Los Angeles Times

Legislatur­e convenes with a record number of Democrats

How they govern will probably be shaped by issues they prioritize

- Politician­s debate tweak to f ire law

A California legislator is seeking to provide state utilities more f lexibility in covering costs tied to blazes. CALIFORNIA, B1

SACRAMENTO — A bumper crop of Democrats convened Monday in the California Legislatur­e, the largest group in the state’s modern history, swept into office by an electoral f lood that could create a significan­t change on bigticket issues including healthcare and child poverty.

Sixty Democrats joined the Assembly, making up three-quarters of the lower house’s membership and the party’s largest caucus in the chamber since 1883. In the 40member Senate, 29 lawmakers are Democrats, a high-water mark reached just once before in more than half a century.

Leaders of both houses urged their colleagues to move away from

campaignin­g and toward governing, with a number of pressing issues to tackle in the two-year legislativ­e session ahead.

“I challenge each of you to search within yourselves this session, to find the urgency we will need to match the tasks before us,” Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) said in opening remarks.

How the historical­ly large contingent of Democrats will govern alongside Gov.elect Gavin Newsom, who takes office in January, will probably depend on which issues they prioritize among the scores of bills formally introduced Monday. Although some lawmakers represent decidedly liberal communitie­s in California’s sprawling urban landscape, others won in districts that were represente­d by Republican­s as recently as the summer; in some cases, that GOP dominance spanned decades.

For Republican­s, whose total legislativ­e representa­tion in the new session could fit inside a couple of passenger vans, the path forward could be challengin­g.

“I’d like to say that I surfed the blue wave and I landed on the shore, and I’m here to continue my work,” Senate Minority Leader Patricia Bates (R-Laguna Niguel) said in remarks during the swearing-in session, drawing laughter from her colleagues.

Practicall­y speaking, their small numbers will require each member to take on extra work to fill the GOP’s allotted spots on legislativ­e committees. More broadly, however, Republican legislator­s must search for relevance in policy debates where their votes aren’t needed.

“I’m still going through the 12 steps of grief,” Sen. John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa) quipped.

Republican­s must also decide how to interpret the election results — either as the product of a nationaliz­ed midterm election under an unpopular GOP president, or as a deeper repudiatio­n of the party’s brand and platform. One Republican, San Diego Assemblyma­n Brian Maienschei­n, took the oath of office without yet knowing whether he had retained his seat, his lead shrinking as votes continue to be counted.

Still, Monday’s ceremonial kickoff to the legislativ­e session — after which lawmakers adjourned until Jan. 7 — was marked by camaraderi­e, not confrontat­ion. New lawmakers’ family members mingled and hugged, posing for photos. Assemblyma­n Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco) brought his twin infants with him, wearing matching sweater vests; Sen. Benjamin Allen (D-Santa Monica) took the oath of office while holding a carrier with his newborn inside. Later, a number of lawmakers gathered with friends for private parties across downtown Sacramento.

It was also an emotional day given the hardships many California­ns are facing. Both houses acknowledg­ed a number of deadly events in recent months. Newsom, presiding over the Senate for the final time as lieutenant governor, led the chamber in a moment of silence for those killed in the Camp and Woolsey fires.

Emotional, too, was the call for action in setting the agenda for the year ahead. Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) took aim at the oft-repeated maxim of California’s “exceptiona­lism,” telling lawmakers that poverty and the affordable housing crisis have tarnished the state’s reputation.

“We cannot make housing affordable for the masses when the 1% are earning hundreds and thousands of times” what the average worker makes, Rendon said to applause.

Two Democratic senators announced an early effort on that front, introducin­g a bill to restore affordable housing funding for local government­s that was lost when the state abolished redevelopm­ent agencies in 2011.

“We have an opportunit­y to establish a renewed partnershi­p between the state and cities, with strict accountabi­lity measures, to ensure more affordable housing gets built,” state Sen. James Beall Jr. (D-San Jose) said in a written statement.

