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Bill Lockyer
32nd State Treasurer of California
Assumed office
January 8, 2007
GovernorArnold Schwarzenegger
Jerry Brown
Preceded byPhil Angelides
30th Attorney General of California
In office
January 4, 1999 – January 8, 2007
GovernorGray Davis
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Preceded byDan Lungren
Succeeded byJerry Brown
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 14th district
In office
1973–1982
Preceded byRobert W. Crown
Succeeded byJohan Klehs
Personal details
Born (1941-05-08) May 8, 1941 (age 83)
Oakland, California, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseNadia Lockyer (2003–present)

William Westwood "Bill" Lockyer (born May 8, 1941) is an American politician. He is the now the 32nd State Treasurer of California, elected in 2006 and re-elected in 2010. He has also served as California Attorney General and President Pro Tempore of the California State Senate. Lockyer, who has held elective office since 1973, is not able to run for a third term as Treasurer in 2014, due to term limits in California.

Described by journalistic observers as one of California's most "colorful" politicians, Lockyer has long been known to speak with a frankness that has occasionally caused political embarrassment.[1][2]

Early life and career

Lockyer attended the University of California, Berkeley, graduating with a BA in Political Science in 1965. While in school, Lockyer founded the Cal Berkeley Democrats.[citation needed] His first job was a public school history teacher.

Lockyer began his political career as a School Board member of the San Leandro Unified School District, as chair of the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, and California coordinator of Senator George McGovern's 1972 campaign for the Presidency.

Personal life

Lockyer has been married since April 2003 to attorney Nadia Lockyer. He has been married twice before. He has an adult daughter who is an attorney for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and a son born in 2003. He and his current wife Nadia live in Hayward, California.

Nadia Lockyer

Nadia Lockyer was formerly a member of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors. She resigned in 2012, after controversies regarding chemical dependency and an affair, and accusations, later rescinded and then reasserted by Mrs. Lockyer, of Mr. Lockyer having supplied her with drugs.[3] [4][5] [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]. Some aspects of these issues were referred to and are currently being reviewed by CA Attorney General Kamala Harris.

Legislative career

Lockyer first won a State Assembly seat in a Special Election of September 4, 1973, following the accidental death of the Bay Area Assemblyman Robert W. Crown who was his political mentor. He served in the Legislature for the next twenty-five years, more than half that time in the State Senate, where, in 1994, he was chosen by his peers to be President Pro Tem, the most powerful position of the upper legislative house.

In his spare time, Lockyer attended law school classes in Sacramento and received a law degree from the McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific.

Within the California Legislature, Lockyer was considered only mildly eccentric - a voracious reader with a yen for junk food and a lifelong aversion to green vegetables, a mercurial temperament he schooled himself to bring under control, and a wry sense of humor that won him close friends on both sides of the partisan aisle.[citation needed]

As a legislator, Lockyer was generally acknowledged to be a hard-working and masterful consensus-builder and negotiator.[citation needed] Long-time Speaker of the Assembly Willie Brown stated in a 2009 interview that, by the time Lockyer left the Legislature in 1998, "Capitol insiders took his prolific effectiveness for granted." [14]

Environmental protection legislation and the Bay Trail

As a freshman legislator in 1974, Lockyer wrote the first legislation to provide state funding for emergency oil spill decontamination. During his legislative career, he wrote other progressive environmental laws, including the first state regulation of trucks hauling toxic substances on California roads and highways, which preceded federal policies adopted by the EPA. He was a close ally of environmental pressure groups like the Sierra Club and the Planning and Conservation League, backing their candidates for appointment to the Coastal Commission[citation needed] and opposing Republican appointees to the Air Quality and Water Board whom he believed to be biased toward industrial de-regulation.[citation needed]

Lockyer considered his signature environmental achievement to be his 1987 bill to create a Bay Trail,[citation needed] which he envisioned as an eventual 500-mile-long hiking and cycling path, a continuous recreational corridor, with adjacent bayshore parks and protected natural habitats, that would entirely encircle San Francisco and San Pablo Bays. Requiring city, county and regional cooperation, the Bay Trail marked its 20th year in 2009 with 293 miles so far open to hikers, bicyclists, joggers and walkers.[15][16]

