SACRAMENTO, July 21, 2007

California Senate Freed From Chambers

Legislative Lockdown Ends Without Resolving Budget Issues

  • Califronia state legislators pulled all-nighters to work out disagreements over a $145 billion state budget proposal. Lawmakers were in a virtual lockdown in the Capitol Saturday as the stalemate dragged on.

    Califronia state legislators pulled all-nighters to work out disagreements over a $145 billion state budget proposal. Lawmakers were in a virtual lockdown in the Capitol Saturday as the stalemate dragged on.  (KOVR)

(CBS/AP)  Unable to persuade Republicans to support California's budget, the Senate Democratic leader allowed bleary-eyed legislators to leave the Capitol on Saturday morning after locking them in the chamber overnight.

Senate President Don Perata ordered the rare legislative lockdown in a standoff over whether to cut a tiny fraction of the proposed $145 billion state budget.

Perata told his Republican counterpart to come up with his own version of the budget so the Senate could reconvene Wednesday.

"We have no freakin' idea where you want to go," Perata told Sen. Dick Ackerman.

Republicans are demanding a balanced budget. They rejected a spending plan passed by the Assembly that reduces the state's operating deficit to about $700 million, about one half of 1 percent of the overall budget.

Overnight, lawmakers needed permission to exit the chamber. Some slept at their desks, listened to iPods or read. Others huddled on the Capitol balcony drinking wine and beer from plastic cups.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger tried to convince Republicans to vote for the plan, but left his Capitol office shortly after 2 a.m. Saturday, all but ending any hope for a quick resolution.

The budget already is long overdue, with the state's 2007-08 fiscal year having begun July 1. Lawmakers also were to begin their summer recess Friday, but late in the evening Perata ordered senators locked in the chamber until they reached a deal.

Senate Republicans remained unified in their opposition to the spending plan because it doesn't go far enough to eliminate the state's operating deficit, Ackerman said.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by brianbwb-2009 July 22, 2007 4:29 AM EDT
700 million?

That could be covered from their salaries and the kickbacks from their collusions with businesses owned by their campaign contributors.
Reply to this comment
by fizzal-2009 July 21, 2007 6:22 PM EDT
If they need to cut something from their budget why don,t they learn how too coast downhill with their transportation system to save fuel with the bus in neutral and get along with what they have?
Reply to this comment

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