Lodi News-Sentinel

‘California is not turning back’

Gov. Jerry Brown says state is a model for the nation in State of the State address

- By John Myers

SACRAMENTO — By the time his brief but blustery State of the State speech ended on Tuesday, it was clear that California Gov. Jerry Brown had offered his most sweeping rebuke to date of President Donald Trump and the new leadership of Congress.

But the critique circled back to the same conclusion Brown has reached several times since returning to the governor’s office — that what most ails the nation is that it’s not enough like California.

“When we defend California, we defend America,” the governor said to applause from lawmakers at the state Capitol. “We must prepare for uncertain times and reaffirm the basic principles that have made California the great exception that it is.”

Brown’s Sacramento speech was delivered just four days after Trump’s fiery inaugural manifesto, a quirk of timing that might have convinced him to liven up what in recent years has mostly been a no-frills homily in praise of cautious governing.

The governor said that recent events had made it hard “to keep my thoughts just on California.” It was the first such admission from Brown, who has largely avoided the political or policy lines in the sand drawn by the state’s other Democratic leaders in the wake of Trump’s victory.

He abandoned that reticence to speak out in Tuesday’s State of the State address on several occasions, including a short reference to top Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway’s defense of inaccuraci­es in describing the size of the crowd for the presidenti­al inaugurati­on.

“We’ve seen the bald assertion of ‘alternativ­e facts,’ whatever those are,” Brown said of the comments made last weekend on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

No part of Tuesday’s speech was more forceful than when the governor promised to protect those who live in California without legal U.S. residency. He admitted that “federal law is supreme” when it comes to immigratio­n, but bragged about California policies that take a blind eye to immigratio­n status when offering access to higher education, employment rights and driver’s licenses.

“We may be called upon to defend those laws, and defend them we will,” said the governor, his voice rising and his right index finger pushing downward for emphasis.

“And let me be clear: We will defend everybody — every man, woman and child — who has come here for a better life and has contribute­d to the well-being of our state,” he said.

At that point, Democrats in the Assembly chamber jumped to their feet for a standing ovation while Republican­s largely sat in silence.

Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, a Democrat, said that she hoped the governor’s promise was a signal for support of pending legislatio­n to help immigrants who face deportatio­n hearings.

“For the last few months I think we’ve been thinking, ‘What is the one thing that he’s going to stand for, that we’re all going to stand for?’” said Gonzalez Fletcher, who is vice chairwoman of the Latino Legislativ­e Caucus. “It was clear when it comes to immigratio­n he is not willing to go backwards.”

Brown also gave a mention to health care, as national efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act stand to jeopardize more than $16 billion in federal subsidies and affect millions of California­ns enrolled in the state’s Medi-Cal program.

And the governor gave no quarter when it came to California’s aggressive efforts to combat the causes of climate change, now one of his signature issues. Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, the president’s choice to lead the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, cast doubt last week on continued approval of California’s unique emissions rules for cars and trucks.

“Whatever they do in Washington, they can’t change the facts,” Brown said. “And these are the facts: The climate is changing, the temperatur­es are rising and so are the oceans.”

But for all of his swagger in pledging to fight the Trump administra­tion, the veteran politician admitted there is opportunit­y for collaborat­ion when it comes to the president’s pledge to commit as much as $1 trillion to expanding and repairing the nation’s roads and railways.

“And I say, ‘Amen to that, man. Amen to that, brother.’ We’re there with you!” the governor shouted in a bit of improvisat­ion during the prepared speech.

Brown has generally used his State of the State speeches as moments of reflection rather than calls to action. Unlike previous governors who used the address as a launching pad for sweeping new policy proposals, Brown has given short shrift to such tradition.

Brown’s fellow Democrats gave him ample applause. They celebrated when, minutes before the speech, he administer­ed the oath of office to state Attorney General Xavier Becerra. The former Los Angeles congressma­n was confirmed to the post by the state Senate on Monday.

Brown frequently sprinkles literary passages or Latin phrases into his remarks, and on Tuesday he tacked on some of the lyrics from legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” to his speech — along with one final vow to defend the state’s policy preference­s.

“California is not turning back,” Brown said. “Not now, not ever.”

 ?? GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? California Gov. Jerry Brown delivers his State of the State speech in the State Assembly Chambers at the State Capitol building in Sacramento on Tuesday.
GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES California Gov. Jerry Brown delivers his State of the State speech in the State Assembly Chambers at the State Capitol building in Sacramento on Tuesday.

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