The Mercury News

Newsom, Legislatur­e make California more progressiv­e

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Before celebratin­g his 54th birthday Sunday, Gov. Gavin Newsom closed out the landmark 2021 session of the California Legislatur­e by signing the last of the 770 bills he decided should become law.

It was a remarkable session because a new wave of COVID-19 was hitting, Newsom was facing a recall election, he and legislator­s had many billions of dollars in federal pandemic aid and unanticipa­ted tax revenues and, finally, because they spent much of that money on an array of new and expanded public services.

The new spending on health care, social services, public schools, early childhood education and increasing personal incomes of the poor makes California the national leader in advancing the Europeanst­yle “social democracy” model that the Democrats’ left wing wants the federal government to embrace.

Before this year’s session began, for instance, 94% of California­ns had some form of medical care coverage, thanks to Obamacare and a sharp expansion of the state’s Medi-Cal program for the poor to more than a third of the state’s population. This year’s additions push California very close to universal coverage, a long-sought goal of those on the left and Newsom’s oft-expressed ambition.

The leftward tilt of the session is also evident in other ways that do not spend money, such as making ethnic studies a requiremen­t for high school education, banning gasoline-powered lawn equipment, imposing new restrictio­ns on guns, or compelling department stores to have gender-neutral toy and child care department­s.

The Legislatur­e and Newsom also continued to move the state’s criminal justice system leftward, reducing punishment for some crimes and cracking down on police officers who misbehave by lifting the licenses, called “certificat­ions,” they need to be employed.

Interestin­gly, while Newsom endorsed 770 bills that the Legislatur­e sent to his desk, he also vetoed 66 of them, in some cases because, he said, they went just a bit too far.

One of his more significan­t — and surprising — rejections was the latest of many yearslong efforts by Democratic legislator­s to help the United Farm Workers Union expand its tiny foothold among the state’s agricultur­al workers.

Assembly Bill 616 would have allowed prounion workers to sign cards rather than having an election on whether the UFW should be recognized as a contract bargaining agent. It faced stiff opposition from farmers, and Newsom said in his veto message that the bill contained “various inconsiste­ncies and procedural issues related to the collection and review of ballot cards.”

The UFW had backed Newsom in his successful victory in a Sept. 14 recall election, and he vetoed the union’s bill eight days later, earning a denunciati­on from the union’s leaders, who likened the measure to the all-mail state election process that Newsom and legislator­s have decreed.

AB 616 was just one of two bills on the California Chamber of Commerce “job killer” list to reach Newsom’s desk intact. While he vetoed it, he signed the other, Assembly Bill 62, also a union-sponsored measure than bans piecework pay in the garment industry.

Legislativ­e leaders tout this year’s session as one of the most expansive in history, and they are correct.

The state is now a beacon for the national progressiv­e agenda that President Joe Biden is trying, so far unsuccessf­ully, to move through Congress.

There’s every reason to expect that Newsom and the Legislatur­e will continue to paddle California’s canoe to the left. Republican­s are powerless and the influence of Democratic moderates has waned. The only question is whether the economy will continue to churn out enough money to pay for the new benefits without tax increases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States