Pubdate: Sat, 20 Feb 1999 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Page: A03 Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Terry M. Neal, Washington Post Staff Writer Note: While we at MAP have a responsibility both to the source and to researchers to provide the whole article, there are times when the part of most interest to our readers is far down in the article. Below you will find: "Ventura also has some ideas that would be political suicide for other politicians. Without commiting himself, he has said he would listen to proposals that prostitution and some drugs be legalized." followed by a quote. GUTS AND, SO FAR, GLORY: VENTURA WINS OVER MANY ST. PAUL, Minn.—Armed with a bullhorn, the 6-foot-4, 260-pound governor of Minnesota came striding down the Capitol steps last week to confront his accusers: a crowd of college students rallying to protest rising tuition costs and demand more student aid. When a young woman who described herself as a single mother shouted out a complaint, the governor exploded in anger. "I don't want to seem hard-core, but why did you become a parent?" asked Jesse Ventura. "It takes two people to parent. Is it the government's job to make up for someone's mistake?" A week later, Ventura was unrepentant. "They thought I was going to back down," he said, puffing on a fat cigar in the back seat of his limousine as he returned from doing a radio call-in show Tuesday night. "But I don't back down. That's one thing you'll never have to worry about with me, having guts. I'll probably get in trouble for having guts." If he's in trouble, it's not with the voters. Ventura, 47, shocked the state and the nation in November when he won the state's gubernatorial election as a Reform Party candidate, beating out long-established and well-known Republican and Democratic opponents by getting 37 percent of the vote in a three-way race. A Star-Tribune/KMSP-TV poll earlier this month put his approval rating at 72 percent, which suggests he's winning over a lot of people who didn't vote for him. The bullhorn episode doesn't seem to have tarnished the luster. Hundreds of calls flooded into his office afterward, with eight to one favorable, said spokesman John Wodele. "They were saying, 'Way to go Jesse. Thank you for standing up to those people,' " said Ventura, who will be in Washington for the National Governors' Association meeting that starts today. These are heady days for Minnesota as their ex-bandanna-and-pink-boa-wearing professional wrestler governor continues to bring uncommon attention to the "Land of 10,000 Lakes." This week, Ventura appeared on the Tom Snyder show. Next Tuesday, he's on David Letterman. The Rolling Stones played in Minneapolis Monday night, and the governor -- who worked as a bodyguard for the group in the early 1980s - -- partied backstage with the band. "Charlie Watts gave me a drumstick and Keith Richards gave me his guitar pick!" the rock-and-roll enthusiast/politician gushed to everyone he encountered the next morning. But it hasn't been all fun and games. "I'm putting in 10 hours a day, Monday through Friday," the governor reassured listeners of KFAN radio, where he hosted a call-in show before resigning last year to run for governor. Not only is Ventura working, but he's doing it under unusual circumstances - -- as the head of the nation's only trilateral government. Democrats control the state Senate; Republicans, the House; and the Reform Party, the governorship. That configuration has only heightened the political contrasts of a state that has elected perhaps the nation's most liberal senator, Paul D. Wellstone (D), and one of its most conservative, Rod Grams (R). Because the Reform Party -- formed by Ross Perot after his unsuccessful presidential campaign in 1992 -- exists basically as a shell organization in Minnesota, Ventura has assembled a bipartisan administration that borrows heavily from the staffs of his vanquished opponents from last year's governor's race, St. Paul Mayor Norm Coleman (R) and former attorney general Hubert H. Humphrey III (D). During his campaign, Ventura promised to cut billions in taxes and return surplus money to the taxpayers. The cornerstone of his budget proposal -- which the legislature must vote on before it adjourns in May -- is a $1.1 billion sales tax rebate, with an average family receiving about $775, and a $1.6 billion income tax cut phased in over four years. He's also begun to fulfill his promise to improve education and reduce class sizes by dedicating 70 percent of new government spending to education. The 2.9 percent increase in government spending is half that averaged by his predecessor, Republican Gov. Arne H. Carlson. And he has proposed investing the first installment of the proceeds from the state's tobacco lawsuit, about $1.3 billion, and using the interest to finance endowments and foundations for medical education and research, health programs and programs to help families move from welfare to work. Ventura has made his share of rookie missteps. He suggested that his wife Terry should be paid $25,000 a year for the official duties she conducts as the state's first lady, then backed off after he received a hail of criticism. His nominee to head the state's natural resources committee resigned after reports surfaced that he had repeatedly been cited for fish and game license violations. And he caused a stir when it was reported he'd received a special permit to allow