The Ukiah Daily Journal

Gavin Newsom's first term: Reality bites

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Last weekend, Gavin Newsom released the first video ad of his campaign for a second term as California's governor.

It is, therefore, an appropriat­e moment to look at what he said he wanted to accomplish as governor during his 2018 campaign and how it has turned out.

A two-word summary would be “reality bites.”

Candidate Newsom, touting a book entitled “Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies,” embraced its central point that visionary leaders should seek “big, hairy audacious goals.”

“I'd rather be accused of (having) those audacious stretch goals than be accused of timidity,” he said at one point.

True to that philosophy, Newsom told voters he wanted to do big things, such as creating a single-payer health system, solving the state's chronic shortage of housing and completely converting California to renewable energy.

During his 2018 campaign, the state Senate passed a singlepaye­r bill and Newsom enthusiast­ically endorsed it, saying there was “no reason to wait around.”

“I'm tired of politician­s saying they support single-payer but that it's too soon, too expensive or someone else's problem,” Newsom said.

The 2018 bill stalled in the Assembly but when another bill cleared the Senate and was pending in the Assembly this year, Newsom made no effort to get it passed and it died without a vote.

A commission Newsom appointed to study single-payer's feasibilit­y has issued a report that lays out options but offers no clear path to implementa­tion.

Essentiall­y, single-payer is no more likely today than it was four years ago.

Instead, Newsom's budgets have incrementa­lly extended Medi-cal coverage to uninsured residents, including undocument­ed immigrants, but in the long term, that coverage depends on the state's notoriousl­y volatile revenues.

As he was running for governor, Gavin Newsom pledged to “lead the effort to develop the 3.5 million new housing units we need by 2025 because our solutions must be as bold as the problem is big.”

The pledge would have required increasing production to 500,000 units a year, but actual constructi­on has been, at best, about 20% of that figure. Newsom downplayed his pledge to “a stretch goal,” telling the Los Angeles Times, “It's a stubborn issue. You can't snap your fingers and build hundreds of thousands, millions of housing units overnight.”

And so it has gone — Newsom edging away from “big hairy audacious goals” one-byone when they proved impossible to achieve in the real world.

Two recent positions on highprofil­e environmen­tal issues also illustrate how reality has tempered his governorsh­ip.

One reality is that California is afflicted by severe drought and, due to climate change, may face permanent shortages of water. One very controvers­ial option is tapping the limitless supply of ocean water and stripping out its salt.

Recently, the state Coastal Commission recommende­d that the state's second desalinati­on plant not be built, but Newsom reiterated his support. “We need more tools in the damn tool kit,” Newsom told the Bay Area News Group editorial board.

That, at least, was a consistent position, but he modified his stance on another real world issue — whether California's only remaining nuclear power plant, Diablo Canyon, should be shuttered as now scheduled.

The San Luis Obispo County plant generates at least 6% of the state's electrical energy and closure could leave California, whose power supply is already marginal, in the dark.

Newsom had supported decommissi­oning Diablo Canyon but told the Los Angeles Times editorial board last week that California will apply for federal funds aimed at keeping threatened nuclear plants in production, saying, “We would be remiss not to put that on the table as an option.”

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