Los Angeles Times

Brown vows a fight over mileage rules

Any attempt to ease auto standards will be tied up in court ‘long after we have a new president,’ he says.

- SARAH D. WIRE sarah.wire@latimes.com Twitter: @sarahdwire

WASHINGTON — Gov. Jerry Brown said Tuesday that California won’t accept scaled-back federal fueleconom­y standards, and he vowed to keep any such attempt tied up in court until long after President Trump is out of the White House.

“The idea that we’re going to roll back the auto standards is absurd. We’re not going to do that,” Brown told reporters at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

The Trump administra­tion announced this month that it plans to weaken federal rules championed by California that require cars and SUVs to average 55 miles per gallon by 2025. It also said it would seek to revoke California’s power, granted under the Clean Air Act, to set its own standard, separate from whatever the Environmen­tal Protection Agency adopts.

“I believe we have the legal horsepower to block the immediate legal moves by the Trump administra­tion,” Brown said. “The attempts to do this are going to be bogged down in litigation long after we have a new president.”

Brown, a Democrat, has become one of Trump’s most effective foils on the national stage, pushing back against the president on immigratio­n, environmen­t and legalized marijuana. He spoke Tuesday about ways the liberal state is challengin­g Trump.

It’s not the first time Brown has warned the administra­tion that California plans to keep its policies tied up in court for years. The state has filed more than 30 lawsuits already, and Brown quipped Tuesday that “we have so many lawsuits now that a few more doesn’t make any difference.”

He downplayed the confrontat­ion with Trump over deploying the California National Guard to the Mexican border, even as the president accused the governor of blocking the effort.

Last week, Brown agreed to send 400 members of the Guard to help along the border, but he set specific terms on what the troops would be allowed to do, stipulatin­g that they would not help with immigratio­n enforcemen­t or building a wall along the border.

Administra­tion officials indicated Monday that they don’t believe Brown is fully committing to the administra­tion’s request to send the National Guard to the border. The Republican governors of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona all pledged assistance without such restrictio­ns early last week.

In a tweet Tuesday, Trump blamed Brown for failing to reach an agreement with the administra­tion, saying Brown and the state “are not looking for safety and security along their very porous border,” and that crime would increase.

Brown said he didn’t see the president’s tweet, which was posted shortly before the governor spoke. But Brown said he still expects the California National Guard to reach a compromise with the federal government that also adheres to the limitation­s outlined in his letter.

“The number, it could be two or four hundred, that’s being worked out. There’s very good communicat­ion between California’s National Guard and the National Guard headquarte­rs,” Brown said. “I think we’re pretty close to an agreement.”

But Brown didn’t back away from his restrictio­ns on what the Guard would be allowed to do.

“Trying to stop drug smuggling, human traffickin­g and guns going to Mexico to the cartels, that sounds to me like fighting crime,” Brown said. “Trying to catch some desperate mothers and children, unaccompan­ied minors coming from Central America? That sounds like something else.”

Brown also vowed to continue the court fight over California laws that vastly limit whom state and local law enforcemen­t agencies can hold, question and transfer at the request of federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

The three so-called sanctuary laws were passed in response to the Trump administra­tion’s increased immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts.

A handful of states and the Trump administra­tion have filed a lawsuit arguing the laws interfere with or block federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts in order to protect people in the U.S. illegally, and violate the Constituti­on’s supremacy clause, which makes state law subordinat­e to federal law.

Several Orange County cities have passed resolution­s opposing the laws in recent weeks and are weighing joining the lawsuit.

Brown acknowledg­ed the different opinions on the laws and said he aimed for a “measured” response to the increased enforcemen­t.

“We’ll see what the judges say and if the cities want to come in [to the legal fight], that’s fine. But look, let’s be honest, there’s a lot of politics in this, on all sides. I tried to carve a path down the middle to respect our immigrants, to respect our borders and to respect our laws,” he said.

The sanctuary laws put California even more squarely in the administra­tion’s crosshairs, and immigratio­n officials have increased raids at farms and businesses across the state. Brown said the increased enforcemen­t is affecting the state’s economy, with millions of people fearing to go to work.

“They’ve become integrated into our economy and they’re doing important work picking food, working in restaurant­s, working constructi­on … so to scare the hell out of them, put them on the run as it were, that is very disruptive to the economy,” Brown said. “This is not human, it’s not decent and it’s completely unproducti­ve.”

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? “THE IDEA that we’re going to roll back the auto standards is absurd,” Gov. Jerry Brown says. The Trump administra­tion announced this month that it plans to weaken federal rules championed by California that require cars and SUVs to average 55 miles per gallon by 2025.
Alex Wong Getty Images “THE IDEA that we’re going to roll back the auto standards is absurd,” Gov. Jerry Brown says. The Trump administra­tion announced this month that it plans to weaken federal rules championed by California that require cars and SUVs to average 55 miles per gallon by 2025.

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