9 The Michigan Daily - Electi 8B - The Michigan Daily - Election '98 - Thursday, October 29, 1998 V f ° 'I feel that we've done a lot' 5 y? 'f y .x s a C 'Agovern of, by an the peop The race to become Michigan'e governor By Mike Spahn Daily Staff Reporter John Engler wants to keep his job. But when you're governor of Michigan, it's not quite so simple. For eight years, the state has grown and prospered, according to some people, under the 1eader hip of EngLr. A strong economy, so id schools and an improving env'ironment are all cited by the governor as examples of his v, CJ de :- But success, like keeping the job in the state, is t quite so simrple. John Engler cent to Lansing brigh-eyed and motivated at the ripe old age o i 22. Then-representative Lngler quickly began layding uit the poliical agenda that defines him even today simproing public educa- tine, loering taxes and creating jobs for cit- And fistening to Eger, i's not hard to see that he feels those goals have been achieved. "We've been talking about what we've done because I feel that we've done a lot," Engler said in a recent interview with The Michigan Daily. Eingler said from day one that education is his top priority.n During his term, funding for education has grown by 50 percent since 1990, and funding for higher education has grown within that budget. In addition, the governor last year proposed the Michigan Reads program, a new guideline designed to ensure that all children can read by the end of third grade. "The state with the best schools wins," Engler said, echoing the State of the State address he gave in January. And Senate majority leader Dick Posthumus, who is running with Engler for lieutenant governor, sets forth a similar agen- da. "For the last 15 years, we've been focused" on public education, Posthumus said. "It's exciting to see that what we had as a goal is now actually working." Proposing and passing 24 tax cuts in eight years warrants support, Engler argues. He said the people of Michigan are better off now than they were before he entered office, spending their own money rather than sending it to Lansing. Engler also claims success in other areas, including the environment and the rebuilding of Michigan's roads. Engler was the brains behind Proposal C, the ballot proposal that would allow the state to borrow $675 million to pay for various envi- ronmental clean up programs. And the transportation budget during the past eight years has been significantly increased, Engler adds. Truth in sentencing legislation will go take effect next year, but Egier believes reforms in the state parole board already have aided in reducing crime. "We have been very firm that if you commit the crime you're going to do the time, and we've backed up ou polie and proecutors," egler said. "I think the fact that now sex offenders are now serving mirtually their entire ters has really been cery helpful in specific crimes in that area." But t hese pol i les have not gone unchal- lenged throughout his tenure, or this election. Opponent Geoffrey Fieger assails Engler for his continual program cutting, claiming that the ystatFs bottom line is the dollar." "Your interests are being sold out," Fieger tells audiences about Engler's privatization of some government departments. "The effects of his policies are obscene. He has no shame." Fieger has called Engler an environmental criminal, a bigot and a stupid man over the past two months, but through it all Engler has stood by his policies. Refusing to get into a war of words with his opponent, Engler would only say that Fieger has little else to base his campaign on, so that is why Fieger consistent- ly attacks the governor. With EPlC/MRA polls showing Engler and Posthumus ahead by 30 or more points, it would be easy for them to get lazy. Even Bill Ballenger, editor of Inside Michigan Politics, said the race is over and the only question is by how much Engler would will. But both men said they will work to the end to ensure victory. "Our biggest opponent is complacency," Posthumus said. By Jason Stoffer Daily Staff Reporter Geoffrey Fieger is not your ordinary gubernator- ial candidate. He has made a habit of denouncing the current Democratic party machine, alienating many leaders in the process. He repeatedly pokes fun at current Gov. John Engler's weight and calls him a "brutal man." Many voters, shel shocked by Fieger's unortho- dox campaign tactics, have been left to wonder- Is this guy for real? Citizens gave Fieger a 61-percent "unfavorable" rating in the latest survey by the Lansing-based EPIC/MRA polling firm. Many teachers, uion members and other traditionally Democratic con- stituents say they are frustrated by the prospect of another four years of Engler's leadership. Pollsters, Fieger said, were incorrect in the August primary elections and have missed the mark again. Despite trailing Engler by 30 percentage points, Fieger insists the sun is about to set on Engler's governorship. "Every pollster said 'go home Geoffrrey you're rocking the boat,' but people came out and rocked the vote," Fieger told University students at a cam- pus rally last month. "We attracted voters who have never voted before. "For the first time people knew there could be a government of, by and for the people," he said. Fieger's platform is boldly liberal and he said his immediate goal, if elected, would be to reverse many of the conservative policies Engler imple- mented during his two terms in office. "I'd attempt to reopen the closed mental facilities, reinstitute polluter pay laws and reconstitute the Department of Natural Resources,"Fieger said dur- ing a recent interview with The Michigan Daily. "I'd repeal Act 112, which prevents public employees from collective bargaining." Democratic state House candidate John Hansen said he chose to endorse Fieger after examining each candidate's stance on education issues. "If you listen to Engler talk about public educa- tion, we agree on many things "said Hansen, who is running for the seat from which current Rep. Mary Schroer (D-Ann Arbor) has been term limited out of the state legislature. C S t c" C t C t T i S c j r c t t i t Educatlo Universit degree. I the Univi Career: ( lawyers. advocate Primary 4 action, r4 Caricature cartoon for the Daily by David Meng