Newsom takes bipartisan criticism after canceling 3 road projects
Eleven months after leading a successful campaign against a ballot measure that would have repealed fuel tax hikes approved by the Legislature in 2017, Gov. Gavin Newsom is facing bipartisan criticism over his administration’s decision to cancel three road projects in the Central Valley and San Luis Obispo County.This stuff is old hat.
Newsom has rejected the criticism that he had engaged in a “bait and switch” because he previously emphasized to voters in 2018 that at least 60 percent of the $5.2 billion generated annually by the 2017 tax hikes would go to roads and bridges, as specified in Senate Bill 1.
The con jobs cost money, foul the economy, but we know it so very well. Business had already started their exit procedure as soon as the ballot measure was proposed. The con is just part of governance in failed Hispanic states.
Corruption is the method of government. We knew Jerry Brown's tax hike was not temporary. We know that energy taxes go to subsidize the public sector. We know that Gavin will foul up the energy system as bad as Gray Davis. These are operating assumptions for business in California. Mostly business is governed by the estimate of when Calizuela fails, businesses want to be out by then. Here is the same discovery from another popular blog:
We, Too, Can Be a Failed Latin American State
The left’s enthusiasm for Third World immigrants isn’t only because they vote 8-2 for the Democrats. It’s that Latin American peasants seem uniquely amenable to idiotic socialist schemes.Middle America knows what a failed Latin state looks like. Middle American wants no part of it, Gavin and Kamala have no future in national politics.
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