Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

California­ns deserve a strong opposition party

- By Bill Essayli Bill Essayli was elected in 2022 to represent the 63rd State Assembly District, which includes the whole cities of Norco, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, and Canyon Lake, as well as portions of the cities of Eastvale, Riverside, and Corona. Assemb

Republican­s have lost 10 seats in the State Assembly over the last 10 years. When you’ve lost seats in every single election over the last 10 years, you might be doing something wrong. Republican­s in the legislatur­e dropped below super minority status years ago, and now at only 18 out of 80, we’re less than 1/4 of the votes in the Assembly. This means Republican votes alone can’t stop legislatio­n in Sacramento — what matters is serving as a strong opposition party against Democrat policies which hurt California­ns.

To be an effective opposition party, Republican lawmakers must be zealous advocates for the public in the face of fierce resistance from the Democrat party and their allies. And yes there will be consequenc­es from the party in power, and legislator­s may not get the crumbs they so crave from the Democrats in Sacramento. That is okay because the goal is not crumbs, it’s to be relevant.

Last year, when Democrats in the Assembly Public Safety Committee rejected SB 14, Republican Senator Shannon Grove’s bill to make human traffickin­g of a minor a “serious” felony, the public outcry was swift and decisive. So decisive, in fact, that Democratic leadership attempted to distance themselves from thenchair of the Public Safety Committee, Assemblyma­n Reginald Jones-sawyer, who refused to support the bill. Republican­s rallied human traffickin­g victims and their stories ultimately won the day and the bill was signed into law, demonstrat­ing both the moral bankruptcy of those who opposed as well as the power of public scrutiny in a building that would much rather push their harmful agendas under cover of darkness.

This year, Assemblyma­n Jones-sawyer introduced a horrific bill, AB 2031, which would spend taxpayer dollars to defend illegal immigrants facing deportatio­n after they have been convicted of violent or serious felonies—in other words, free lawyers for illegal immigrants who murder California­n citizens. I strongly condemned this bill and rallied the public to pressure the Assembly Judiciary Committee to reject this dangerous bill, and it worked. The author pulled his bill from the committee hearing, even though he was in town and presented other bills in committee that same morning.

Violent and serious felonies, as the naming implies, are some of the most heinous crimes imaginable. Murder, rape, kidnapping, lewd acts on a child under 14 years of age, and, as of SB 14 being signed into law, human traffickin­g of a minor. Keep in mind, the illegal immigrants this bill sought to provide legal assistance to are not merely accused of these acts, they have been convicted of them.

We’re talking about the lowest, most detestable dregs of society receiving taxpayer-funded legal support. The same ones that murdered 22-year-old University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley, beheaded 55-year-old America Thayer, stabbed to death 20-year-old University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbets, and shot 32-yearold San Franciscan Kate Steinle in the back of the head, among the many other horrendous murders perpetrate­d by criminals who never should have been in this country in the first place.

It is almost unthinkabl­e that an elected member of the California Legislatur­e would even introduce such a dangerous bill—almost. Assemblyme­mbers who think like Jones-sawyer are far more common than California­ns

would like to believe.

Just as the public outcry was felt in Sacramento when SB 14 was initially rejected last year, I am proud that our communitie­s made their voices heard when AB 2031 was set for a hearing in the Assembly Judiciary Committee this morning. Social media pressure, phone calls to the offices of the Judiciary Committee members, and press scrutiny led directly to Assemblyma­n Jones-sawyer pulling the bill from considerat­ion last week. A win for public safety and a win for common sense.

While this represents a tremendous victory for California and a testament to the importance of public participat­ion in the legislativ­e process, this is only the beginning of the fight. AB 2031 could make a comeback at a future hearing in the coming weeks. Republican lawmakers need to stand firm if AB 2031 rears its ugly head again to engage and activate the public to kill this bill for good.

 ?? BRITTANY MURRAY — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones Sawyer, and California Governor Gavin Newsom in Long Beach on July 21, 2021.
BRITTANY MURRAY — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones Sawyer, and California Governor Gavin Newsom in Long Beach on July 21, 2021.

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