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DeMaio: ‘My real opponents are the government employee unions and powerful downtown interests’

[captionpix imgsrc=”http://sdrostra.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/demaio.jpg” captiontext=”Carl DeMaio”]

Politics & Media Mashup is on break for the next few weeks so we can bring you exclusive Q & As with San Diego Mayoral candidates Carl DeMaio, Bonnie Dumanis and Nathan Fletcher.

We kicked off the series last week with Fletcher. We determined the order based on when the responses to our questions were received — first in, first up. Despite repeated attempts, no one from Bob Filner’s campaign would answer our questions, even though a staffer there said, “We read Rostra all the time.”

Perhaps by the end of this series — following Q & As with DeMaio, Dumanis and Fletcher over three consecutive Saturdays — Filner will have changed his mind and we can learn a little more about him.

Here is Rostra’s Q & A with City Council member Carl DeMaio:

City government is broken and we need real reform. San Diegans are sick of empty rhetoric and endless talk by politicians – they want details and action. And that is exactly what my candidacy represents.

I’m offering specific and concrete commitments to taxpayers through my 90-page comprehensive plan to fix San Diego’s financial problems and make city government work again for the people. The plan transforms five years of deficits into five years of surpluses – and saves roughly one billion dollars for taxpayers.

Unlike the other candidates who are just now suddenly talking about city issues because they now want to be Mayor, I have been talking about and leading on these issues all along.

More importantly, I’m not waiting to be Mayor to get reform done. I’ve been getting results for taxpayers – from the managed competition program, to cutting red tape on businesses, to our upcoming public vote on the Comprehensive Pension Reform ballot measure.

We have an exceptional quality of life in San Diego so there’s so much I enjoy. When I can break myself away from working to advance reform for taxpayers, I enjoy hiking the trails and spending time at the beach.

I don’t see this as a race of me against these three other candidates. My campaign is the same campaign I have waged since becoming a taxpayer watchdog years ago: to clean up the mess at city hall.

My real opponents are the government employee unions and powerful downtown interests that benefit from the cozy system at City Hall at the taxpayers’ expense. They know I will end their taxpayer-funded gravy train, and that’s why they are doing everything they can to defeat our grassroots campaign.

My childhood was not typical by any measure, with my mother passing away and my father leaving his children. I had to grow up pretty quickly.

In my elementary school each year, they gave out a big prize for the student that could sell the most raffle tickets. Starting in the third grade, each year I sold thousands of tickets by walking door-to-door in neighborhoods. I always won one of the top two prizes, winning a bike one year and a surf board another year. I reconnected with my raffle ticket selling experiences when I walked door-to-door in my race for city council – personally walking to over 15,000 houses in 2008.

The single most important issue is fiscal reform, which includes comprehensive pension reform. Our city government is in a complete state of deficit, dysfunction and disrepair and as a result, our financial crisis has negatively impacted even the most basic city services like road repairs, emergency response times and neighborhood services. We cannot address these other issues in a meaningful way until we get our finances back on track. I have developed a 90-page comprehensive plan to fix San Diego’s financial problems and make city government work again for the people.

Rubios – a San Diego original.

I envision a San Diego that is no longer in a constant state of disrepair. A San Diego that has balanced budgets, streamlined city government, repaved roads and upgraded infrastructure. San Diego will be more attractive to job creators. I don’t think that vision is a fantasy and I don’t even think it will take 10 years to start seeing. I have developed a 90-page comprehensive plan to fix San Diego’s financial problems and make city government work again for the people of San Diego. The plan transforms five years of deficits into five years of surpluses – and saves roughly one billion dollars for taxpayers. This plan allows us to restore services and fix our roads.

Yes, I send out tweets myself. I try to stagger my tweets throughout the day, and sometimes schedule tweets and posts through social media software.

I’m running on the 3 P’s: Pensions, Potholes and Prosperity! By that I mean we need to fix the finances, rebuild our streets and infrastructure, and get San Diegans back to work through job creation. My proposals in education are all geared to preparing our youth for prosperous futures by giving them the skills they need to get quality jobs.

I use my laptop – and I crowd source my news by checking a Twitter feed I’ve built of local news reporters, news organizations and civic leaders. I then read the digital version of our city’s newspaper of record: U-T San Diego.

Dedicated.

Cat: Ace the Cat is five year old bengal; he actually received some national and international media attention when I stood up against the “Cat Tax” proposed by city staff.

I believe San Diegans share my vision of fixing our financial problems, closing a troubling chapter in our city’s history and allowing our city to pursue big dreams again. As Mayor, I believe we will make this vision a reality, and will invite everyone to work together to make that happen.

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Tony Manolatos is a communications strategist. You can follow him on Twitter or LinkedInYou can hear Tony talk politics and media with KOGO’s LaDona Harvey every Friday at 2:35 p.m. on AM 600 and FM 95.7.
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