1984 "hate crimes" legislation

In 1984, Lockyer sponsored the State's first "hate crimes" legislation which, as later amended, provided that "no person...shall by force or threat of force, willfully injure, intimidate, interfere with, oppress, or threaten any other person in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him or her by the Constitution or laws of this state or by the Constitution or laws of the United States because of the other person's race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, disability, gender, or sexual orientation, or because he or she perceives that the other person has one or more of those characteristics." Later, as Attorney General, Lockyer was responsible for coordinating enforcement of this statute by local law enforcement. [17]

1987 tort reform "napkin deal"

On September 10, 1987, while Lockyer chaired the State Senate Judiciary Committee, he and Speaker of the Assembly Willie Brown met at a restaurant in Sacramento with representatives of bitterly competing special interests - insurance companies, trial lawyers, doctors and manufacturers - to formalize their agreement to "the most sweeping changes in California's civil liability laws in decades".

After many days of painstaking negotiations, these warring interests had accepted a compromise bill that included "a drastic restriction in product liability laws offset by fee increases for lawyers prosecuting medical malpractice cases. Doctors got promises that protections already in place against lawsuits would not be touched. Insurance companies won a reprieve from threatened regulations gaining momentum in the Legislature." This compromise had already been worked out; the dinner was meant to ratify a future "peace pact" among all the concerned parties to abide by the compromise.

Lockyer, who had acted as mediator during the earlier negotiations, scribbled the terms of the "pact" on a restaurant cloth napkin, and so ended a political war.[citation needed] The compromise bill was then ramrodded through the Assembly and State Senate on the last night of that year's legislative session, and was signed into law by Republican Governor George Deukmejian. [citation needed]

The "napkin deal" became legendary in the State Capitol[citation needed] - though the legend grew to mistakenly confuse the long negotiations with the final culinary act of peace-making.[citation needed] Proudly reproducing the original napkin on a poster titled "Tort-Mania 1987", Lockyer and Brown regarded the special interests compromise and conciliation they had arranged as a great legislative accomplishment. "The public is better served", Lockyer said at the time, "when these groups are trying to mend rather than tear the fabric of society".[18]

1997-1998 "welfare reform" budget

Federal legislation signed by President Clinton in 1996 required California to enact “welfare-to-work” legislation to help welfare recipients move from government assistance to employment and “self-sufficiency”. The resulting establishment of a new CalWORKs (California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids) program had a major effect on the State budget, propelling difficult negotiations between the Democratic Legislature and conservative Republican Governor Pete Wilson.

As Senate President Pro Tem, Lockyer was involved in these private negotiations, which, he later recalled to journalist Daniel Weintraub, produced the State's “last... old-fashioned balanced budget.”[19]

1997 tax cut "mega-deal"

One month after the budget was passed and signed by the Governor, Lockyer was the key Democratic negotiator of a bi-partisan tax "mega-deal", a six-bill package that included a billion-dollar income-tax cut for middle class Californians by increasing the dependents credit over a three year-period.[20]

State Attorney General

Lockyer felt his large staff of some 2000 attorneys, and the entire state Department of Justice, had to be radically restructured and reinvigorated - first, to modernize the relationship between the Attorney General and the California law enforcement community. Having grown up in the Berkeley 'Sixties atmosphere of anti-police rhetoric, he now found himself called the State's "Top Cop". Lockyer provided new technical support services for all of the State's 90,000 law enforcement officers, including those in neglected smaller departments.[citation needed] He also insisted on attending memorial services for every officer in the State who was killed in the line of duty.[citation needed]

At the same time, Lockyer steered the Justice Department to a new legal activism that reflected his liberal values in such areas of litigation and regulation as civil rights and anti-trust enforcement and consumer and environmental protection. He became one of the two most prominent state Attorney Generals in the nation, rivaled in media attention only by New York's Eliot Spitzer. The two men were personal rivals as well, once nearly coming to blows after "screaming expletives at each other" at a Los Angeles convention of the National Association of Attorneys General.[21] That organization elected Lockyer its President in 2003. Lockyer was popular among the other AGs,[citation needed] and respected for his legal initiatives.[citation needed]

