Carole Migden Is Back In The Legislature
Transcription
Carole Migden Is Back In The Legislature
100 100 CAROLE MIGDEN IS BACK IN THE LEGISLATURE 95 95 How long will she be charmed by Arnold Schwarzenegger? 75 75 by Randy Perry 25 25 5 5 0 0 A moment of levity while in her f inal year on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Carole Migden would become Assemblywoman Migden in a couple of months. (AP, 1996) 100 95 75 25 There is some agreement that New Yorkers and Californians are as different as the Golden Gate and Brooklyn Bridges. The generalities are endless, from the brashness of New Yorkers to the laidback style of Californians. Because the basis for these perceptions is rooted in image, lore, conjecture, sports fans, and the arts, some competition between the coasts, and what we see in the movies and on television, the truth oftentimes gets lost. However, once in a while, you cross paths with a person who, like the bridges above, is a link to two worlds, usually because she was raised in one state and settled in the other. Newly elected California State Senator, Carole Migden, originally a New Yorker, and now a 35 -year San Franciscan, is one of these people. California Conversations met with Senator Migden in her new Capitol office. A white carpet, maybe eggshell white judging by the way we entered, had just been put down and the dark wood shelves behind the desk were still mostly empty. Carole Migden was sitting behind her desk. The diminutive senator has an electricity about her – some of it is the kind we call political charisma and some of it is the kind that runs through a chair. First impressions of the Senator are what we imagine to be pure New York; expensively dressed, meticulous, straightforward, precise, and naturally intense. Her reputation, of course, preceded the meeting. She would say she is focused. Others might say she is difficult. The bottom line is that she has the senate seat that belonged to Senator John Burton, the cofounder of the San Francisco political machine and former pro tempore of the Senate. It is the same seat that was coveted by Willie Brown, the self-described Ayatollah of the Assembly and two- term mayor of “The City.” Whatever people say, and she prompts extreme reactions from both allies and detractors, she is accomplished and powerful. Migden’s staff was attentive. She has a veteran team, and her chief of staff worked for the Senator in the Assembly and came back when Migden was elected by an overwhelming margin to the Senate. We expected to get a little of the bum’s rush. Surprisingly, we didn’t. The Senator turned out to be enjoyable company. In private, her humor is more evident. She leans forward when answering questions, which she does without hesitation while gesturing, laughing and, even with a cup of herbal tea, not bothering to hide a continual restlessness. 100 95 75 25 5 0 5 Spring 2005 PAGE 33 CAROLE MIGDEN Saturday, February 26, 2005 2:20:47 PM California Conversations 33 0 100 100 California Conversations: Where did you grow up? Carole Migden: Most people don’t have to ask. 95 75 CC: New York. CM: (smiles) I grew up in New York, New York, which was always a fine address, and frankly, I found it’s been a great asset to be a New Yorker as a politician, humanitarian, and a Californian. People like New Yorkers. They like to have a good time. New Yorkers seem to be folks of consequence and, you know, it’s the ‘you make it there, you can make it anywhere’ kind of thing. New Yorkers bring the moxy and the knowhow and the sensibility of New York to this fabulous landscape of opportunity in California. 25 5 0 CC: Your mother was French? CM: My mother still is. CC: (laughs) I guess so. Can you tell us about your family? CM: My father was a second -generation Jewish immigrant and grew up on the lower east side of New York. He was a stockbroker and a weisenheimer and a man of numerous opinions, a product of City College. He met my mother when he was an American soldier in WWII. My mother, incidentally, is self - taught in Spanish, too, in addition to English and German. We’re kind of a polyglot family. His mother, Grandma Migden, ran luncheonettes, and she said, “I don’t make the best, but I make the quickest sandwich on the lower east side.” So, the quickest sandwich is something that is always heralded, and I learned a work ethic and a can-do ethic from my family. After WWII my father became a Certified Public Accountant. My brother eventually went into business with him. CC: One brother? CM: I have an older brother who is a CPA. I have a younger sister who lives in Ohio. She has a fa ncy job. (playful) Yeah, let’s talk about those Migden sisters, wow! She’s the public utilities watchdog person in Ohio. CC: Are you two close? CM: You know, we’re close in that we’re similar, but again, we have lived apart, so I am close in that I care about people. I’m not close in that I don’t see them that much or we’re not on conversational tracks the same week. I take great spirit and strength (from them)…It’s not conventional, but there’s a closeness. 