Bruce Cain
![Bruce Cain](/assets/img/authors/unknown.jpg)
Bruce Cain
Bruce E. Cain is a Professor of Political Science at Stanford University and Director of the Bill Lane Center for the American West. Professor Cain’s fields of interest include American politics, political regulation, democratic theory, and state and local government. He has written extensively on elections, legislative representation, California politics, redistricting, and political regulation. In addition to his academic work, Cain frequently is quoted in national and international media, and regularly appears as a political expert for KGO-TV in the...
advice coherent seen sit sort
Arnold, or someone, has to sit through all this advice and sort out a coherent plan. One thing we haven't seen in the Schwarzenegger administration is coherence.
bipartisan fight pick playing trying
I think they may be playing it for all it's worth. If he's trying to get back on a bipartisan track, what better way than to pick a fight with the president?
branches government highly judges public rated three
In public esteem, the judges are the most highly rated of the three branches of government.
famous rich
Basically. The rich and famous only need apply.
details fairly financing people price realistic tag
First is the price tag - it's huge, and the financing details are fairly complex. People are going to want to know how realistic is it that you are going to get this money.
numbers perfectly
Their numbers are an estimate, all our numbers are an estimate, but they're perfectly sensible,
concerns rocky start
It all portends a very rocky start to 2006 for the administration because the concerns are increasingly bipartisan.
expect industry insurance money people position risky supposed
This was supposed to become a consumer-oriented office. For him to take money from the insurance industry is risky because people expect that position not to be in their pocket.