him to pack a handgun -- not only in public but at the Capitol. Still, said Senate Majority Leader Roger D. Moe (D), "Overall, I'd say he's done a very good job. . . . Most of my complaints, I'd have to say, would be of the nitpicking variety." Republicans give him more guarded praise, saying the governor should have offered more dramatic tax cuts and rebates. "We're a little disappointed because we thought he was going to be more of a fiscal conservative," said House Majority Leader Tim Pawlenty (R). "I will give him credit, though, for slowing down the rate of spending." Ventura described his budget as one befitting his centrist political beliefs. In an interview in his office this week, he expounded on that philosophy. "The way I look at it, 70 percent of Minnesotans, and maybe even 70 percent of the nation, are not being represented politically," said Ventura, who shares the governor's mansion with his wife of 22 years and their two teenage children. "I believe the Republicans and the Democrats have reached levels of extreme, where they're out there representing 15 percent extreme left and 15 percent extreme right. And the 70 percent of us who are more centrist have to then choose between the lesser of two evils." Ventura said he won because voters were tired of doctrinaire and ideological partisan politics and were eager for a plain-talking leader beholden to no one. As a Reform Party candidate, he took no money from political action committees and raised a fraction of what his opponents did. That decision, he says, has left him remarkably free to speak his mind. "Jesse's really not a politician at all," said Dan Cole, an on-air personality at KFAN. "A lot of people think he's just a dumb wrestler, but he's very smart and a great debater. It's street smarts, and people just respond to him." Bill Hillsman, Ventura's media strategist, said Ventura's success will depend on his ability to engage the public and use it for leverage, since he doesn't have an established party to help him fight for his issues. "Jesse's got a direct wire between himself and the people who put him in office," Hillsman said. Ventura calls himself a social liberal and an economic conservative, whose guiding principle is that the government should stay off people's backs, out of their personal business and away from their wallets. He noted that he only had a few weeks after his January inauguration to prepare his budget. Future budgets will be more daringly conservative, he said. Among his cost-cutting ideas is eliminating one chamber of the state legislature, which would save taxpayers tens of millions of dollars a year. Ventura also has some ideas that would be political suicide for other politicians. Without commiting himself, he has said he would listen to proposals that prostitution and some drugs be legalized. "If some guy wants to go into the privacy of his own home and take LSD and he stays in his own home and he puts no one else in danger but himself inside his own home, why is that illegal?" he said in the interview. "Now if he takes it and gets into a car and starts driving around the metro area, where he's a danger to someone, well, yeah, at that point the government has a point to come in." Ventura is a staunch supporter of abortion rights, but he still appears to be working through some other issues. When an aide asked his opinion about the death penalty, which Minnesota does not have, he said: "I'd be happy to pull the switch on a lot of 'em. But boy, if you make a mistake, this is a person's life you're talking about. So, I'm okay with not having it." Ventura's ideas often seem to be filtered not through an ideological spectrum, but through the spectrum of his personal grievances. Ask him about welfare, and he'll lecture you about the value of work and note the example of his childhood friend's father, whose job collecting rubbish brought him boundless fulfillment. His anti-regulatory bent often seems to stem from his disdain for the state's $50 tax on personal watercraft, of which he owns five. The apparent absence of a dogmatic approach to governing seems to appeal to many younger voters disenchanted with both major parties. Of those who voted in November, 15 percent registered on the spot. Most were young people, and pollsters believe most cast their ballots for Ventura. Carleton College political science chairman Steven Schier characterized Ventura's outlook as "erratic centrism" and said that he seemed "more radical in thought than substance." Ventura's governing style was on display in staff meetings this week. Aides came and went all afternoon to discuss dozens of topics. Ventura enthusiastically engaged, questioned and delegated. At one point, a health department administrator began briefing him on an obscure Medicare provision that some states believe to be unfair. Ventura cocked his head in her direction and said: "Give it to me in one big layman's term." The bottom line, the administrator replied, is that the policy rewards inefficiency and punishes efficiency. "Oh, well there you go," he said in his upper Midwest accent, reminiscent of the movie "Fargo." "That goes right against my philosophy. That's kind of like property taxes. If you improve your property, then you're going to owe more money to the government. But you sit there and let your property deteriorate and you owe less taxes. What kind of message does that send?" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake