40 million to “tear up Steve” if he did not drop out.

    With this as background, now the question is what did Meg Whitman offer Tom Campbell to drop out of the race for Governor and leave the field to Meg and Poizner? Bill Bradley has the poop.

    While Whitman’s operatives employed coercion in their backfiring bid to get Poizner out of the race, they employed persuasion to remove Campbell from the equation. While consultant Mike Murphy played the heavy with Poizner, several sources say that another former consigliere for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bob White, the longtime chief of staff to former Governor and Senator Pete Wilson who now heads a powerful corporate consulting firm in the state capital, played the lead role for Whitman on the Campbell project. Wilson is Whitman’s campaign chair.

    In December, according to well-informed sources, Whitman operatives began trying to influence people in the orbit around Schwarzenegger to persuade Campbell to switch out of the governor’s race and into the Senate race. Campbell, whose varied career has included stints as a Stanford law professor and head of the UC Berkeley business school, had been the state finance director in the Schwarzenegger Administration.

    The blandishments for Campbell included the promise of new backing and help with fundraising.

    Campbell, though running relatively well in the polls for governor — and probably the most dangerous candidate for presumptive Democratic nominee Jerry Brown in a debate — had raised barely a million dollars. His only realistic hope of winning the Republican gubernatorial primary was to slide through if Whitman and Poizner savaged one another.

    In the Senate primary, he could start off in the lead with residual name ID from two earlier Senate runs. There he would face only one rich candidate, ex-Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, and far right Orange County Assemblyman Chuck DeVore.

    Campbell listened to this and began seriously mulling the prospect of switching races. He did just that last month.

    And when he made the move, he had newfound support.

    George Shultz, secretary of state in the Reagan Administration and secretary of the treasury in the Nixon Administration, was suddenly Campbell’s new campaign chair. Shultz put aside his differences with Campbell on abortion, gay rights, and the Middle East (Campbell is far less pro-Israel) in making the move.

    Campbell picked up a fundraiser, too. Kristin Hueter, a top Whitman fundraiser, made the move to the new Team Campbell. Hueter had previously worked for Schwarzenegger.

    When I reached him, Bob White acknowledged that he was involved in the effort to get Campbell to switch from the governor’s race to the Senate race. But he said that his role wasn’t as central as other sources said it was.

    White had been very involved in bringing former Secretary of State Shultz, now ensconced at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, into the Schwarzenegger orbit when the action movie superstar mounted his swiftly jury-rigged campaign for governor in the 2003 California recall election.

    White and his old boss, former Governor Wilson, who like Shultz is a Hoover Institution fellow, played a major role in bringing Shultz into one of the seminal events of Schwarzenegger’s career, his ballyhooed economic “summit” at an LA airport hotel. Schwarzenegger already had his longtime friend, Democrat Warren Buffett, on board, but needed a big name Republican. Shultz and Buffett co-chaired Schwarzenegger’s economic task force meeting behind closed doors, then played good-natured sidekicks on stage after at Schwarzenegger’s massively attended press conference, allowing themselves to be publicly dominated by the Hollywood showman. (That was the event at which Schwarzenegger chastised his longtime friend Buffett for musing in the Wall Street Journal that California’s Prop 13 needed to be changed, telling him next time that happened he’d have to do 500 sit-ups.)

    As a congressman, Campbell was an ally of then Senator Pete Wilson. As a state senator following his first race for the U.S. Senate in 1992, he was an ally of then Governor Pete Wilson. And, naturally, of Wilson chief of staff White.

    So, there is the connection between Meg Whitman, former Governor Pete Wilson, Bob White and Tom Campbell. Meg was clearing the Governor’s race primary field and Tom Campbell bit at the chance. No wonder prior to the Christmas holidays Campbell was almost non-chalant about switching to the Senate race (remembered he first denied it) and traveled to Panama for extensive Spanish lessons. When he returned after the first of the year, little movement was seen on the fuindriaisng front or PR front.

    Why?

    Meg Whitman and her supporters have promised Campbell campaign help and financing for his campaign.

    Now, is there anything wrong or illegal about this move?

    Probably not as Steve Poizner has found out although he handled Whitman’s clumslily handled clearing the filed strategy poorly. But, what about disclosure? Do California voters understand that Meg whitman is staking Tom Campbell in a U.S. Senate race?

    Probably not until Bradley’s piece aired.

    Even former San Francisco Mayor and long time Democrat California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown has weighed into the flap.

    I firmly believe now that Meg Whitman and her camp encouraged Campbell to exit the gubernatorial race – a move that greatly helped Whitman – in return for her help in his Senate bid.

    With Campbell out of the way, Whitman is all but skipping over the Republican primary fight with Steve Poizner and instead is concentrating on running against Democrat Jerry Brown in the fall.

    Her first TV ad, which went on the air last week, sets her up for that. It’s a high-gloss, positive ad that one usually doesn’t see until the general election.

    At this point, Poizner does not appear to know what do to. He tried making hay with Whitman consultant Mike Murphy’s e-mail threatening a $40 million media blitz against him, but it went nowhere. Poizner’s call for an FBI investigation was pure amateur-hour politics.

    If Poizner really wanted to cause some damage to Whitman, he should have reported it to the FBI, then leaked that the feds were running an investigation.

    Reporters would have called the FBI, the FBI would have said “no comment” the way it always does, the reporters would have taken that as confirmation that there really was an investigation, and Meg would have found herself in the hot seat.

    He didn’t, and now she is in the driver’s seat, with her new friend Campbell riding shotgun.

    Late this afternoon, I received an e-mail from the Carly Fiorina Senate Campaign regarding Meg Whitman’s involvement in the Senate race. The campaign is calling on the media to ask questions of Tom Campbell and Meg Whitman as to what promises have been made.

    The questions:

    • What did Tom Campbell know and when did he know it?
    • What conversations did he have with the Whitman campaign/Whitman’s supporters?
    • Was there some sort of quid pro quo in this situation?
    • And, last but certainly not least, what was he promised for jumping out of the Governor’s race?

    California voters have a right to have these questions answered and law enforcement has an obligation to investigate if any campaign finance laws have been broken (remember federal campaign law has different limitations). This may be “just politics” but the last time this pay-off scheme appeared in the race for Senate with Bobbi Fielder and Ed Davis, it ended in disaster for both and the Democrat Alan Cranston was re-elected.

    In 1986, Fiedler did not run for re-election to the House of Representatives, opting instead to make what proved to be an unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination to challenge Alan Cranston for his United States Senate seat. She was charged with political corruption in January 1986 after an undercover investigation allegedly showed that Fiedler offered a rival, State Senator Ed Davis, $100,000 to withdraw from the Republican senatorial primary. The charges were dismissed by the court before the matter went to trial. Despite the dismissal of the charges in February 1986, Fiedler garnered only 7.2% of the vote in the Republican primary.

    Stay tuned as this flap is about to expand…….