A private meeting of legislative leaders and Gov. Schwarzenegger ended abruptly Tuesday amid bad blood between Senate
Leader Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, and his GOP counterpart, Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth
of Murrieta.
The angry exchange at the Big 5 meeting between the two Senate leaders began when Schwarzenegger asked Hollingsworth what it would take
for Senate Republicans to support nearly three dozen
bills that have already passed the Assembly, but have
remained stalled on the Senate floor since the end
of the legislative session last month. The bills require
Repunblican votes to emerge from the Senate.
Earlier, Hollingsworth said he would not put up votes
for the bills until Democrats agreed to a list of demands
that were laid out by Russell Lowery, Hollingsworth's chief of staff, in an e-mail to senior Democratic staff on the morning of Sept.
11, the last day of the legislative session.
The existence of the e-mail was first reported last month by Capitol Weekly.
Lowrey's e-mail also described an authorship dispute in which Republican Sen. Roy Ashburn's name would appear on a home-buyer tax credit bill. The bill is currently authorfed by Democrat Anna Caballero, D-Salinas. Ashburn is a Bakersfield Republican.
Hollingsworth has said that Steinberg agreed to resolve
all three issues at a later date as part of this summer's budget deal. Steinberg steadfastly denies that he
ever made such a deal with Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth was not available for comment Tuesday.
But last month, he confirmed those three issues were
important to him, telling Capitol Weekly, "There were things that were left undone from the budget
agreement that needed to be finalized,” Hollingsworth said. When asked if he thought he had
a commitment from Steinberg to resolve all three of
those issues, Hollingsworth replied, “I think it’s accurate to say that. Yes.”
None of the members involved in Tuesday's Big 5 meeting would comment about the dust-up bewteen the two leaders. But multiple sources confirmed
that tempers flared between Steinberg and Hollingsworth.
Steinberg spokeswoman Alicia Trost says the Senate
leader still plans to reconvene the house next week
to take up 35 bills that have not yet been decided on. Hollingsworth
spokesman Colin Maynard indicated Tuesday that Hollingsworth's earlier statements about the fate of those bills
still applies.
According to sources familiar with what was said in
the meeting, Schwarzenegger was trying to broker a
detente between Steinberg and Hollingsworth, and tried
to figure out what Hollingsworth wanted in exchange
for Republican support for those 35 bills. When Hollingsworth brought up his wish list,
sources say, he was interrupted by Speaker Karen Bass,
who said she did not see any connection between Hollingsworth's issues and the bills before the Senate.
In an e-mail sent by Steinberg to his caucus earlier this week, Steinberg told Senate Democrats that the governor had suggested, but not formally asked, that the Senate pull back all bills from his desk until a water deal has been reached.
Assembly Majority Leader Alberto Torrico, D-Newark, said Tuesday, the governor's actions "have clearly crossed the line."
"The legal definition of that behavior is extortion," Torrico said. "I am sending a letter to the Attorney General urging him to investiage the matter."
Torrico had similarly harsh words for Hollingsworth, calling his list of demands "tantamount to ransom notes."
According to sources familiar with today's meeting, Schwarzenegger told legislative leaders he wants a water deal in place by midnight Friday. He has until Sunday to sign of veto the bills before him. If a bill is not signed or vetoed, it automatically becomes law on Oct. 12.

