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Gov. Tries to Soothe GOP Discontent

At the opening of the state party convention, Schwarzenegger touts his conservative side and boldness. His pitches win over some.

February 25, 2006|Michael Finnegan and Robert Salladay, Times Staff Writers

SAN JOSE — Seeking to calm an uprising among conservatives, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger began sketching a rationale for his reelection for fellow Republicans on Friday by portraying himself as a bold leader who can rise above partisan squabbling to meet California's critical needs.

The governor reminded 650 Republicans of the times he has stuck to a conservative line: slashing the car tax, rejecting calls for higher income taxes, blocking a move to grant driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. But in a hotel ballroom dinner speech opening the state party's weekend convention, Schwarzenegger also confronted conservative outrage at his vast new public-works spending proposal, arguing to delegates that it fits Republican traditions dating to the Civil War.


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"We Republicans have a history of boldness," Schwarzenegger said in an address punctuated by frequent cheers and applause. "I love that. Abraham Lincoln struck down slavery. Teddy Roosevelt fathered the environmental movement. Dwight D. Eisenhower built the interstate highway. And Ronald Reagan tore down the wall and defeated communism.

"This is a time in California's history that calls for similar boldness."

Earlier, Schwarzenegger also tried to win over the party's rank-and-file in a series of private meetings to tout his proposed $222 billion in public construction projects, including schools, highways and prisons. In some cases, such as his speech to the California Congress of Republicans, he appeared to succeed.

"Maybe some of the members here needed to be reassured," said Carl Burton, the group's president. "If they did, he reassured them."

But signs of trouble for Schwarzenegger still abounded.

"Most of the conservatives are just depressed," said Jon Fleischman, a former executive director of the state party who now publishes a widely read blog on Republican politics. He called Schwarzenegger's construction plan a "massive spending proposal" that "doesn't excite a Republican grass-roots base."

"He's taking a leftward turn on fiscal issues," Fleischman complained.

The Young Americans for Freedom group took aim at Schwarzenegger in fliers showing his face superimposed on a photo of kidnapped heiress Patty Hearst holding a machine gun. The message: Schwarzenegger is a victim of the Stockholm syndrome, adopting Democratic ideology in the same way that she embraced the radical cause of her Symbionese Liberation Army kidnappers in 1974.

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