As Attorney General, Lockyer sometimes had to defend official positions he found personally objectionable, such as defending a state employee accused of sexual harassment;[citation needed] or, in 2004, asking the courts to invalidate San Francisco same-sex marriage licenses which conflicted with State law, though Lockyer personally supported gay marriage.[citation needed]

Sometimes the positions Lockyer defended matched his own, such as when he defended California's 1996 legalization of medical marijuana against federal attacks by the Bush Administration. Lockyer found this particularly satisfying as he had come to strongly support "compassionate use" of Marijuana after living through his mother's and younger sister's deaths from leukemia.[22]

Lockyer was unable to run for a third term in 2006 due to term limits and was succeeded by Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown.

Sex offenders, DNA testing, bullet coding

An avowed technophile,[citation needed] Lockyer found different quandaries while directing his Department to give new high technology support to law enforcement agencies.

His predecessor had actively promoted legislation aimed at curbing sex crimes,[citation needed] notably California's version of "Megan's Law", which required authorities to make publicly available registration information provided to local Police by former child molesters, rapists and others sex offenders after being released from custody. But the public could only access this information about registered sex offenders living in their communities by visiting a Police station or calling a 900 toll-line number, until Lockyer sponsored legislation requiring the data to be posted on a public website.[citation needed] Less than 90 days after the bill was signed into law,[citation needed] the website was running, listing personal details about more than 60,000 past sex offenders, together with an interactive map that allowed users to search their neighborhoods. The website accessed by 27 million users in 18 months. However, it faced complaints that the information was outdated;[citation needed] that there were too many restrictions on use of the information by employers, landlords, schools and insurance agents,[citation needed] or, as the ACLU contended, too few restrictions to protect the civil liberties of those who had already paid their debt to society.[23][24]

Similar problems followed from a bio-tech achievement of which Lockyer was especially proud[citation needed] - expansion of State Crime Lab facilities to process DNA genetic samples taken from convicted felons, aiming to create the largest state-run DNA criminal data-bank in the country. Law enforcement officials said this would be a boon to solving a growing backlog of often "cold" investigations of violent unsolved crimes. But the lab soon developed its own massive backlog, with tens of thousands of unprocessed and non-prioritized DNA samples languishing in refrigerators, still to be placed in the offender database.[citation needed] A voter-approved measure of 2004 that allowed police to gather DNA, not just from convicted violent criminals, but from anyone arrested, even without charge or conviction, for any felony, violent or otherwise, led Lockyer himself to express reservations. "I personally wouldn't have put arrests in the measure," he said, adding that he would also have made it simpler for innocent people to get their information removed from the files - a complaint of civil libertarians who raised the specter of innocent people being kept in the same database as convicted armed felons.[25][26]

After a Seattle company unveiled a new technology for "coding" individual bullets, Lockyer sponsored the first legislation in the country which would have required all handgun (but not rifle) ammunition sold in California to be engraved with a unique serial identification number. "We are losing too many of our young people to seemingly random shootings and anonymous killers," said Lockyer. The bill "will strip criminals of their anonymity and give law enforcement evidence it can use to quickly and effectively solve more gun crimes." The National Rifle Association and other gun rights groups - already at odds with Lockyer over enforcement of State prohibitions against semi-automatic rifles - strongly condemned the plan, saying criminals could easily obtain unmarked ammunition and that the whole process would create a costly enforcement bureaucracy. Manufacturers also opposed the measure as economically disastrous, since the engraving machines would cost up to half a million dollars each and would make virtually obsolete tens of millions of dollars in existing manufacturing equipment. The bill died in the Legislature.[27][28]

2000-2001 California energy crisis

Of the many actions taken by Lockyer's staff against corporate fraud and malfeasance, the most prominent were related to the California Energy Crisis that began in the summer of 2000, marked by rolling blackouts, brownouts and the billions of dollars in price hikes that appeared on consumers' electrical bills.

It later emerged that the "crisis" stemmed in part from illegal practices by energy corporations such as the now-defunct Enron.[citation needed] The exposure of these hidden offenses began in August 2000 when Lockyer created an Energy Task Force to launch the State's first investigation of alleged price gouging by power companies.