100 CC: Do you love them? CM: I love them. 95 CC: Was your family involved in politics in New York? CM: No. The fact is I’m one of the last sort of on-the-jobtraining kind of people. I didn’t get a PhD planning to be a political scientist. My parents weren’t particularly political. They certainly d id vote. I think they shifted 75 25 from libs to conservatives as they got older, not different from many. I really am a product of a vocal generation of great conviction and whether Abby Hoffman went on to sell brushes door-to- door or somehow there was a switch and some folks became entrepreneurial, the energy of social action has always felt to me the most pre-eminent of drives. Migden moved to California in 1970 with her boyfriend. They landed in San Francisco and were immediately immersed in the issues of the times. Migden is one of the first openly gay members of the Legislature and she tells a funny story about possibly ending the curiosity people in Sacramento have about her boyfriend, who later became her husband, by putting a cloth over a portrait of him and allowing colleagues and lobbyists to have one quick peek. 75 25 5 0 Carole enjoys the company of kids. (2002, Migden collection ) CC: What was happening in your life that made you decide to leave New York and move to California? CM: You know, it was the sign of the times, a harkening, an excitement about a cultural revolution in California. The year was 1970. We were pulsating, excited students. We were engaged. It was the era before “whatever” or “checking-out.” We didn’t even know what those terms meant. In 1971, I was a Haight Ashbury Medical Clinic employee who went on to work with schizophrenics. I got a Masters Degree at Sonoma State. So, I was essentially involved in the helping professions, and we were political as a consequence of who we were as young people in the world. We said free Erica (Eri ca Huggins), and free Bobby (Bobby Seale). We said no to the invasion of Cambodia. The nature of our generation was engagement. But we had the arrogance to believe we could change things, and we had the caring and, really, the sense of destiny. I think that period linked me to California. California was also receptive of the new frontier and many of us escapees landed here. That’s the wealth and the beauty of this state in its most unique diversity. 100 95 75 25 Migden and her boyfriend were married in San Francisco. 5 0 95 5 34 Spring 2005 PAGE 34 CAROLE MIGDEN Tuesday, March 01, 2005 1:13:06 PM California Conversations 0 100 100 95 75 25 95 CM: Both of us worked in the Haight. I moved out here and we were kind of living together, then married, and separated after four years. That was 1975. He’s back in New York City as a journalist. He’s a terrific fellow. He has a wife who is an artist with her paintings in the Chase Manhattan Bank. CC: (laugh) Has your weight changed in forty years? CM: You know, like most hummingbirds, we kind of stay at the same weight. 75 Migden is a crusader for gay and lesbian rights and equality, including being the author of California’s original domestic partnership legislation. 25 5 5 CC: When did you come out, and how did it change your life fundamentally? CM: I came out in 1975. I think how it changed my life was suddenly being aware that I then became a little bit of a social outlaw, even in the glorified Bay Area. So, I realized I wasn’t everyone’s immediately preferred dinner partner, and that, coupled with my persona, gave me new and interesting perceptions. 0 Mayor Newsom, of San Francisco, marries Migden and her longtime partner, Cristina Arguedas. CC: Were you a flower child? CM: I was a little post flower child. I was a little too persnickety to be a flower child, because I always wanted my flowers pressed (laughter). CC: How did you avoid the excesses of the ’60s? CM: All you have to do is look at me. I’ve always been caffeinated, fast-talking, up in the morning… I’ve always been a fairly disciplined person with a purpose. I did drug rehab work, the work that makes people say someone’s a bleeding heart, which I don’t understand, but I believed that I ought to have some good public service component to a life I lead. I always voted. I never burned a card or a book or a bra. I would say I skittered along some fringes of small, serious activism, but I took from it the commitment to make life better for people. Maybe I was explosive in personality, but not deed. What I took from the ’60s, in hindsight, is to look at some of the messages that were in the movement. You know, we could spruce them up and they still hold as needing attention. 0 CC: How did your family and ex-husband handle your coming out? CM: Yeah, immediately everyone’s shaking their heads and wondering, “Where do we assign blame?” And not too long afterwards, well, there’s the normalizing and a stabilization, and renewal. My mother and father ended up being terribly proud of me. CC: If you were 20-years-old now, and you were coming to this new life, “escaping” to this new world, would you have come out earlier? CM: Well, I was 25 or 26 when I came out. There were a couple of years that got lost that I might have done differently. Being straight clearly wasn’t my real natural identity, but the label I used was also a byproduct of the times as we all kind of grew to adjust to our own independence. “I’m not dazzled by movie stars, particularly.” 