Proposition 23 Defeated: Big Climate Bootlegger and Baptist Coalition Win in California
Economist Bruce Yandle introduced the idea of Bootleggers and Baptists joining together in political and regulatory coalitions to advance policies to further their goals. Of course, their motivations differ. For example, in Yandle's model preachers demand alcohol prohibition to save their parishioners' souls while bootleggers want it to stay illegal so they can stay in business. We saw this phenomenon in its purest form when California drug prohibitionists and pot growers both came out against California's Proposition 19 which would have made recreational use of marijuana legal in that state. Alas, that coalition was successful on Tuesday.
But Proposition 19 was not the only ballot measure in California to spark the birth of a Bootlegger/Baptist coalition. Proposition 23 which would have delayed the implementation of California's A.B. 32, the Global Warming Solutions Act, faced just such a coalition of environmentalist Baptist and renewable energy rent-seekers.
Some background: A.B. 32 mandates that Californians emit no more greenhouse gases than they did in 1990 by 2020. That's a 25 percent reduction from current emissions.
Fearing that the ambitious plan to address global warming would raise energy prices and futher damage California's already faltering economy, a coalition of businesses came together behind Proposition 23. Prop 23 would have suspended implementation of A.B. 32 until the state's unemployment rate fell from 12.4 percent today back to 5.5 percent which is what it was when the bill was enacted in 2006.
The measure was defeated on Tuesday when 61 percent of voters in California cast their ballots against it. Apparently, some voters were swayed by the argument that Prop 23 was backed by millions from the nefarious out-of-state oil companies, Valero and Tesoro. Never mind that the campaign against Prop 23 outspent the proponents by 3 to 1.
So who were the Baptists and the bootleggers who worked together to defeat Prop 23? As the New York Times explains:
Prop 23 lost behind a coalition of environmental groups, clean-tech companies, Silicon Valley venture capitalists and hedge fund managers who all had a stake in seeing the statewide climate law, A.B. 32, continue its march toward implementation in 2012.
Now let an environmentalist Baptist speak:
Fred Krupp, president of Environmental Defense Fund, said the Prop 23 defeat sends "a big signal" to the rest of the country and the world that Californians stand firmly behind the law, which would cut greenhouse gas emissions in the state to 1990 levels by 2020. He called the level of cooperation between the fledgling clean-tech sector and environmental groups unprecedented, (emphasis added) giving the "No on 23" campaign the street muscle and the money it needed to prevail.
And Reuters cites the rent-seeking bootleggers:
"AB 32 is a stimulus for economic growth and innovation," said Tom Werner, chief executive of California-based solar panel maker SunPower Corp.
With Prop 23 defeated, SunPower will proceed with a plan to open a San Francisco-area manufacturing facility that will employ 100 people. It would have considered putting the factory in another state if Prop 23 had passed, Werner said.
Silicon Valley investors, who have heavily funded solar and wind energy, biofuels and electric cars, poured money into defeating Prop 23 in recent weeks. In total, the campaign raised more than $25 million.
Millions out of the pristine goodness of their hearts. Well, as H.L. Mencken once said, "Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard."
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Yay! More jobs for Texas.
Come and get 'em, boys!
We anxiously await those businesses that will flee California here in Louisiana.
Unfortunately, you'll also get California voters with it, which is like getting electoral AIDS.
Eh, Louisiana is pretty socialist to begin with, believe it or not.
It might take a century or more to undo the damage left by Long/Edwards and all of the other creeps.
Naw, that cain't be raht.
I'd hope the business owners would be a little more conservative then the workers they'd leave behind.
You might hope, but the workers will come to. And Southern states on the East Coast, as well as California's neighbors, are familiar with the process of left-leaning voters voting to destroy their own state's economy, leaving because the economy is bad, and then prompting voting to do the same things to their new state that made them leave.
Or us.
Wouldn't that be ironic. The anti-Grapes of Wrath.
Oklahomans hate that book
That conspiracy to have Pro 23 defeated has certainly worked - now, to receive all fleeing Californian jobs with open arms . . .