The Wall Street Journal scoffed at million-dollar rewards offered by the Attorney General's office for information about illegal conduct by energy powers, dismissing the allegations as unsupported by clear evidence.[29] But such probes eventually led to some five billion dollars in brokered settlements by Enron and a half dozen other corporations which admitted[citation needed] to "gaming" the State's deregulated energy system.

Enron and prison-rape remark controversy

As Attorney General, Lockyer was incensed[citation needed] by what he believed to be inequities in the legal system that allowed financial and corporate malefactors to escape punishment entirely, or at worst, to be incarcerated in minimum-security, "Club Fed" facilities.

During the Enron scandal of 2001 which led to the then-largest corporate bankruptcy in American history, Lockyer achieved some notoriety for his public quip, "I would love to personally escort Ken Lay [Enron CEO Kenneth Lay] to an 8-by-10 cell that he could share with a tattooed dude who says, 'Hi, my name is Spike, honey'". Intended to be an off-color comment on the impunity of white collar criminals,[citation needed] this remark was instead widely condemned as an endorsement of prison rape.[30][31] Lockyer later apologized for the statement in a letter to the Los Angeles Times, saying, "My anger over the activities of energy barons doesn't come close to my lifelong outrage at the crime of rape. ... I guess I let my anger get the better of me..."[32]

(Lay later died of a heart attack, before he could serve any time in prison.)

Auto industry global warming lawsuit

On September 20, 2006, Lockyer filed a lawsuit against what his office referred to as "the big six automakers" for their alleged contributions to global warming. Initial reaction was mixed, with some environmental groups being supportive, and an auto industry trade calling it a 'nuisance suit'. A similar suit in New York had been dismissed by a federal court.[33]

The California suit was dismissed on September 17, 2007, with the court saying that "The adjudication of plaintiff's claim would require the court to balance the competing interests of reducing global warming emissions and the interests of advancing and preserving economic and industrial development."

Hewlett-Packard scandal

While Attorney General, in 2006, Lockyer and his staff conducted a criminal investigation into the Hewlett-Packard pretexting scandal to ascertain whether or not the investigators authorized by Chairman Patricia C. Dunn to discover the source of leaks from within the company illegally obtained the phone records of HP board members and journalists. Charges were subsequently brought against Dunn, which were dismissed by the court in 2007.[34][35]

2003 gubernatorial recall election

An initiative to recall newly re-elected Governor Gray Davis qualified for the ballot in July 2003, with a special election, scheduled for October, to include both a referendum on the recall itself and a list of candidates vying to replace Davis if the recall succeeded. With some arm-twisting by US Senator Dianne Feinstein, all the potential Democratic candidates, including Lockyer, agreed not to run, in the hope that this would strengthen Davis' campaign to defeat the recall.

At the start, it appeared that the strongest Republican candidate would be former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, who had unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for Governor the previous year. Lockyer, at the start of August, publicly warned Davis and his political consultants against a repeat effort to sabotage Riordan's candidacy by negative attack ads: "If they do the trashy campaign on Dick Riordan ... I think there are going to be prominent Democrats that will defect and just say, 'We're tired of that puke politics. Don't you dare do it again or we're just going to help pull the plug.'" [36]

Five days later, Arnold Schwarzenegger announced that he would run as a Republican in the recall election. Lockyer and Schwarzenegger had been casual friends since Lockyer's State Senate years, when the actor had chaired the Governor's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, and the two men had together toured charter schools in southern California. Later, Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante announced he would become the only prominent Democrat to place his name on the recall ballot.

On October 7, by a decisive vote, Davis was recalled, and Schwarzenegger was elected to replace him. Two weeks later, at a UC Berkeley post-mortem conference of the election, Lockyer announced that while he had voted against the recall, he had also voted for Schwarzenegger. He explained that "Arnold represented... hope, change, reform, opportunity, upbeat problem solving".[citation needed]

Despite some support from San Francisco radio talk show personality Ronn Owens, who hailed Lockyer's "courage" and "independence",[37] fellow Democrats and feminists reacted bitterly to Lockyer's surprise announcement.[citation needed]

