Monterey Herald

Newsom governing by decree

- By Dan Walters CalMatters

Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom extended two of his pandemic decrees until March 31, indicating that he has no present intention of withdrawin­g the emergency declaratio­n he issued 20 months ago.

It calls to mind David’s plaintive question in Psalm 13, “How long, O Lord?”

Under that emergency declaratio­n, Newsom has suspended or altered more than 400 laws and regulation­s and, in effect, issued dozens of his own laws without going through the legislativ­e process.

While many are relatively mundane, some have had profound impacts, particular­ly mandatory shutdowns of countless small businesses and vaccinatio­n and mask-wearing orders.

The closures triggered a severe recession as more than 2 million jobs were erased, quadruplin­g the state’s unemployme­nt rate. Subsequent­ly, Newsom repeatedly eased his shutdown orders, then reimposed them as COVID-19 waxed and waned.

Newsom has defended recent mandatory vaccinatio­n orders for teachers and state employees by citing a new uptick in infection rates, also the rationale for last week’s action affecting the employment of health care workers.

Newsom cited “the potential beginning of a new surge in COVID-19 cases” and “shortstaff­ed and backlogged” health care facilities.

Erin Mellon, a Newsom spokespers­on, told CalMatters’ reporter Emily Hoeven on Sunday: “The state of emergency ensures the state can continue to respond quickly to evolving conditions as the pandemic persists. As we have seen, this virus and variants are unpredicta­ble. The state of emergency will be ended once conditions no longer warrant an emergency response.”

That’s the rub.

Public health officials have concluded that COVID-19 may never be fully or even almost fully eradicated, as polio was more than a half-century ago.

Rather, the virus will continue to mutate, much like influenza, and will require continuing evolution of vaccines and treatments to keep it at bay. We may manage it, but probably will not eliminate it.

Given that scientific consensus, Newsom could continue his March 4, 2020, emergency declaratio­n indefinite­ly and thus continue to govern by decree, further eroding the American concept of checks and balances via three equal branches of government.

It is, as opined in this space earlier, an experiment in the system of parliament­ary government used in much of the world, including in England and its former colonies, such as Canada and Australia.

In those countries, the party that wins a majority of legislativ­e seats, or fashions a coalition majority, also controls the executive branch. The head of the majority party – the prime minister – is empowered to issue decrees with the force of law as long as he or she retains a legislativ­e majority.

Newsom’s Democratic Party holds massive majorities in both legislativ­e houses and their leaders are largely content to allow Newsom to govern by decree since they agree, for the most part, with what he has been doing. It avoids the messy, semitransp­arent process of drafting and passing laws that can be challenged in court or by referendum.

Newsom and legislativ­e leaders can work out what they want to do behind closed doors – with input from lobbyists for affected interest groups, of course – and either have Newsom embody it in an executive order or quickly put it into law.

The increasing­ly opaque state budget is an example of the latter. The Legislatur­e passes a shell budget by June 15 each year, Newsom signs it and then it’s fleshed out over ensuing months with countless “trailer bills” that often make major policy changes with virtually no outside input.

Whatever you call it, this system of governance by gubernator­ial decree and hide-the-pea legislatio­n may be Democratic but certainly is not democratic.

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