100 95 75 25 Even then I loved to read (Migden was an English major at Delphi University before moving to California). If you asked me what I do in the Capitol hours when a lot of us are marooned and we’re away from home, I like to converse and be collegial…I love to just fluff up pillows, read a book and have a cup of tea. CC: Is that how you relax? CM: I go to the gym. I like to go to movies. I like to read books. When talking with most elected officials, they usually speak of mentors, or persons in their lives who were influential. Migden credits life itself for being her guide. CM: You know, I’m more of an everyman’s kind of person and everywoman’s kind of person… you can’t help but admire people who have the courage to step out and do something unusual or difficult or different in the midst of a regular life – and not a rich or famous life. What worries me most is the adherence to conformity, that if you hear anybody’s name, it’s because they said something different – that it is automatically vilified with all the “I gotchaisms.” It used to be that we wanted an honest exchange of different ideas. That is what I hope to bring here during my time in the Senate. 100 95 75 25 5 0 5 Spring 2005 PAGE 35 CAROLE MIGDEN Thursday, March 03, 2005 12:50:33 PM California Conversations 35 0 100 100 A member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, Migden won a seat in 1996 to the California State Assembly. After being termed -out she ran successfully for one of five spots on the Board of Equalization (California’s tax board) and then cleared the field – a major feat for a non-incumbent seeking a legislative seat from the Bay Area – and was elected in November to the State Senate. The seat belonged to John Burton, who has held elective office in San Francisco since the early ’60s and is a longtime, close friend of Willie Brown, who wanted to return to the Legislature. There is a story, perhaps apocryphal, but close enough to Burton’s humor and disposition to tell - that he once said he had two goals in life – to throw a football like Joe Namath and to sleep with Carole Migden…Migden told him to buy a football. 95 75 25 5 0 and left then sitting Governor Gray Davis without a job, there is no question that the environment in the Capitol hallways has changed. With Migden in the state legislature for the final part of the Pete Wilson administration, and the beginning of Gra y Davis’ tenure, many Capitol insiders are wondering how Migden will handle working with Governor Schwarzenegger. CC: Senator John Burton was charmed by Governor Schwarzenegger. CM: Yes. 95 75 25 5 0 75 25 5 0 CC: Are you the same way? CM: You know, I admire the Governor. CC: I guess the real CC: Were you John question is, do you Burton’s choice to expect to be as charmed replace him for Senate? by Schwarzenegger as CM: You know, I don’t Burton was? know. He has great CM: I’m not dazzled by affection for me, and I for movie stars, particularly. him, and I don’t think he I admire the Governor as is disappointed in my a self-made man who victory. Good evidence of came to this country years that is the 150-pound ago, and created not just cappuccino machine personal acceptance, but a outside my door (a gift real social phenomenon, from Burton). Now, fitness and gyms, and so whether it makes as good on. One has to tip one’s a cappuccino as John hat to a visionary and a made for the Governor, I successful promoter and Relieved, and deserving a laugh, Migden celebrates Governor Davis' don’t know if we’re going entrepreneur. There are signature on her domestic partnership legislation. (AP, 2003) to put it through the test. many appropriate labels. He certainly had longstanding friendships with other So I give him his due. I understand his bedazzling and speculative candidates, and I think he wisely stood on the immediate success as a political figure. I do think it will side and counseled from the sidelines. be a little more sobered environment this year, and that celebrity is kind of beside the point. We’ve got a new CC: Willie Brown? finance director who is talking about painful issues. We CM: Willie and I didn’t have much to do with each other Dems are going to want different solutions. over the last couple of years. There may have been some campaign reasons for that, but I’m happy to stay connected CC: What do you see as a difference between you and with the Mayor. I think he’s enormously talented. Schwarzenegger, either personally or professionally? CM: I think that I am a little more blunt and forthright. The CC: Did Willie ask you not to run? Governor talked about being against autopilot spending, CM: No, he once told me that he was running and I think but he began the aut opilot spending with this after-school he thought I would step aside. And I told him, no, I’m program. The Governor talks about wanting certain kinds running. of free markets and business protections, but he campaigned to give iron clad fiscal deals to counties with While we had more questions about Willie, the Senator no accountability. There’s just a lot of flip - flopping and, chose instead to be gracious and respectful of Mr. Brown. dependence upon the vagaries of the daily press, as to what She did not cut us off, but she made it clear that she would seems to be the order of the day. This kind of autopilot prefer to honor the service Mr. Brown provided to spending that Tom Campbell is talking about, didn’t the California rather than talk about a campaign that is Governor borrow to create the autopilot spending last behind her. year? We’ll have t o pay eleven cents on the dollar for the rest of our lives just to pay off the debt. I want to stand up With the election of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in for the parents, and the kids and grandchildren. October of 2003, the recall election that rocked the nation, 100 95 100 95 75 25 5 36 Spring 2005 PAGE 36 CAROLE MIGDEN Tuesday, March 01, 2005 1:16:19 PM California Conversations 0 100 95 75 25 5 0 100 CC: Have you ever sat down and spoken with Governor Schwarzenegger? CM: I’ve said hello, but we h aven’t had that much contact yet. He didn’t really see all that much of me as a BOE member, but we certainly had cordial contact. CC: What do you view as different in the Capitol since you came back? CM: Well, there’s a little less of the freewheeling, CC: Why hasn’t Bush paid Arnold back? CM: I mean what’s going on? We’re vulnerable because of our access and the exposure. California is really a very vulnerable part of the country. The first thing I’m going to ask is why aren’t we getting back our fair share of federal spending. The President thinks he can ignore us because we are the ultimate blue state. Our Republican governor needs to use his charisma and clout to change that. 95 75 25 95 75 25 5 0 “…being chair of Appropriations means you become the repository of everyone’s disappointment.” anything goes, because we had the house in the high times of surpluses, and money to spare. There’s a sobriety that comes with toughness and a little bit of being subdued associated with that. I believe we have a little more evenhandedness within the caucuses, with no oversized personalities that may be dominating to the extreme. It may lead to better “member development” and institutional development. I think we’re not dewy -eyed about the new Governor. I think everyone was kind of pixilated in the beginning, but remember, here is a guy that said he is going to go to New York (Republican convention) to just do his duty, instead he rocked the house. Here’s a guy that said, “I’ll pick one state to campaign in”, and it was Ohio on the weekend before the election that he pulled out all stops and headed a stampede for Bush that led to the White House. What do I think? Where’s California’s money for the payback? I want them (the press) to be writing about that, rather than repeating rhetoric about autopilot spending. 100 people?” That is my only mantra. Can we rebuild the economy? What’s predominant to me is will the legislation in front of me do some fiscal good or help people or make sure for kids the schools are strong? I think we’ve got to give some latitude to the locals where it is deserving, because there is no cookie-cutter approach. My message is to not oversimplify the complexities of a big state, of a North/South dynamic, of a term-limited Legislature, of a movie star governor, of no value anymore on pretty much anything but money. CC: After dealing with federal funding are there issues that are litmus tests for you? CM: I think I want to get away from the extreme polarization. How did Betty Crocker say you make a cake? You take a little flour, you leaven the flour, you add a little sugar and those are the ingredients. How do you make a sound and stable fiscal budget? I hope we’re trying to say, “Do the legislative efforts help do some good, help solve the budget problems, help take care of CC: Would you like to be governor? CM: I don’t think, you know, a personality like me will aspire to that role. I don’t mind being a muckraker. You make a choice between being loved or being effective. And I’ll choose effective. I’ve had the privilege to serve in different positions. If you’d said to me I was going to be on the Board of Equalization forever, I might not have been happy, but I had to get that personal experience. If I can give just a little bit of connection to Northern and Southern Californians and people of color and gays while reassuring Joan Didion’s California, then in eight years I’ll have done quite a lot. If that makes me suitable to look to something else, I’ll be pleased to. When Carole Migden was in the State Assembly, she ran the powerful Appropriations Committee, which heard all the bills with any significant fiscal impact. Her well earned reputation was of a tough, no-nonsense chair, with a very quick and heavy gavel, rarely allowing statements longer than simply “oppose” or “support.” Her hometown newspaper used words like spitfire and frenetic to describe her. The stereotypical New York abruptness in her personality was prevalent. Her style, however, was not gratuitous or selective. She cut off legislators, lobbyists, members of the public and her own colleagues on the committee with equal impunity. It was a gruffness that allowed her to reduce the Appropriations’ hearings from a marathon experience of sometimes several days, to getting the business done in a single long morning. Her sharp comments, often caustic and dismissive, were the source of enormous comment in the Capitol offices. As a newly elected Senator, Migden has been given the chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee. The appointment is an acknowledgement of her skills and her power within the Senate Democratic Caucus. 