Los Angeles Times

A thumb up, and down, for Brown

Critics are stumped after the governor vetoes legislatio­n that would have imposed new rules on gifts and donations to state lawmakers

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento george. skelton @ latimes. com

Governor signs bill on ballot initiative reform but vetoes legislatio­n imposing ethics rules.

One thumb up for Gov. Jerry Brown. And the other thumb down.

The governor signed a bill inserting a smidgen of sense in California’s oft- abused ballot initiative system. Excellent.

But he vetoed legislatio­n imposing sensible ethics rules on Capitol politician­s. Whatwas he thinking?

I’m thinking Brown has always been a better political reformer out of office than in. And I’m not the only one who thinks that.

“He’s not the reformer he was 40 years ago,” says Bob Stern, who back then cowrote the California political reform act that helped propel Brown into the governor’s office during the Watergate era. “Then hewas seeking the governorsh­ip. Nowhe is governor.”

Maybe it’s just human nature. Preaching temperance fromthe outside is much easier than sermonizin­g once you’re inside the saloon. Andit’s simpler to regulate others than yourself.

But about the governor’s laudable action: his signing the bill upgrading the centuryold initiative system.

That therewas ever any doubt he’d sign it says a lot less about the bill’s merits than about his own quirkiness.

It’s a modest improvemen­t in the system but neverthele­ss significan­t.

Basically, the newlaw gives the public and Legislatur­e input into the writing of an initiative with the goal of detecting legal flaws, avoiding unintended consequenc­es, reducing the cost of collecting signatures, giving voters a clearer idea of who is bankrollin­g the measure and possibly aborting the ballot battle altogether.

The bill provides a 30- day public reviewat the beginning of the initiative process during which backers could amend their proposal. Additional­ly, after 25% of the necessary voter signatures are collected, the Legislatur­e is required to hold a hearing on the measure— early enough for backers and lawmakers to negotiate a compromise that the Legislatur­ewould pass, avoiding the need for an initiative.

Also, sponsors will have an extra 30 days to collect signatures— a180- day window rather than150— more time to use unpaid volunteers, relying less on expensive profession­als, to circulate petitions. Signaturec­ollecting these days can runwell over $ 3 million.

And once a measure is on the ballot, the secretary of state’s website will be required to list the top10 donors supporting and opposing the initiative.

Thiswas the product of some California reform groups, including the Think Long Committee and Common Cause.

The legislativ­e sponsor, Senate leader Darrell Steinberg ( D- Sacramento), says the measure will give initiative backers a better crack at forging an alliance with the Legislatur­e.

“You have the people’s elected representa­tives and an initiative process that too often is used by folks with a lot of money.” Steinberg says. “These are two very powerful forces that now travel their separate paths and often collide in a way that doesn’t serve the public.”

So bravo for Brown. He signed a bill that might help a bit in writing better law.

But boo for his vetoing of three ethics measures.

Theywere launched in the Senate and motivated by the embarrassi­ng indictment­s of two colleagues — Sens. Ronald S. Calderon ( D- Montebello) and Leland Yee ( D- San Francisco)— on federal corruption charges. Calderon was especially an inspiratio­n, having been accused of accepting bribes, pricey meals and junkets. Both suspended senators have pleaded not guilty.

One vetoed bill, by Sen. Jerry Hill ( D- SanMateo), would have prohibited elected officials from donating campaign money to family- owned nonprofits; banned them from spending campaign contributi­ons for house payments, clothing, club membership­s or vacations; and required them to disclose the names of individual­s funding their travel junkets.

Pretty simple. But Brown inexplicab­ly, in his veto message, said these rules “would add more complexity” to existing regulation­s “without reducing undue influence.” Guess we’ll never knowabout the latter. But “complexity”? The Legislatur­e passes and the governor signs complex stuff all the time.

“It doesn’tmake sense to me,” Hill says. “It’s strange.”

Another bill, by Sen. Ricardo Lara ( D- Bell Gardens), would have required candidates to file campaign contributi­on reports quarterly, instead of semiannual­ly, so the public could more often see who’s investing in them. Brown said the state’s technology wasn’t up to it. Well, update the technology.

Athird bill, by Senate leader- electKevin de León ( D- Los Angeles), would have lowered the annual value of gifts an elected official could receive froma single source from$ 440 to $ 200. More significan­tly, the measure would have barred politician­s and their aides from receiving free tickets to concerts, sporting events, amusement parks, golf courses or resorts.

Again, Brown opined that thiswould add “further complexity without commensura­te benefit.” Hesaid “some balance and common sense is required.”

“I’m very disappoint­ed and dismayed,” says Stern, Brown’s onetime reformer inchief. “These were the most significan­t reform bills in 20 years.”

Kathay Feng, executive director of California Common Cause, says of Brown: “I just think over time he has become cynical about how politics work. He’s OK with the current pay- to- play system.”

Maybe some of his advisors enjoy freebies, like Sacramento Kings games and Disneyland comps.

Maybe the governor just thinks this is a Senate problem, and the senators should handle it themselves.

Dan Schnur, director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at USC, says: “These bills weren’t particular­ly strong. And the governor certainly is entitled to suggest better ways to clean up a corrupt system. But it’s his responsibi­lity nowto spell out what he thinks should be done.”

Maybe Brownwill after he’s safely reelected to a fourth term in November. But don’t bet on it.

 ?? Bob Chamberlin
Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. JERRY BROWN signs a bill providing paid sick days to California workers in September. Hemay sign ethics reform legislatio­n if and when he’s reelected.
Bob Chamberlin Los Angeles Times GOV. JERRY BROWN signs a bill providing paid sick days to California workers in September. Hemay sign ethics reform legislatio­n if and when he’s reelected.
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