Albuquerque Journal

Calif. gas tax hike shows Gov. Brown’s political skill

Deal will raise more than $52 billion over the next 10 years

- BY JONATHAN J. COOPER

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California Gov. Jerry Brown employed all the tricks he has accumulate­d over a lifetime in politics to pass one of the largest state tax increases in recent memory in one frenzied week.

Using a mix of public pressure, private armtwistin­g, a late-night meeting at the governor’s mansion and nearly $1 billion of pork, Brown showed the political acumen that’s made him California’s longest-serving chief executive.

Brown, who typically prefers to politick in private, was a very public campaigner for the deal he negotiated with fellow Democratic legislativ­e leaders. He ventured to Concord and Riverside to pressure undecided legislator­s from those areas, and he appealed directly to two legislativ­e committees.

A group of contractor­s and constructi­on unions underwrote a $1 million ad blitz on TV and social media. And the day before Thursday’s vote Brown headlined a rally at the state Capitol.

The tax hike, projected to raise more than $5 billion a year from higher gas taxes and vehicle registrati­on fees, cleared the Legislatur­e on Thursday night without a single vote to spare for the two-thirds majority required for tax increases.

Minutes later, at about 11 p.m. on the eve of his 79th birthday, Brown stepped out of his office and declared victory, flanked by about a dozen lawmakers.

“I appreciate being a Democrat and what the Democrats did tonight,” Brown said. “The Democratic Party is the party of doing things. And tonight we did something to fix the roads of California.”

California­ns have historical­ly been receptive to hiking taxes on the rich and “sins” like cigarettes. In 2012, Brown convinced voters to approve a higher income tax on the wealthy.

Thad Kousser, chair of the political science department at University of California, San Diego, said Brown and his legislativ­e partners— Senate leader Kevin de Leon and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon — cleared a higher hurdle by winning passage for a much broader tax package.

“What he got was a legislatur­e … to look ahead 10, 20 years into the future and put some pain on their voters today to build California for the future,” Kousser said. “That makes it a really tough trek.”

The deal will raise gasoline taxes 43 percent to 47.3 cents per gallon beginning Nov. 1. Diesel taxes will more than double to 36 cents a gallon. Vehicle owners will be charged a new annual fee, paid along with the vehicle registrati­on.

The money, more than $52 billion over the next 10 years, will pay for repairs to state highways and local streets, along with improvemen­ts to bridges, public transit, and biking and walking trails.

Every Republican but one opposed the plan. Conceding that road conditions are dire, Republican­s said overtaxed California­ns can’t shoulder another increase. California’s gas taxes will be among the highest in the nation.

The decision to ask lawmakers for a tax hike is a departure from Brown’s promise in 2010, when he pledged not to raise taxes without a vote of the people. However, he did not repeat the promise when he was re-elected four years later.

“He has that uncanny knack for knowing when to seize a political issue and run with it and make it work and score with it,” said Larry Gerston, a professor emeritus of political science at San Jose State University. “He rarely loses the big fight.”

Brown, Rendon and de Leon worked on the deal for nearly two years.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California Gov. Jerry Brown waits to speak at a rally to urge lawmakers to approve a tax and fee road repair measure during a rally Wednesday in Sacramento, Calif.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS California Gov. Jerry Brown waits to speak at a rally to urge lawmakers to approve a tax and fee road repair measure during a rally Wednesday in Sacramento, Calif.

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