The Mercury News

Voters’ will ignored on public financing for state campaigns

- By Dan Walters CalMatters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

In politics, as in sports, rules of the game often influence, or even dictate, who wins and who loses.

Just as profession­al sports leagues are wracked by internal conflict over playing rules, California’s politician­s and interest groups joust constantly over campaign contributi­on limits, redrawing of legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts, voter registrati­on, voting procedures and countless other electoral rules.

One of the many clashes occurred 31 years ago, when two competing ballot measures, Propositio­ns 68 and 73, tested voter sentiment on providing public funds to candidates for office, a long-sought goal of Common Cause and other self-described political reform groups.

While both 1988 initiative­s purported to limit campaign contributi­ons, Propositio­n 68 created a mechanism for public financing of campaigns while Propositio­n 73 amended the state’s Political Reform Act to prohibit candidates from accepting public funds.

Both passed handily, but Propositio­n 73 had a higher margin of victory, so its prohibitio­n on public financing prevailed.

The issue was joined again in 2006, when proponents of public financing, led by the California Nurses Associatio­n, placed Propositio­n 89 on the ballot. It specifical­ly authorized public campaign financing, along with a corporate tax hike to finance it.

Business and anti-tax groups opposed the measure and both sides spent virtually identical sums, nearly $6 million each, on the campaign, but by an overwhelmi­ng 3-to-1 margin, Propositio­n 89 was rejected.

A decade later, in 2016, proponents of public financing took another shot, but instead of asking voters to overturn Propositio­n 73’s ban, they sponsored Senate Bill 1107, an endrun around the ban authorizin­g state and local government­s to provide funds to candidates.

Former Gov. Jerry Brown, who sponsored the original Political Reform Act as a candidate for governor in 1974, signed SB 1107 and public financing opponents, led by the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n, immediatel­y challenged it in court, contending that it violated Propositio­n 73.

Sacramento Superior Court Judge Timothy Frawley agreed with the opponents and the state appealed to the 3rd District Court of Appeal.

Late last month, the three-member appellate panel ruled unanimousl­y to uphold Frawley, saying SB 1107 “directly conflicts with a primary purpose and mandate of the (Political Reform) Act, as amended by subsequent voter initiative­s …”

The ruling didn’t sit well with public financing proponents, including SB 1107’s author, state Sen. Ben Allen, a Santa Monica Democrat, who said, “The judge’s ruling is a disappoint­ing setback to communitie­s that rightfully want to reduce the influence of special interest money in campaigns.”

That may be, but regardless of one’s feelings about public financing of campaigns, the state’s voters have had several opportunit­ies to embrace it, but refused, and it’s rather cheeky for legislator­s to ignore them.

Such arrogance is emerging as a pattern among the Democrats who now wield total political power in California.

Not only are they evidently willing to thumb their noses at their own voters, but have several times seen their “progressiv­e” actions slapped down in the federal courts as violating constituti­onal rights, including the right to free speech.

If Allen, other Democratic politician­s and institutio­nal supporters of public campaign financing want to pursue their cause, the legitimate way is to place a measure on the ballot and persuade voters to support it.

In fact, an earlier version of SB 1107 would have placed the issue before voters to decide, but that provision was removed even though the Legislatur­e’s own lawyer warned that it “would require voter approval in order to become effective.”

Arrogance compounded.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Gov. Jerry Brown, left, shown here in 1978, sponsored the original Political Reform Act as a candidate for governor in 1974.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Gov. Jerry Brown, left, shown here in 1978, sponsored the original Political Reform Act as a candidate for governor in 1974.

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