2006 election

By a year into Schwarzenegger's governorship, Lockyer increasingly felt the governor's performance was disheartening, marked by inexperience, lack of strong political conviction, and personal braggadocio. In a 2005 interview, Lockyer criticized Schwarzenegger's leadership style as demonstrating an "arrogance of power" with the "odor of Austrian politics", alluding to the Austrian-born Governor's upbringing in a country with a "long history" of "elite...autocracy".[38]

Soon after the recall election, Lockyer began contemplating his own run for governor in the 2006 election. Inspired by discussions with futurist Peter Schwartz, he tried to lay the groundwork for a lofty, issues-oriented campaign.[citation needed]

In January 2005, while still Attorney General, Lockyer tentatively announced his candidacy for governor: "the one and only office that has held abiding interest for me since I left the Legislature... It's the job I want, not only because I think I'll be a great executive, but because I think that I can and will lead the best campaign you've ever seen, a winning Democratic campaign of ideas, ideals and inspiration to stake out a great future for California." [39]

Lockyer changed his mind four months later, sensing a lack of interest among voters.[citation needed] In June 2005, Lockyer announced he would instead run for State Treasurer. He was elected to that office in November 2006.

State Treasurer

Climate Change and Renewable Energy Finance Initiatives

As Treasurer (and ex officio trustee of CalPERS and CalSTRS, the two largest public employee pension funds in the United States) Lockyer tried to use the influence of his office in the aid of various environmental causes. These attempts included:

  • Expanding the "Green Wave" environmental initiative first proposed by Treasurer Phil Angelides in 2004 to a multi-billion dollar investment in renewable energy [40]
  • With statutory authority of the Treasurer's California Alternative Energy and Advanced Transportation Financing Authority (CAEATFA), exempting new "Zero Emission Vehicle" manufacturers, such as electric automobile startup Tesla Motors, from sales and use tax on the purchase of equipment used in California manufacturing.[41]
  • State purchase - the first by any governmental body in the US - of "Green Bonds" issued by the World Bank to finance Climate Change projects in developing countries [42]
  • Providing a $48 million loan guarantee program to help California truckers comply with new diesel emission regulations put into force by the California Air Resources Board [43]

Based on such State programs, Lockyer also sponsored federal legislation (H.R.3525,“Private Activity Bonds for Clean Energy Projects”) introduced in July 2009 by California Congressman Mike Thompson to provide tax-exempt bond financing nationally for private sector Renewable Energy projects, Zero-emission vehicle purchases, and "green" manufacturing facilities.[44]

2008–2009 California budget crisis

In the fall of 2008, with the economy faltering, the Legislature very belatedly passed what Los Angeles Times political columnist George Skelton called "another atrocious, short-sighted, gimmicky budget that set a record for procrastination" and "wreaked havoc all across California among small business vendors, healthcare centers and nursing homes that couldn't be paid by the state until a budget was enacted."

Lockyer was also critical of the budget, describing its budgetary provisions to Skelton as "banana republic financing", based on accounting gimmicks (that "give gimmicks a bad name"), "phony inflated estimates of revenue" and a "boondoggle" of "massive" corporate tax breaks at a time of mounting State deficit.[45]

In 2009, it was discovered that the state faced a $25 billion deficit, following a sharp drop in tax revenues.

As negotiations began to revise the state budget, Lockyer tried to convince U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to provide a guarantee for state bond payments. "A fiscal meltdown by California ... would surely destabilize the U.S., if not worldwide financial markets," Lockyer wrote to Geithner on May 13.[46] The Obama Administration declined the request.

Earlier, Lockyer warned the legislative conference committee that private lenders would be leery of any more "smoke-and-mirrors accounting tricks" and that lawmakers would have to rely heavily on spending cuts to balance the budget: "It seems to me that the kind of budget we will require before the end of June is almost entirely comprised of cuts...My suggestion to you is don't delay the pain. It's going to be awful, but just get it done. It's going to be worse if it doesn't get done." [47]

Lockyer was also quoted as telling Democratic legislators that, "fair or not", angry voters blamed them for "12 years of flowing red ink". "Why don't you start with the realization that probably none of you are going to be back here next year?", after the 2010 elections. "You're not going to get reelected. Just put the politics out of your brain...That's a very liberating thought, and with it you can get a lot done." [48]

