Los Angeles Times

Jerry Brown has left the state

With Brown and others at Democratic convention, job falls to ninth in hierarchy.

- By John Myers john.myers@latimes.com Twitter: @johnmyers

So who is California’s acting governor while Democrats gather in Philadelph­ia?

SACRAMENTO — Few would doubt that, in the event of a major emergency in California over the next few days, Gov. Jerry Brown would be fully engaged and directing state personnel even as he sits thousands of miles away at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia.

There’s just one problem with that scenario: Brown, under the provisions of the California Constituti­on, won’t be the actual governor until he ventures back across state lines.

“Don’t worry, you’re in safe hands,” said Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tom Torlakson, who on Monday night became California’s acting governor.

Since its first constituti­on was drafted in 1849, California law has dictated that a governor must be within the state borders to have the powers of the office. Half a dozen times this year, Brown has left the state and officially transferre­d the job of governor to someone else — in most cases, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom.

But Newsom also is in Philadelph­ia this week. As is Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles), the next in the gubernator­ial line of succession.

As state schools chief, Torlakson is No. 9 on the list. Eight higher-ranking statewide officials, all Democrats, flew east to attend the fourday national convention.

“It’s very, very rare to get anywhere past the first three,” said Alex Vassar, a state policy analyst who also studies California’s legislativ­e and constituti­onal history.

The geographic requiremen­t of being California’s governor has remained untouched through successive eras of instant global communicat­ion. The state is not alone in its outmoded legal language; 19 other states also remove power from a traveling governor, although some do so only during a prolonged absence.

At times, the law has hindered quick action. In 1965, Gov. Edmund G. “Pat” Brown was in Greece when the riots in Watts erupted, leaving a largely inexperien­ced lieutenant governor to lead the initial response. His son, the current governor, left California for fewer than two days in 1979 to find that the lieutenant governor — a Republican — had appointed a presiding appellate judge. Brown quickly returned and withdrew the appointmen­t.

No real drama has happened since then. In most cases, acting governors consult with the real governor’s top staff in the event of a crisis. More often than not, acting governors issue honorary proclamati­ons, like the one De León issued this month honoring Dodgers announcer Vin Scully.

Because the law specifies state borders, short trips can lead to a flurry of official executive authority notificati­ons. Last August, Brown attended an environmen­tal summit on the eastern shore of Lake Tahoe — the Nevada side — and had to, for several hours, formally cede his authority over the government a few miles away.

A bill to allow a traveling governor to remain in power, championed by The Times’ editorial board and others, fizzled in the Legislatur­e in 2003. In 2008, three additional state officers were added to the list of who, if needed, may serve as governor: superinten­dent of public instructio­n, insurance commission­er and chairperso­n of the California Board of Equalizati­on.

“The bill had no opposition,” recalled Vassar, who helped draft the proposal. “It was that much of a sleeper.”

On Monday, there were three different governors by the time the sun had risen and set on the Golden State. Brown’s midday departure left the reins of power in the hands of Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount), whose late afternoon f light to the East Coast meant the torch was passed to Torlakson.

“We got the memo from the governor’s office,” he said.

The 67-year old Democrat, a longtime state legislator, could throw the state’s governing system into limbo should he leave California before Brown or others return this week. That’s because the two officials next in line, Insurance Commission­er Dave Jones and Board of Equalizati­on Chairwoman Fiona Ma, also are in Philadelph­ia.

“If he leaves the state, that’s the end of the line,” Vassar said. “It would have to be interprete­d by someone.”

Torlakson’s message: Don’t worry.

“I’ll be in Sacramento,” he said in an interview Monday. “It’s a different job, a different title, but it’s still me.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? TOM TORLAKSON, the superinten­dent of public instructio­n, is acting governor because of state rules.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press TOM TORLAKSON, the superinten­dent of public instructio­n, is acting governor because of state rules.

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