100 CC: When you first came up, you had staff turnover. Have you resolved that? CM: I disagree. I don’t think I did. We had some folks in and some folks out, but in the main I think we’ve done kind of well. Four of my first seven hires are returning Migden staffers. And, like anything, it’s a personality thing. One comes to work here, and one works the 95 75 25 5 0 5 Spring 2005 PAGE 37 CAROLE MIGDEN Wednesday, March 02, 2005 9:09:56 PM California Conversations 37 0 100 100 8 hours, and at the end, one wants to get something done. I’m not for everybody, but if you really want to say you’ve got an opportunity to get something done that is real and lasting for people, and maybe have the toughness and perseverance to do it, it’s a darn good job and we have a lot of fun while we work together. We don’t just occupy the job here. We get the results. 95 75 25 When asked about personal issues, Migden is quick to point out that she looks at things in terms of four -year and eight-year goals. She quickly states that being able to reach kids who are in need and helping families are important goals. CM: I want to do more to reach kids that are now getting the short shrift. I’m thinking of the families eligible for “Healthy Families” money, which California returns to Washington each year, because w e don’t use it. So the question becomes how can we really engage and get health care for the kids, where the fathers work, and the mothers work at McDonalds? I say if I can get McDonalds and Carl’s Jr. and others to give out “Healthy Family” money, that’s a way to get the kids insured. So, one thing, and it will take me eight years to do it, is to get the minimum wage employer involved in helping give out health care to kids. CC: Even when someone comments on you cutting them off they never make the comment that you can’t run a committee. CM: It’s a little bit of a requisite of what it takes to do a job. Sometimes it’s a little bit of “get out of the way,” but Patrick (Senator Patrick Johnston, a former chair of Appropriations) and I used to talk about this, because it falls to the chair to kill everyone’s bills. The Speaker or the Pro Tem says to a legislative member, “ I love your bill.” Then they come to us and say, “Kill the bill.” The member thinks they got the bill, and I can’t say I’m pulling your bill because they said to, so I have to take the rap. I Senator Migden was unabashed in her admiration and guess what I’m saying is that fully inherent with being love for her longtime partner, Cristina Arguedas. They chair of Appropriations is were married in a that you become the private ceremony repository of everyone’s conducted in the disappointment. There is office of Mayor something inherent in the Gavin Newsom on role that puts you on a February 20, 2004. little bit of a disquieting footing with some. That CC: So this college is the job. It is my job to lesbian stage say, “I’m sorry Senator, you’ve been going we can’t do that at this through, are you time,” and to take the hit finished with it yet? for the leadership CM: No. (laughs) It decision, or to just say we is deep-seeded. My can’t get it done in this partner, Cris, is the time frame. But, what one, and actually you’ll never hear is “She you should be doing said she’s going to give it a profile on her. to me, and she didn’t” or, She’s a criminal Migden and former senator, John Burton (2003, Migden collection) “I can’t believe what defense lawyer, and happened with the votes we have been there.” together for twenty years. She is successful in what she 5 0 CC: Is your approach of always being tough a shtick at times, this kind of…. CM: (laughs) Get a joke out… CC: No, (laughs) what we’re trying to say is do you play off other people thinking of you as being difficult? CM: No, but I guess it also comes with the territory. You’ve got to be a little bit of a character to be able to wield the gavel. I like to have people laugh. I want them to be comfortable. I want to disarm them. We also want to make sure that our arrogance quota is kept intact. So I try a little bit to shake things up, to take the excessive abuse of formality and regularize things a little bit. 100 95 75 25 75 25 5 0 does, whether it is defending an unknown client or Kobe Bryant. We have these two powerful personalities, and really we just want to go to the movies and split a bag of popcorn. CC: Are you happy? CM: Happy? I think so, to the extent of which an obsessed New Yorker, constantly- on -the-move kind of gal can be. I feel pretty good. CC: You go home at night, you sleep well, and you’re satisfied? CM: I’m trying to help people, and I think I do that. So, I feel I’ve got a virtuous job and an opportunity to do some good. There is nothing more fulfilling than that. 5 0 95 100 95 75 25 5 38 Spring 2005 PAGE 38 CAROLE MIGDEN Saturday, February 26, 2005 3:07:58 PM California Conversations 0