When the Legislature failed to pass a balanced budget before the start of the new fiscal year on July 1, 2009, State Controller John Chiang began issuing IOUs to some state creditors. Lockyer suggested having a respected intermediary mediate between the Republican Governor and the Democratic-controlled Legislature.[49] Republican State Senator Bob Huff scoffed at the idea, saying, "No caucus is going to go with that... I'm not going to vote for new taxes just because some mediator told me to." [50]

Throughout the budget crisis, Lockyer warned that an impasse would increasingly raise the costs of short-and long-term state borrowing, ultimately as much as an additional $7.5 billion in interest over the next 30 years.[51] On July 6, with no budget agreement yet concluded, Fitch Ratings downgraded California's bond rating to BBB, just one notch above the dividing line between investment grade and speculative grade "junk" bonds. A Lockyer spokesman estimated that this downgrade alone would represent an immediate "hit of hundreds of millions of dollars" in higher credit costs.[52]

As California continued to issue IOUs to cover $350 million in short-term debt, the formal standing of California bonds continued to decline. Moody's joined Fitch in cutting the State's debt rating (though still three levels above "junk" status), because of "increasing" risk to debt service payments. And a London firm which tracks speculative "credit default swaps" ranked California ninth in the world among the 10 governmental entities most likely to default on their financial obligations. A Lockyer spokesman called this assessment "ludicrous", and Lockyer himself continued to insist, as he had done throughout the crisis, that the threat of default was "infinitesimally small... short of a thermonuclear war." [53][54][55]

Two days later, on July 16, Lockyer stated, “I call on the Governor and Legislature to focus exclusively on what it takes to bring this year’s budget back in balance, honestly and immediately. I urge them to...quit adding or resurrecting endless ideological debating points, and to stop using budget negotiations to score points with political allies or against partisan opponents." He added that the state’s credit rating was moving "closer and closer to the junk pile... If our credit rating sinks to junk status, the state will find the door to the infrastructure bond market locked shut".[56][57]

One Democratic insider stated that by this "tongue-lashing of legislative leaders", the "ever-blunt" Lockyer "didn't win...any friends in the Capitol".[58]

Four days after Lockyer's remarks, the Governor and legislative leaders finally announced they had reached agreement on a complex budget plan which combined spending cuts with various accounting maneuvers.

A month later, Standard and Poor's removed California bonds from its "credit watch list", indicating that while the bonds still had a negative outlook, they were not "under threat of an imminent downgrade". Lockyer was optimistic about this "positive development...It reflects confidence that the budget solution adopted by the governor and legislature gets us on the right track...” [59]

2010 Tesla, Toyota and NUMMI Electric Auto Partnership

When the Toyota corporation announced it would close the NUMMI auto plant in Fremont, California, after its long-time partner in the facility, General Motors, pulled out of the partnership, Lockyer appointed a blue-ribbon commission that publicized the adverse economic consequences of plant closure and the unemployment of several thousand workers, and pleaded with Toyota to reconsider. The company refused.

But then Lockyer, working behind the scenes, helped arrange a new partnership at the NUMMI plant between Toyota and Tesla Motors, an electric car company, which he had assisted in the past through the Treasurer's "Green Wave" investment policies.[60]

2010 gubernatorial election

Three of Lockyer's predecessors as State Treasurer - Jesse Unruh, Kathleen Brown, and Phil Angelides - had lost gubernatorial campaigns, and Democratic pundits considered the Treasurer's job a much "smaller bully pulpit" which did not provide a good spring-board to higher office.[61]

Despite persistent rumors that Lockyer, who had earlier accumulated a $10 million political war chest, might be a "dark horse" possibility for Governor in 2010,[62][63][64][65] he expressed no interest in mounting a campaign to succeed Schwarzenegger. When asked about the possibility, Lockyer stated that he saw no chance of winning a primary election battle with former Governor Jerry Brown (his successor as Attorney General), who eventually emerged as the unchallenged Democratic nominee and went on to win the general election. Lockyer also said he preferred spending time with his family. "You kill yourself being a Governor", he joked, "and then maybe you get a new aqueduct named after you".[66]

In an article probing Schwarzenegger's political unpopularity in his final months in office, George Skelton, after quoting Lockyer's reflection on the fickle electorate ("Our state voters have very high expectations of what government can do. And their haste to criticize is very high") opined that Lockyer "might have been governor himself if he were more ambitious and photogenic, and sometimes less blunt".[67]

Having faced no opposition in the Democratic Primary, Lockyer was re-elected for a final term as State Treasurer in the November 2010 Election, defeating a Republican State Senator from Orange County, and receiving more votes than any elected official in the United States.[68] He was endorsed by the Sacramento Bee, Oakland Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, and the San Jose Mercury News, which concluded that "the Hayward Democrat has done well at a number of jobs over several decades, from the Legislature to attorney general. But as state treasurer for the past four years, he has really shone, maturing to near-statesman stature..." [69]

Unable to run for a third term as Treasurer due to term limits, Lockyer has expressed a tentative interest in running for State Controller in 2014.

References

  1. ^ Peter Schrag, "Paradise Lost: California's Experience, America's Future" (1998), Page 52
  2. ^ Bill Lockyer, Los Angeles Times
  3. ^ Contra Costa Times, August 20, 2009 http://www.ibabuzz.com/politics/2009/08/20/lockyer-takes-early-fundraising-lead-in-supes-race/
  4. ^ http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/#storylink=cpy
  5. ^ San Francisco Chronicle, February 26, 2012 http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/02/25/BADO1NC8OV.DTL
  6. ^ http://www.nbcsandiego.com/blogs/prop-zero/Bill-Lockyer-Nadia-Davis-Lockyer-Treasurer-Attorney-General-140528823.html
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  9. ^ [3]
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  11. ^ [5]
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  13. ^ http://www.mercurynews.com/bay-area-news/ci_20453631/exclusive-interview-nadia-lockyer-tells-traumatic-story-how
  14. ^ "Experts expound", Capitol Weekly, July 16, 2009
  15. ^ Jason Sweeney, "Lockyer bill remembered as Bay Trail turns 20", Hayward Daily Review, June 4, 2009
  16. ^ www.baytrail.org
  17. ^ "Final Report of the California Attorney General's Civil Rights Commission on Hate Crimes", http://www.ag.ca.gov/publications/civilrights/reportingHC.pdf
  18. ^ James D. Richardson, "Willie Brown: Power, Money and Instinct", http://www.aliciapatterson.org/APF1603/Richardson/Richardson.html, citing the legendary version
  19. ^ ”What Works…”, excerpted from Daniel Weintraub interview with Lockyer, Sacramento Bee, July 12, 2009
  20. ^ California Budget Project, "What's in the Tax 'Mega-Deal?', September 1997, http://www.cbp.org/pdfs/1997/970919Megadeal.pdf
  21. ^ Brooke A. Masters, "Spoiling For A Fight, The Rise of Eliot Spitzer" (2007), Pg. 282
  22. ^ "Medical pot users honor Lockyer", AlamedaTimes-Star, February 25, 2004
  23. ^ Attorney General's office press release, September 13, 2004, http://ag.ca.gov/newsalerts/print_release.php?id=1137
  24. ^ http://www.meganslaw.ca.gov/
  25. ^ Julia Scheeres, "Rough Reception for DNA Law", November 27, 2004, Wired.com
  26. ^ Henry Weinstein, "Law Officials Decry DNA Lab Backlog", Los Angeles Times, September 15, 2006
  27. ^ California proposes requiring bullet ID numbers, Reuters | April 27, 2005
  28. ^ http://www.nraila.org/Issues/FactSheets/Read.aspx?ID=178
  29. ^ Emshwiller, John (2001-05-22). "California Blame Game Yields No Score --- Probes Reveal Little Evidence Suppliers Acted Illegally". Wall Street Journal. pp. A2.
  30. ^ Palmer, Tom (2001-06-06). "'Hi, My Name Isn't Justice, Honey,' and Shame on Lockyer". Los Angeles Times. pp. B11.
  31. ^ King, Peter (2001-06-10). "Maybe the Texas Power Folks Felt It Was Time to Let Prices Drop". Los Angeles Times. pp. B1.
  32. ^ "Lockyer Regrets 'Crude Remark'". Los Angeles Times. 2001-06-20. pp. B12.
  33. ^ Kahn, Michael (2001-09-20). "California sues carmakers". Reuters.
  34. ^ Streitfeld, David (2006-09-08). "Spiraling Scandal Engulfs Tech Icon". Los Angeles Times. pp. A1. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  35. ^ Associated Press (2006-09-14). "Criminal charges for HP?". Dubuque Telegraph Herald. pp. D4.
  36. ^ "California Democrats Warn Governor against Trash Talk", Sacramento Bee, August 1, 2003
  37. ^ Ronn Ownens, Voice of Reason (2004), Pg. 125
  38. ^ Carla Marinucci and Marc Sandalow, "Lockyer, Angelides first Democrats in Governor's race", San Francisco Chronicle, March 16, 2005
  39. ^ Sacramento Bee, January 23, 2005
  40. ^ http://www.calpers.ca.gov/index.jsp?bc=/investments/environ-invest/home.xml
  41. ^ http://gov.ca.gov/press-release/10038/ Office of the Governor, Press Release, June 30, 2008."Governor Schwarzenegger Celebrates Clean Technology Investment in California, Welcomes Tesla Motors Production to California"
  42. ^ (London) Financial Times, June 11, 2009
  43. ^ "Partners To Aid Truckers Clean Air", San Diego Union, March 25, 2009
  44. ^ Lake County News, August 8, 2009, http://lakeconews.com/content/view/9830/764/
  45. ^ George Skelton, "Blame all the players for the gimmickry budget", Los Angeles Times, September 22, 2008
  46. ^ Kevin O'Leary, "Can the U.S. Afford to Let California Fail? Time, June 19, 2009
  47. ^ Steve Wiegand, "Lockyer urges spending cuts to balance state budget", Sacramento Bee, May 22, 2009
  48. ^ George Skelton, "Note to budget doctors: Don't spare the knife", Los Angeles Times, June 11, 2009
  49. ^ "Lockyer suggests mediator break state budget impasse", Los Angeles Times, July 1, 2009
  50. ^ It's Politics, San Gabriel Valley Tribune, July 3, 2009
  51. ^ Downgraded bonds cost a bundle, Steve Wiegand, Sacramento Bee "Capitol Alert" blog, June 30, 2009
  52. ^ "Calif. budget talks stall amid reform proposals", Associated Press, July 6, 2009
  53. ^ State leaders talking again - budget woes go on, Matthew Yi and Richard Procter, San Francisco Chronicle, July 11, 2009
  54. ^ "California is a high risk for credit default, according to analyst", Sacramento Bee, July 14, 2009
  55. ^ Amid Budget Travails, California Investments Pay Off, Brett Arends, The Wall Street Journal, July 15, 2009
  56. ^ Calif. treasurer warns of junk bond threat, Silicon Valley Business Journal, July 16, 2009
  57. ^ "State Treasurer warns of credit rating hitting ‘junk’ status", San Francisco Business Times, July 16, 2009
  58. ^ Steve Maviglio, "Budget Winners and Losers", California Majority Report, July 22, 2009
  59. ^ "S&P takes California bonds off watch list", Sacramento Business Journal, August 18, 2009
  60. ^ Richard Harris Smith, "Tesla-Toyota-Nummi: The Electric Car Reborn?", HuffingtonPost.com, May 25, 2010
  61. ^ Steven Maviglio, "Governor's Race: The Early Line on 2010", California Majority Report, November 8, 2006
  62. ^ Calbuzz.com, March 29, 2009
  63. ^ Christian Science Monitor, June 2, 2009
  64. ^ Steve Maviglio, California Majority Report, July 28, 2009
  65. ^ Calbuzz.com, August 14, 2009
  66. ^ San Jose Merucury News, November 15, 2009
  67. ^ Los Angeles Times, July 19, 2010
  68. ^ Smith, Richard (February 1, 2011). "The Top Vote-Getter In America". Huffington Post. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  69. ^ San Jose Mercury News, October 20, 2010
California Assembly
Preceded by California State Assemblyman, 14th District
1973–1982
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by California Attorney General
1999–2007
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by California State Treasurer
2007–present
Incumbent

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