Well, I voted for it. Smog, fuck 'em.
That will be because the population will flee for their lives to leave only the same number of Californians as in 1990.
Re Mencken, wait until Gov. Moonbeam starts telling Californians they can only drive three days out of four.
What the fuck would happen to Cali if the weather sucked? Detroit?
worse
Sounds like a win for the rest of us, but we'll all end up paying for it as we funnel billions after billions worth of bailout money to support this lunacy.
At this point the best thing CA could do for the rest of the country both environmentally and economically is just start handing out the kool-aid.
This is the thing. If California was just going to fuck itself, I'd not care a bit--they'd have to learn eventually. But they're going to ask for bailouts, and they might get them.
And that's when they start to fuck the rest of us.
It is worse than that. California used to be a great source of economic growth. People in the rest of the country made money trading with California. It should be our healthiest and most vibrant state. Instead, it is Detroit with a better climate because of this shit. We are all poorer thanks to Californians.
At this point we need to make a trade, for every Mexican who comes to California, a native is exiled to Mexico. A new population is really the only hope for dumbfuckistan.
No not a native, the natives aren't the problem here. The carpet-bagging east coasters who moved into my formerly beloved state and fucked it all up should be exported to Mexico.
I stand corrected. Of course Mexico will never take the dumb bastards without threat of military action. And who can blame them?
Hear, hear. I'm fucking sick and tired of all this California is Detriot shit.
Unless Obama uses some of his "stash," that may prove to be difficult getting some dough out of the House. But, I concur. Cali is a great blueprint for how not to run a state.
Their only hope is to go broke and hit rock bottom. They are like a drug addict.
They only go all Jesus-y then.
Hey Epi,
Don't blame Cali for fucking the rest of the US if you all go along with the program.
CA is more greedy than lefty. The minute the rest of the US turns the screws, things will change, and fast.
I left too many true believers behind in CA to buy into that. It might be true for Orange County though.
That's really stretching the analogy. Rent-seeking is not the same as benefiting from an established black market.
The rent-seeking stems from advocating policies that create profitable black markets.
Still not making sense. The renewable-energy folks would be the ones who were selling legal goods. Benefiting by forcing everyone but yourself out of the legitimate market is still not the same as the benefit than a risk-tolerant, non-law-abiding dealer gets from being one of the few people willing to participate in a black market. For one major reason, in the former case, the rent-seekers are much more likely to share the ethical views of the prohibitionists, whereas it's implausible in the latter.
Re: cynical,
You're missing the point. Whereas bootlegging implies dealing in stolen goods, the rent-seeking part does not imply it, merely being the pushing of policies that ultimately deliver a non-market advantage on your goods or services, be it legal OR illegal - the legal status or good intentions of the "green" goods peddlers notwithstanding.
OM: Thanks.
Yes, but the article isn't "Baptists and Rent-Seekers", is it?
The strength of the Baptists and Bootleggers idea is in its counter-intuitive nature -- that people who, ethically, should find each other repulsive, can find common cause in prohibition. There's nothing that surprising about a coalition between Baptists and non-alcoholic beverage sellers to shut down booze sellers, or Baptists and family-friendly restaurateurs to shut down local taverns.
How about Baptists and beer and wine distributors?
Just because it's alcohol doesn't make the people in the legitimate market "bootleggers". People who would rather make criminals of their enemies/competitors is disappointing but expected, whereas people who would rather make criminals of themselves requires some explanation. Once people understand weird things like that, they're more likely to be able to spot Unintended Consequences from farther off.
That said, insofar as the absolute prohibitionists probably hate the selective prohibitionists (and vice versa), it's somewhat closer to the spirit of the analogy than an alliance between environmentalists and green energy producers, who would seem to be buddies even without the financial angle.
Smart people who are not in on the score have or will soon be leaving. That leaves people like Krupp who are smart but are there to steal and people like Tony and most of the rest of the 61% who are clinically fucking retarded and believe in a cargo cult.
California is doomed. At this point we should probably look at kicking it out of the country. Let it turn into Guatemala sooner rather than later.
