Los Angeles Times

California’s new navigator

Gavin Newsom called for change. Now the governor-elect must decide how far to the left to lead the state.

- By John Myers

Few can argue with California Democrats that their sweeping victories Tuesday are a clear mandate to set in place an agenda for the state that will last well into the next decade. Less clear, though, is what those marching orders should be — and whether voters will embrace the full panoply of demands that have lurched the state’s dominant party leftward since the election of President Trump.

No one will face that task more directly than Gov.elect Gavin Newsom. With his resounding victory over Republican challenger John Cox, the 51-year-old Democrat not only will preside over the nation’s largest economy, but as leader of America’s most fierce resistance to Trump and the nationalis­t shift of mainstream GOP politics.

But the history of how Democrats came to dominate California politics over the last quarter-century is a story less about provocatio­n than pragmatism. The majority of the state’s modernera governors have been Republican­s. Newsom’s platform was hardly one of a cen-

trist, even though the state’s electorate has rarely been as liberal as its national reputation — choosing instead to be socially moderate but fiscally stingy, environmen­tally progressiv­e but solidly behind get-tough-on-crime efforts.

No one knew that chapter of California’s political life better than the man Newsom will replace in January, Gov. Jerry Brown.

The cliche that has followed Brown for decades is his “canoe theory” of politics, a belief that paddling a little on the right and then on the left ensures the vessel of government steers in a straight path. Few leaders could pull off a multibilli­ondollar expansion of MediCal while at the same time coming across as a frugal guy who canceled state worker cellphones and stashed money in a rainyday fund.

Conservati­ves never thought the iconic Democrat was all that straight in his paddling. But Brown’s approach stood the test of time; public opinion polls consistent­ly found a majority of voters liked the way he handled the job these last eight years.

Newsom, in contrast, made his campaign slogan “Courage for a change.” It came across as equal parts swagger about the path forward and a not-so-subtle rejection of what came before. If the governor-elect intends to recalibrat­e that bold promise in the weeks and months to come, he didn’t offer any hints Tuesday night.

“The sun is rising in the west, and the arc of history is bending in our direction,” he said to supporters at a crowded Los Angeles victory party. “This is not just a state of resistance. California is a state of results.”

Newsom, only the third California lieutenant governor in the last 70 years to win the top job, must quickly focus on the practical. Gubernator­ial transition­s are a dive into the deep end of the pool, with state budget decisions that must be made — in consultati­on with Brown — in a matter of weeks, long before Newsom takes the oath of office.

The new governor also may have to contend with the other Democrats elected to statewide office Tuesday, each seeking a platform to demand change. Most of them, like Newsom, will be new to the job. None ran on a platform of moderation.

In Sacramento, they will join a California Legislatur­e where Democratic leaders have spent two years pushing forward an agenda that has become the nation’s most persistent repudiatio­n of Trump. That effort remains largely intact, thanks to Brown’s signature on a series of environmen­tal and immigratio­n laws. The president has largely ignored the state, although his administra­tion unsuccessf­ully asked the courts to block the “sanctuary state” immigratio­n enforcemen­t law enacted this year.

Brown has only occasional­ly criticized the president, often sounding a note of indifferen­ce to any taunt from Trump about the state’s actions. “We can follow our own trajectory,” he told reporters Wednesday. “I would rather focus on the creativity and the unique opportunit­ies and needs of California, as opposed to defining everything in relationsh­ip to the president.”

Newsom has been far less restrained. He didn’t reference Trump by name on Tuesday, only by reputation. “It’s been a long two years, but tonight America’s biggest state is making America’s biggest statement,” he said. “We are saying — unmistakab­ly and in unison — that it’s time to roll credits on the politics of chaos and cruelty.”

Nor has the governorel­ect held back in his embrace of ideas that embody the base of his Democratic Party. No topic looms larger on that score than universal healthcare — Newsom has insisted, as he did during a candidates’ forum last year, that “single-payer is the way to go to reduce costs and provide comprehens­ive access.”

