The Mercury News

Effort to split State of California should be permanentl­y junked

- Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Not too many years ago, when California’s government appeared to be totally dysfunctio­nal, some reform-minded folks considered sponsoring a broad overhaul of the state’s governance structure.

However, the reformers, led by the Bay Area Council, a coalition of business and civic groups, ran afoul of one of the California Constituti­on’s most obscure, rarely invoked provisions.

Article 18 says that while voters can amend the constituti­on by initiative, bypassing the Legislatur­e, a “revision” can be placed before voters only by the Legislatur­e or a constituti­onal revision commission appointed by the Legislatur­e after it has asked for and obtained permission from voters to do so.

The sweeping changes envisioned by the reformers would clearly be a revision and they knew the Legislatur­e would never get the ball rolling. Some decades earlier, in fact, voters had approved the appointmen­t of a constituti­onal revision commission, only to see the Legislatur­e refuse to create one.

Therefore, the reformers tried a two-part approach — an initiative ballot measure to amend the constituti­on to allow a revision commission to be created via initiative, and a second measure to create such a commission.

The movement foundered, essentiall­y because of internal conflicts over the scope of the proposed commission’s charter. And now Article 18 has popped up again vis-a-vis an initiative measure placed on the November ballot that would, if passed, set in motion a process to split California into three states.

Propositio­n 9 is the pet cause of Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper, and it had touched off an internatio­nal media feeding frenzy. But it faced strong opposition from the state’s political leadership, including both major political parties, labor unions and business groups.

Opponents filed suit, alleging that proposing to split the state would, by definition, be a major revision of the state constituti­on that Article 18 says can only be initiated by the Legislatur­e, either directly or indirectly.

Last week, while setting aside the basic issue, the state Supreme Court ordered that Propositio­n 9 be removed from the November ballot “because significan­t questions have been raised regarding the propositio­n’s validity, and because we conclude that the potential harm in permitting the measure to remain on the ballot outweighs the potential harm in delaying the propositio­n to a future election…”

Draper didn’t like it, of course. “Apparently, the insiders are in cahoots and the establishm­ent doesn’t want to find out how many people don’t like the way California is being governed,” Draper said in an email. “Whether you agree or not with this initiative, this is not the way democracie­s are supposed to work. This kind of corruption is what happens in Third World countries.”

Well, no, that’s the way it works when the law is followed as intended.

Draper was trying to bypass Article 18 by making his measure a statute that would command the Legislatur­e to pursue a threestate breakup.

The court’s order to delay a vote implies that it sees merit in the opponents’ contention that it would be an unconstitu­tional revision. But it couldn’t fully explore that issue with an election looming, so it did the sensible thing and put the proposal on hold. If Draper’s measure passes muster, it will go on the 2020 ballot, but chances are it will fail the constituti­onal test and be permanentl­y junked — and that’s what should happen.

Splitting California into three new states would be a logistical nightmare and makes no sense except in Draper’s mind.

 ?? BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? Venture capitalist Tim Draper believes California­ns would be better off splitting the state into three separate states.
BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO Venture capitalist Tim Draper believes California­ns would be better off splitting the state into three separate states.
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