Wrong. Keeping it and holding it accountable will accomplish much more.
I can see progressives, building large paper m?ch? office buildings. "These are the places where the jobs used to come from! If we build them, there will be jobs again!"
+100 That is great BP.
"There's dumb in them thar hills!"
That's really stretching the analogy.
The "bootlegger" in the clich? is a metonymy, not an analogy. It's made of stretchedness. Like, profitable criminality and rent-seeking are contiguous, y'know?
(Someone on is terminologically inexact on the internet!)
But, what about the green house gasses that leak across the Arizona border? Won't California have to put up a fence to keep those noxious gasses out?
Hey, as long as it keeps Kalifornians in...
I fucking hate this state.
By the way Reason, as if we California libertarians didn't have enough to lament with 19 failing, and all the other bullshit that passed/failed/got elected/etc., you have to go rub salt in our wounds by piling on California day. Fuck man, it burns so bad right now.
Sudden - I think you overlook the redistricting measure - which, if it spreads like the other CA diseases, could be a national electoral game-changer.
From Cali, or a transplant? I had about 5 or so friends from college end up in California. They all made a shit ton of money, loved the weather, said the women were hot, stuck up gold-digging bitches, and fled back to the east coast after about 5 years.
From Cali for all practical intents and purposes. Family moved around a bit as a kid, Kansas City, Chicago, Honolulu, but ended up in Cali since I was 9 and been stuck ever since. I wanna leave, desperately, but there are some complications that make it rather difficult.
Actually, I do have a buddy who is still there. He lives in Arcata, or could be in another city now. He lives a different lifestyle last I remember - he's a bit of a farmer, of the indoor variety. That's when he isn't kayaking. That was 2000, when I passed through. That place has a great aroma to it, until you get right up next to a resident.
What is people's problem with the term 'bootlegger'? It's someone who can take advantage of a market when more obvious mainstream participants are regulated out of it.
In fact, a couple weeks ago there was a piece on NPR about a battle in Washington which actually does pit Baptists against bootleggers...
I was waiting the whole time for them to say "Baptists and bootleggers" because I had never heard a more apt example of it. They didn't say it.
Once again: Californians are dumb as posts.
"AB 32 is a stimulus for economic growth and innovation," said Tom Werner, chief executive of California-based solar panel maker SunPower Corp.
If I ever meet this guy I will punch him in the throat.
He didn't say it was a net stimulus. It definitely stimulates his business.
I was driving through Santa Barbara and saw a sea of 'No on 23' signs on front yards. Funny thing is, those same houses seemed to all have big ass SUV's in the driveway. And by the size of them, I'm betting they also had multiple AC units per house. The disconnect in California is horrible.
I'm most worried about Cali's agri business. They've been hit hard the last couple of years, and the people there are hurting. Manufacturing has pretty much been driven out already. So you have tech/software, agriculture, and tourism.
I was reading a site the otherday that listed various facts about CA. I didn't confirm this, but it listed the top employers. The list was pretty sad. Here's a sample:
1. 32nd street naval station san diego
2.
3. UCLA Health System
4. UCLA
5. UC Davis
6. LA Sheriff
7. Nestle USA (Yay a private employer!)
8. UC San Francisco
9. Edwards AFB
10. UC Berkley
and so on. The list is dominated by government employers.
An old friend always lamented, "We're doomed." I always disagreed and tried to encourage optimism. Now I agree: We're doomed in Cali-land.
......driving Prius Hybrids and scolding the masses for having foul, wasteful habits.
Dicaprio, you Gore-Whore, you bet this song is about you.
sfui
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fdill;
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I'm confused about how the defeat of a proposition largely backed by Texan oil companies (http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/27/business/la-fi-hiltzik-20100727) by a coalition of environmentalists and start-ups is somehow a moral issue just because the oil companies were outspent. Of course, I guess the oil companies were just trying to help out California from the goodness of their own heart.
Valero is #1 ethanol producer.
AB 32 provides corporate welfare for Big oil and NGOs.
Corporate works both sides to win in the end.
Get food out of my gas.
Corn fuel ethanol stinks.