Daily News (Los Angeles)

INCOMPETEN­CE SAVES AMERICA FROM CALIFORNIA

- Columnist

SACRAMENTO » During a recent trip to Phoenix, locals rolled their eyes at all the California­ns who are moving there — mostly middle-class residents who are so tired of our state’s chronic mismanagem­ent that they’re willing to abandon the temperate coast for a parched desert. Note to California­ns: It’s best to re-register your cars in other states as quickly as possible, to avoid glares from the locals.

But while the exodus continues — and California’s falling population and outmigrati­on figures reinforce the anecdotal stories — progressiv­es still dream of replicatin­g the state’s political experiment at the national level. California­ns might be voting with their feet, but there’s nowhere they can run and hide if the federal government embraces the same policies.

After the Biden administra­tion took power, many Americans expressed these concerns. After all, Vice President Kamala Harris is a product of the Bay Area Democratic political machine. Biden tapped another former California attorney general and member of Congress, Xavier Becerra, to run the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services — a particular­ly important agency given the pandemic.

Other California­ns rose to high-level positions, too. These include a team of economic officials with longtime California ties, including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco), Small Business Administra­tion head Isabel Casillas Guzman (a veteran of the Gray Davis and Gavin Newsom administra­tions) and a host of lesserknow­n officials.

And San Francisco’s Nancy Pelosi remains the Speaker of the House, where California­style policies (such as its ban on independen­t contractin­g) receive a sympatheti­c hearing. As we know, California’s Democratic leaders seem more interested in using California — it’s the world’s fifth-largest economy, don’t you know? — as a template for national policy.

Their recent fratricide over single-payer healthcare is one recent example. The Legislatur­e proposed ending every private health plan and replacing it with a DMV-style bureaucrac­y called CalCare. Its companion measure, Assembly Constituti­onal Amendment 11, would have asked California voters to raise their taxes by $12,250 per household.

In reality, neither bill had any serious chance of becoming law. The effort was about making a symbolic point — largely for a national audience. But with Harris and Becerra in key national posts, progressiv­es hoped such policies could be imposed from the top down.

Yet fears of the Californic­ation of America are overblown after watching the administra­tion’s ongoing struggles. “White House officials have grown so frustrated with top health official Xavier Becerra as the pandemic rages on that they have openly mused about who might be better in the job,” The Washington Post reported last month.

Biden officials are frustrated at conflictin­g messaging from Becerra’s office, as the pandemic continues and the administra­tion pays a political price for its mishandlin­g of related health policy. By the way, a government agency that can’t even get its messaging right

“While California’s lawmakers will continue along their merry, progressiv­e way, it’s obvious – and fortunate – that they lack the skills to impose those priorities on a politicall­y diverse nation.”

on one single health issue might not be the best place to centralize all healthcare decisions, but I digress.

The administra­tion jumped into damagecont­rol mode, as Latino groups complained about criticism of Biden’s highest-ranking Latino official. But no California­n should be surprised at Becerra’s inability to inspire confidence

 ?? DAVID CRANE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Xavier Becerra, then-California Attorney General, at a press conference Monday, February 10, 2020.
DAVID CRANE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Xavier Becerra, then-California Attorney General, at a press conference Monday, February 10, 2020.
 ?? THOMAS COEX — POOL PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S Vice-President Kamala Harris speaks during a press conference in Paris Friday, Nov. 12, 2021.
THOMAS COEX — POOL PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S Vice-President Kamala Harris speaks during a press conference in Paris Friday, Nov. 12, 2021.
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