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As featured on p. 218 of "Bloggers on the Bus," under the name "a MyDD blogger."

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Welcome to Youngstown

California is starting to look more and more like the factory states in the 1980s after everybody pulled out.

California's deteriorating economy is demonstrated anew by a sharp jump in the state's unemployment rate to 6.8 percent in May.

The Department of Employment says 60,000 fewer Californians held jobs last month than in April, and 18,000 fewer than in May 2007. Unemployment, meanwhile, hit 1.3 million, up by 300,000 from May 2007.


That's an over 30% increase in the unemployed in just one year.

The paralysis of the state's government is slightly more manageable when job growth is expanding, sectors are booming and money is flowing into the coffers. When you have a dramatic downturn like this, government simply must have the flexibility to act. It actually needs that flexibility all the time, but in a downturn people suffer visibly from the structural stasis.

If the Democrats can use the Youngstown-ization of the state economy as a lever to argue for legitimate, long-lasting structural changes, they'd gather a lot of support. The LA Chamber of Commerce is talking about restoring the car tax, fercryinoutloud. The problem, of course, is that California's government is being held for ransom, in a bipartisan way, and it simply eliminates any opportunity for moving forward.

The backers of a package of bills to overhaul subprime lending regulations pointed to a deepening crisis that has put one of every 242 California homes into foreclosure in February, the second highest rate in the nation [...]

The package of subprime bills had been approved by the Assembly. But it hit rough waters Wednesday in the Senate banking committee, chaired by Sen. Mike Machado, D-Linden.

Machado has dealt with mortgage issues for years. His district is one of the national epicenters for foreclosures. But Machado is seen by some consumer advocates as overly sympathetic to the industry.

"The arguments he makes are certainly quite similar to those made by the industry folks we are negotiating with, and in many cases don't seem to put the protection of consumers at the forefront," Leonard said.


Machado isn't alone in being bought and paid for, of course. The lobbyists talk about "regulatory nightmares" that will stop anyone from getting credit and stunt job growth. They spend lots of money to ensure their argument will be heard. And they water everything down.

This is why we have a bitter, angry electorate. Democrats have the opportunity to channel that anger. But the universe of those who put their constituents first is narrow indeed. Broken government leads to broken lives.

Welcome to Youngstown.

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