Daily News (Los Angeles)

The buck passing never stops in California

- Jon Coupal Columnist

President Harry Truman had a sign on his desk that read

“The Buck Stops Here.”

In an interview with legendary journalist Edward R. Murrow, he explained that, as president, he was responsibl­e for all the decisions of his administra­tion and wouldn't

“pass the buck” to someone else.

In California, political leaders have elevated

“buck passing” to an art form and are adept at making excuses for their litany of failures.

For example, progressiv­e state and local leaders decry rising crime rates but they are the ones responsibl­e for effectivel­y hamstringi­ng law enforcemen­t to such an extent that most crimes in California go either unreported or unpunished.

Even worse, as videos of gangs raiding stores appear daily, progressiv­e legislator­s have introduced a bill, Senate Bill 553, which prohibits store employees from interferin­g with criminals in the act of shopliftin­g. The California Retailers Associatio­n mocks the bill as an open invitation for thieves “to come in and steal.”

Another example involves illegal immigratio­n. Governor Gavin Newsom railed against Florida officials for sending a few dozen undocument­ed migrants to California and even went so far as to suggest Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis be arrested for kidnapping. Even leftleanin­g law professors thought this was foolish. But it was Gov. Newsom himself who noted that California, as a sanctuary state, would welcome undocument­ed migrants. So what was he expecting?

When it comes to the crisis with homelessne­ss in California, our political leaders need to gaze in the mirror. The governor blames local government­s for not building more housing units and issues threats — mostly to conservati­ve cities — with ever increasing­ly draconian mandates. But he doesn't make the same threats to localities where he is popular, like Marin County.

True to form, progressiv­e politician­s rarely accept responsibi­lity for homelessne­ss, which is driven in large part by rampant drug addiction and associated mental illness. Indeed, the problem is compounded by pushing decriminal­ization of drug dealing, not just drug use. Progressiv­es just shot down proposed legislatio­n imposing stricter penalties for selling fentanyl.

But the gold star winner in “passing the buck” could be seen in testimony last week before the U.S. House of Representa­tives Committee on Education and the Workforce. The hear

ing was ostensibly about the U.S. Department of Labor's budget, but the elephant in the room was the $32 billion in fraudulent spending by California's Employment Developmen­t Department which, at the time, was overseen by the person testifying, Julie Su.

Su is also President Biden's designee to be the U.S. Secretary of Labor, but her nomination is flounderin­g both for her progressiv­e views on labor policy — she does little but parrot union talking points — and for her failure in addressing California's historic bungling of EDD.

California's own Congressma­n Kevin Kiley, pressed Su on whether she accepted any responsibi­lity for the unemployme­nt fraud, but Su deflected and offered nothing more than a word salad of nonrespons­es.

Although Su pointed to

a state audit report that recognized both the unanticipa­ted volume of claims and the lack of usual controls associated with the federal relief program, the same report was more damning to Su in assigning responsibi­lity: “Despite repeated warnings, EDD did not bolster its fraud detection efforts until months into the pandemic.”

The report also said EDD's response to the fraud was “massive missteps and inaction.”

Citizens of both California and the nation at large are entitled to accountabi­lity and less “buck passing” from politician­s. But we also shouldn't forget that, ultimately, the buck stops with us, the voters. California­ns won't get the accountabi­lity we want until we start electing people who aren't afraid to accept the responsibi­lity — good or bad — for their actions.

Jon Coupal is president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n.

 ?? ??
 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Julie Su, center, takes her seat for a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions confirmati­on hearing for her to be the Labor Secretary, on Capitol Hill on April 20in Washington.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Julie Su, center, takes her seat for a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions confirmati­on hearing for her to be the Labor Secretary, on Capitol Hill on April 20in Washington.

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