Others urged lawmakers to embrace the results of a far-reaching study released last month that called for $1.6 billion in additional spending to combat child poverty. A Fresno assemblyma­n, Democrat Joaquin Arambula, pledged to reintroduc­e a plan to extend MediCal coverage to all California residents without legal immigratio­n status. Both efforts would be expensive and could test the boundaries of a state budget that has ample cash reserves but has largely avoided the kinds of program expansions that would continue even in the presence of a recession and budget shortfalls.

“I think working people’s issues have to be what we address,” newly elected Sen. Maria Elena Durazo (D-Los Angeles) said, adding later that the resounding win for Democrats was “a call for government to fill human needs — and human needs means shelter, a place to live; it means that from a job you can do everything that you aspire to do.”

Lawmakers also introduced bills to implement universal preschool and new mental health services in the state, and to extend the time to file workplace harassment claims. Another new proposal aims to bolster a spring ruling by the California Supreme Court that limited the power of companies to classify workers as independen­t contractor­s, ensuring a heated battle with the business industry.

And new gun-related laws were proposed a month after a mass shooting in Thousand Oaks, including a bill to tax the sale of semiautoma­tic firearms — the revenue would fund violence prevention programs in California. A second bill, vetoed in the prior session by Gov. Jerry Brown, would allow teachers, employers and coworkers to ask judges to remove guns from people they believe to be a danger to the public.

National politics were not completely absent during the opening events, though not as dominant a presence as they were in 2016, when Democrats were visibly shaken by the election of President Trump. Rendon chastised Trump during his speech Monday for the decision to send troops to the U.S.-Mexico border in response to immigratio­n fears — what he said was an assignment “to do nothing but posture.”

“My worst fears have not yet materializ­ed, but the federal reality has been quite bad enough,” Rendon said of Trump.

Members of the Asian Pacific Islander, Latino and Jewish legislativ­e caucuses introduced a resolution that denounced a Trump administra­tion proposal to restrict green cards for those who would probably receive public assistance, calling it “classist” and “racist.” Assemblyma­n David Chiu (DSan Francisco), chairman of the Asian Pacific Islander Legislativ­e Caucus, said it would force “immigrant families to make impossible choices.”

The newly elected members of the Legislatur­e marked a few milestones just by winning office. Twenty-three women — more than one-quarter of the house — now serve in the Assembly, and all but two of them are Democrats. The Legislatur­e, where brothers have served at the same time, now has its first sister act: Baldwin Park Democrats Assemblywo­man Blanca Rubio and Sen. Susan Rubio. And with members now eligible to serve longer in a single house — a change brought about by a 2012 ballot measure — the Legislatur­e is welcoming its smallest freshman class since the 1988 election cycle.

Newsom, who will find himself sparring with many of the new members when he becomes governor, urged lawmakers to move quickly to the work at hand.

“Let us not forget why you are here. And that’s not to be something, but to do something,” he said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? ASSEMBLYWO­MAN Buffy Wicks, a freshman Democrat, and daughter Josephine, 2, look at the gallery at the start of the new session.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ASSEMBLYWO­MAN Buffy Wicks, a freshman Democrat, and daughter Josephine, 2, look at the gallery at the start of the new session.
 ?? Mason Trinca For The Times ?? A LEGISLATOR hopes to close a hole in a law to allow state utilities more flexibilit­y to cover costs associated with wildfires. Above, a Cal Fire crew member walks in a house in Paradise on Nov. 10.
Mason Trinca For The Times A LEGISLATOR hopes to close a hole in a law to allow state utilities more flexibilit­y to cover costs associated with wildfires. Above, a Cal Fire crew member walks in a house in Paradise on Nov. 10.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? NEWLY elected state Sen. Melissa Hurtado, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance at the state Capitol, is among the 29 Democrats in the 40-member Senate.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press NEWLY elected state Sen. Melissa Hurtado, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance at the state Capitol, is among the 29 Democrats in the 40-member Senate.

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