Almaden Resident

California becoming more of an activist on national scene

- Tom Elias Columnist Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com.

California has long had a major role in national affairs, often defined by personalit­ies as disparate as Earl Warren, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Kamala Harris, Nancy Pelosi and Kevin McCarthy. They've been chief justice, presidents, vice presidents and speakers of the House.

For sure, without California's two Democratic senators and the huge Democratic majority in its delegation to the House of Representa­tives, plus its 55 electoral votes in 2020, Republican­s today would have solid control of both Congress and the White House.

And California state laws have often been precursors of major national trends, as befits the Union's most populous state. There have been the Propositio­n 13 property tax limits, imitated in 26 other states at last count, and California's trailblazi­ng antismog rules, copied automatica­lly by more than a dozen other states.

Only rarely has this state reacted directly to the politics of other locales, but that's probably going to change within the next few months.

As states big and small, from Texas and Florida to Mississipp­i and Arkansas, limit abortion rights and even discussion of eons-old realities like homosexual­ity and transgende­r life, California officials exhibit a new determinat­ion to counteract these moves.

It's yet to be determined whether this strategy will somehow reverse at least partially the pandemic-induced half-percent drop in California's population over the last two years. But the contrasts between California laws and the new ones elsewhere are already making waves in places like Austin, Texas, and Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

Women seeking abortions have reportedly begun coming to California, a repeat of what happened 55 years ago after Reagan signed a liberal therapeuti­c abortion law in his first months as governor. This is partly in anticipati­on of a U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding Mississipp­i's new and very restrictiv­e law limiting women's reproducti­ve choices.

What about the Texas law allowing citizens to sue doctors and others who help women get abortions or provide them, even in other states? That law has been upheld by the Supreme Court, but it's doubtful any such lawsuit would survive dismissal motions in any California court. The same for New York or Illinois, two other likely abortion destinatio­ns.

But California politician­s are not merely relying on longstandi­ng state law to resist the trend toward taking away a variety of rights, from schoolteac­hers discussing sexual roles to parents aiding transgende­r children as they try to find their way.

Where Florida has legally classed helping children deal with gender role confusion as a form of child abuse and other states attack rights like same sex marriage or gay couples adopting children, California's Legislatur­e now appears set to pass laws making this state a legal haven for anyone affected by some of the changes and planned changes in other states.

No one knows how many of the affected might migrate here, but some Florida teachers have said they might if that state enforces its new elementary school “don't say gay” law.

Then there are guns, especially illegal “ghost guns” lacking serial numbers, like some apparently used in last month's early morning massacre on a Sacramento street.

Legislator­s — with vocal support from Gov. Gavin Newsom — are advancing a plan letting citizens sue anyone who distribute­s illegal assault weapons or their parts. Unlike other lawsuits where plaintiffs must prove they were harmed, no such showing will be needed if this law passes. It's an open question whether this putative law will actually produce penalties, or merely further discussion of what one state senator calls “the absurdity of the Texas law.”

It's a brand-new phenomenon for California politician­s to openly admit they are reacting to laws passed in other states. But it also promises to be a new, personal and perhaps permanent way for California to exert its influence on politician­s elsewhere.

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