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Opinion: In today’s pages: Secret votes, hate crimes and L.A.’s top cop

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Bet you thought that the business of your publicly elected California Legislature was, well, public, since your public dollars pay these public servants to make public decisions in the public’s Capitol building. Is there a theme in that sentence? There ought to be, especially with the editorial board today bemoaning the Assembly’s decision to expunge the record of the individual votes of its members on whether or not to allow drilling off the Santa Barbara coast. In other words, you can’t find out how your own Assembly member voted.

Assembly members sometimes complain, privately, that their constituents just don’t understand how difficult it is to make laws and balance a budget. But making the very public process of lawmaking into a secret ritual doesn’t help matters. On the contrary, it makes Californians feel like they are part of the stuff being fed into the meat grinder.

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The board also weighs in on the latest maneuvers to stop a worthy bill that would extend hate-crime laws to cover crimes against gays and lesbians. Since conservative lawmakers in Washington D.C. weren’t getting anywhere with the specious argument that halting hate crimes against people because of their sexual orientation would somehow impinge on the perpetrators’ freedom of speech and religion, they’ve come up with a new tactic: making certain hate crimes a capital offense, thus changing the congressional conversation from one about equal rights to one about the death penalty.

And though the people of Afghanistan have a million good reasons to mistrust the election process, the editorial board notes the importance of holding new presidential elections and giving voters hope that they can, at least eventually, have an impact on changing the government that has turned out a disappointment to many of them.

On the other side of the fold, Tim Rutten reprimands Police Chief William Bratton for the timing of his departure from Los Angeles and some of the dealings that took place beforehand:

...The manner and timing of Bratton’s departure is almost breathtakingly irresponsible. It also raises troubling questions about his relationship with Michael Cherkasky, the court-appointed monitor who evaluated the LAPD’s compliance with the federal consent decree, and about Cherkasky’s role in convincing the federal judge to terminate oversight of the department.

And a professor in Mexico calls on President Obama to do more than praise Mexican President Felipe Calderon for his courage in the war on drugs; he must also remind Calderon that the human-rights abuses that his army is accused of in that war are unacceptable.

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