So will he lead an effort in 2019 or beyond to revive a stalled attempt in the Legislatur­e to do just that? The party’s base may demand it, a test for Newsom in his early days as governor. The topic was a key point of contention during the 2018 primary, when former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa said the proposal floating around the statehouse in 2017 was nothing more than “snake oil,” lacking the details necessary to be taken seriously.

Newsom snapped that his fellow Democrat was nothing but a “defeatist” on the issue. Should he call for patience as governor, he will surely hear the same criticism from progressiv­es. Other topics also will be tricky, as Democratic legislator­s are eager to push bills vetoed by Brown onto the desk of the new governor. Higher education officials, meanwhile, say they intend to demand more college funding in 2019.

Here too the question arises: How progressiv­e is too progressiv­e? Legislativ­e Republican­s may play a small role, but they will be all too happy to sound the alarm in hopes of resetting at least part of the state’s political narrative by 2020.

The relationsh­ip between new governors and legislator­s is often contentiou­s. Former Gov. Gray Davis, fresh from a 20-percentage-point victory in 1998, boasted to a newspaper editorial board that the Legislatur­e’s job was “to implement my vision.” Five years later, facing a recall by voters, Davis eagerly signed a handful of liberal-leaning bills in an unsuccessf­ul effort to rally turnout among the party’s base.

Unlike Brown, who was governor before some current legislator­s had even been born and received a lot of deference from his fellow Democrats, Newsom will probably be seen as the newcomer. He may have an office in the Capitol building, but his post for the last eight years has been more understudy than a starring role. The leaders of the Senate and Assembly, on the other hand, will reprise their roles from the last few years. And most legislator­s who will serve alongside the new governor can remain in office beyond his four-year term.

“Every new governor going in with an establishe­d legislativ­e leadership, there’s a little bit of a question of how power is shared,” said John A. Perez, a former Assembly speaker. But the governor, he acknowledg­ed, has real power in shaping the state’s budget — key leverage over programs championed by liberal Democrats.

Newsom may look to Brown’s track record for guidance, one he praised on the campaign trail. “You do not need to be profligate to be progressiv­e,” he told a San Francisco audience in 2016.

How he’ll translate that slogan into substance remains to be seen. Had Villaraigo­sa, not Republican John Cox, emerged in second place in the June primary, voters might have had a front-row seat to a robust debate about Democratic or centrist-left public policy, one that could have better defined how Newsom will thread the needle of Democratic politics.

But in Cox, there was only the tried-and-true Republican brand — one rejected by voters on the statewide level for more than a decade.

“He wasn’t going out of his way to try and meet California­ns where they are at,” said Assemblyma­n Chad Mayes (R-Yucca Valley), a leader of a political action committee that is trying to reimagine GOP politics. “If you have a scarlet ‘R’ next to your name, you can’t win statewide.”

In Mayes’ assessment is a question that this election, like those in 2014 and 2010, failed to answer: Do Democrats dominate California politics because of the strength of their positions, or because of the absence of centrist Republican­s? Few elected officials will have more of a role in answering that question than Newsom.

Unlike Brown, who oversaw the final touches on fixing many of the leftover problems from California’s 20th century, the new governor seems poised to be its first leader of what’s ahead. Along with the others who will take office in January, he is not only part of a new chapter for the state, but also represents a different brand of Democratic politics crafted during a time when choosing sides has sometimes taken precedence over building bridges. How he responds as the party’s leader — and as the governor of millions who don’t always agree with him — will be a key test.

 ?? Kevork Djansezian Getty Images ?? “THIS IS not just a state of resistance. California is a state of results,” said Gov.elect Gavin Newsom, who may have to contend with other elected Democrats.
Kevork Djansezian Getty Images “THIS IS not just a state of resistance. California is a state of results,” said Gov.elect Gavin Newsom, who may have to contend with other elected Democrats.
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? GOV.-ELECT Gavin Newsom, above with wife Jennifer, will have to make state budget decisions within weeks, even before he takes office.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times GOV.-ELECT Gavin Newsom, above with wife Jennifer, will have to make state budget decisions within weeks, even before he takes office.
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