IN
THE NEWS - California Recall Election
By Cynthia Kirk
This is Bob Doughty with In the News, from VOA
Special English.
Voters in California will decide Tuesday whether
to remove Governor Gray Davis from office. If he is recalled, public
opinion studies(民意调查)show the leading candidate to replace him
is actor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Mr. Davis is a Democrat, Mr. Schwarzenegger
is a Republican. The two have been going city to city in a final effort
for votes. Both are leading television campaigns critical of each other.
Yet the two men are not really opponents on
the ballot(投票)Tuesday. Mr. Davis is the
only name on the first question. Voters are asked to decide if the governor
should stay in office or be recalled. He needs fifty-percent of the
votes plus one to stay.
The second question asks voters who support
the recall to choose a replacement. One-hundred-thirty-five candidates
are listed. One of them is Mr. Schwarzenegger. Another is Lieutenant
Governor Cruz Bustamante. He is considered the leading Democratic candidate.
If Mr. Davis is recalled, the candidate with the most votes will become
governor.
Republicans worry that another Republican on
the ballot, state Senator Tom McClintock, could take votes away from
Mr. Schwarzenegger. Mister McClintock, however, was refusing to withdraw.
Republican Congressman Darryl Issa financed the recall effort. He said
he would urge people to vote "no" on the recall unless one
of the Republicans withdrew to avoid splitting the vote.
Opinion studies show that a majority of Californians
want to recall Governor Davis. Many people say they are unhappy with
the way he has dealt with a budget crisis. California has the largest
population in the country and one of the largest economies in the world.
Critics of the recall effort say it is an undemocratic
way to try to remove an elected governor from office. Mr. Davis is in
his second term. He says the recall is a Republican effort to seize
power in California and possibly other states.
Eighteen of the fifty states permit special
elections to recall the governor. Six of those states say the governor
must be guilty of some wrongdoing. California is not one of them. It
has some of the easiest rules for recall elections.
Several civil rights groups tried to delay the
vote this Tuesday. They said there could be problems with older voting
machines in some areas with large numbers of minorities. Those efforts
failed.
In developments late this week, the Los Angeles
Times reported accusations by six women. They said Mr. Schwarzenegger
had touched them in a sexual way without permission. On Thursday he
apologized for having, in his words, "behaved badly sometimes."
He said he would be a "champion(支持者)for
women" as governor.
The Austrian-born actor also reacted to reports
that he once expressed praise for Adolf Hitler. Mr. Schwarzenegger said
he had no memory of such comments and that he hated the Nazi dictator.
In the News, from VOA Special English, was written
by Cynthia Kirk. This is Bob Doughty.
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