Schwarzenegger and his
aides are also heard saying their biggest problem is with Republican
legislators who they believe lack a long-term vision for California and are
concerned only with small projects that will help their districts. At one
point, Schwarzenegger seemingly becomes annoyed when recalling negotiations
over infrastructure bonds with members of his own party. Democrats hold
majorities in both the Assembly and Senate. "I said, 'Now is when we have a chance here, and
you want to have it all perfect. It won't happen. You're not the majority.' I
said, 'When does that get into your mind? You're not the majority,'"
Schwarzenegger says. Nunez's spokesman, Steve Maviglio, said the speaker would
have no comment about the audio files. A Perata spokeswoman did not immediately
respond to an e-mail seeking comment late Sunday.
The recordings were made in
March 2006 in the governor's Capitol office, mostly to generate ideas for
writing speeches. A segment was leaked to the Los Angeles Times during last
year's election by the campaign of Schwarzenegger's Democratic opponent, Phil
Angelides. In that clip, Schwarzenegger said a mixture of black and Hispanic
blood can give people a fiery temperament. He apologized. The Times obtained
more of the recordings Sunday, just two days after the California Highway
Patrol found the Angelides campaign did nothing wrong in obtaining the audio
files. The CHP said the
recordings were accessed through a publicly available section of the governor's
Web site.
The leak of the additional audio tapes prompted the governor's
office Sunday night to release the transcripts of more than three hours of
private conversations. Schwarzenegger's communications director, Adam
Mendelsohn, blasted their leak to the Times. "This type of behavior is exactly why people have
such a low opinion of politicians," he said, referring to Angelides and
his campaign staff. He said the tapes largely show a governor who is
"thoughtful, concerned and focused on solving some of California's most
serious problems." In one recording the governor expresses compassion for
the immigrants who come to the U.S. looking for a better life while also
criticizing those who refuse to assimilate. The governor compares his
post-World War II upbringing in Austria with plans to build a border fence with
Mexico, a proposal he has opposed. "We had the Berlin Wall; we had walls everywhere. But we always
looked at the wall as kind of like the outside of the wall is the enemy,"
he said. "Are we looking at Mexico as the enemy? No, it's not. These are
our trading partners."
The Associated Press
contributed to this story

