www.csua.org/u/heo -> news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061108/pl_nm/usa_elections_california_dc_6
President George W Bush and taking a moderate stance, results on Wednesday showed. I love doing sequels," Schwarzenegger told supporters in Beverly Hills. The star of the "Terminator" films scrapped a confrontational style that served him well as a champion bodybuilder and in movies but led to a complete defeat in a special initiative election last year. A humbled Schwarzenegger, 59, turned on his charm, no longer taunted Democratic legislators as "girlie men" and backed a series of bipartisan laws, including reducing the state's greenhouse gas emissions. Schwarzenegger also distanced himself from Bush, avoiding him during recent California visits and criticizing the White House on issues such as global warming. He thus did well as Republicans suffered setbacks nationwide on Tuesday. "Schwarzenegger was successful in embracing a more moderate agenda that affected people's lives in a positive way,' former Gov.
Gray Davis , whom Schwarzenegger ousted three years ago, told Reuters. "The Republicans in Washington tuned out that agenda and are paying the price for that tonight." It also worked at home, where the Austrian-born politician is married to Democrat Maria Shriver, niece of former Democratic President John F Kennedy. Yet Schwarzenegger's charms did not translate into wider Republican victories in California: Democrats won all other state races except for insurance commissioner. Angelides, a liberal Democrat and former real estate developer, struggled throughout the campaign and even the state's leading liberal newspapers backed his opponent. Schwarzenegger dedicated much campaigning not to countering Angelides but to rallying support for more than $37 billion in bonds to fund infrastructure including roads, housing and schools. While backing new bond spending, Californians rejected new levies, voting down higher cigarette taxes or a tax on oil producers to fund alternative energy development. Also in California, Democrat Jerry Brown, 68, the man who held Schwarzenegger's job in Sacramento from 1975-83, easily won to become the attorney general of the nation's most populous state. Once derided as "Governor Moonbeam," Brown became a national figure by running for president three times and has served for the past eight years as Oakland's mayor.
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