Los Angeles Times

Newsom departs from his liberal image

Bucking progressiv­e agenda, governor’s slate of centrist policy wins could broaden his appeal nationally.

- By Taryn Luna and Hannah Wiley

SACRAMENTO — In a subtle departure from his national image as a liberal champion, Gov. Gavin Newsom successful­ly pushed state lawmakers to support a series of tough policies in the final weeks of the legislativ­e year that bucked progressiv­e ideals and ultimately could broaden his appeal beyond California.

Democratic and Republican lawmakers at the state Capitol heeded his call to extend operations at Diablo Canyon, reversing an agreement environmen­tal groups drove six years ago to shut down California’s last remaining nuclear plant out of safety concerns.

The governor won support for his plan to provide court-ordered treatment for unhoused California­ns struggling with mental illness and addiction amid outcry from powerful civil rights organizati­ons.

Newsom vetoed legislatio­n to allow supervised drug injection sites in pilot program cities, drawing criticism that his decision was politicall­y motivated as speculatio­n swirls around his prospects as a potential presidenti­al contender.

“He is making political calculatio­ns on all of these decisions in a very deep and nuanced way that considers where he wants to go next,” said Mary Creasman, chief executive of California Environmen­tal Voters. “That doesn’t mean he doesn’t care about these issues. I think he does. He’s making political calculatio­ns around how to still move the needle for climate while also protecting some of the political interests.”

Newsom successful­ly lobbied the Legislatur­e to approve a $1.4-billion forgivable loan for Pacific Gas & Electric in order to continue operations at Diablo Canyon through 2030. He said the bill was critical to the state’s ability to avoid rolling blackouts during heat waves, which have caused problems for California and presented political challenges for the governor. Newsom signed that legislatio­n into law Friday.

He balanced the controvers­ial ask with a package of bills to address climate change that Creasman and other environmen­talists celebrated.

The marquee policy in Newsom’s climate package,

which he announced just weeks before the end of the legislativ­e session, created health and safety buffer zones between homes, schools and public buildings and new oil and gas wells. That also squeaked by this session after lawmakers had tried — and failed — to pass those restrictio­ns for years without his interventi­on. Other more contentiou­s legislatio­n addressed carbon capture technologi­es, which some environmen­tal organizati­ons argue only perpetuate­s oil extraction.

“That was 100% strategic,” Creasman said. “It’s strategic because he wants the headlines to be about climate action versus about these other things he’s doing, which I get. But he’s doing both. The authentic story is both. There were some really phenomenal things and there were some really tough things.”

Newsom pressed for the climate legislatio­n amid a clash with the oil industry that drew national attention. As part of a campaign to call out Republican governors and make himself a resonating voice for Democratic voters across the country, Newsom ran ads in Florida contrastin­g that state’s restrictiv­e policies on abortion rights and education with California’s more liberal positions.

Western States Petroleum Assn. responded with its own advertisem­ents in Florida warning about the cost of Newsom’s climate policies.

Creasman said being seen as a climate leader is smart if Newsom has national ambitions. Though the term “climate change” has been politicize­d, voters nationwide want the government to do more to mitigate increasing drought, wildfires, pollution and extreme heat. It’s also the only issue that will give Newsom a global spotlight, she said.

Since his sound defeat of the Republican-led recall attempt last September, advisors to Newsom have said his decisions are less motivated by politics and are instead a reflection of the confidence he feels to govern in a more nuanced way. The strong support he received from the electorate gave him the freedom to stray from a strictly progressiv­e agenda that many in his party want him to follow.

In an interview with The Times in July, Newsom said that his first term has gone by in a flash and that he wants to take advantage of the time he has left.

“If I’m privileged to have a second term, you guys will be writing my obituary within six months and who’s the next person coming behind me,” Newsom said. “I know how limited my time is and I just don’t want any regrets. I don’t want to look back and join some panel of ex-governors saying, ‘I woulda, coulda, shoulda.’ I’m not going to do that.”

Robin Swanson, a Democratic political strategist, said Newsom’s also practicing “pragmatic politics.”

She compared his legislativ­e approach to that of former Gov. Jerry Brown. When Brown returned to the governor’s office in 2011 for his third term, he was a more seasoned politician with less adherence to a strict political ideology.

“I think this is part of his growth as governor,” Swanson said. “When you’re managing a state of 40 million people, you have to do what matters and what works in that moment whether that aligns 100% with what you would do in a perfect world. Those solutions often are a little more center, more middle of the road.”

Newsom disappoint­ed many of his allies last month when he vetoed Senate Bill 57, legislatio­n to allow Los Angeles, San Francisco and Oakland to set up supervised injection site pilot programs. Moderate Democrats and Republican­s, who characteri­zed the bill as government authorizat­ion to use lethal drugs, applauded the decision. They urged Newsom to pour more resources into treatment and rehabilita­tion programs instead.

But advocates and addiction specialist­s said the veto would lead to more deaths amid an opioid overdose crisis.

Mike Herald, director of policy advocacy for the Western Center on Law and Poverty, said the governor’s rejection of the bill was disappoint­ing because it seemed like the type of firstin-the-country bold action he gravitates toward.

Herald also suggested hewing toward the middle is not new for Newsom. While he was a county supervisor and then mayor of San Francisco, Newsom championed Care Not Cash, a policy to reduce welfare for single homeless adults and instead spend the funds on shelters, housing and services.

“I’m just not as surprised as some when he’s more conservati­ve-leaning on certain issues,” Herald said.

Newsom also faced fervent opposition from civil rights groups for his Community Assistance, Recovery and Empowermen­t (CARE) Court proposal, a far-reaching plan to provide court-ordered treatment for thousands of California­ns suffering from a mix of severe mental illness, homelessne­ss and addiction.

A coalition that included the American Civil Liberties Union, Disability Rights California and the Western Center on Law and Poverty — groups with which Democrats in the Capitol often align — spent the legislativ­e session castigatin­g the proposal as an inhumane effort to criminaliz­e homelessne­ss and strip people of their personal freedoms. The Legislatur­e overwhelmi­ngly approved it, with Republican­s and Democrats celebratin­g its passage.

“It runs completely counter to truly progressiv­e ideals,” said Susan Mizner, director of the ACLU’s Disability Rights Program. “It’s a throwback to an era in which we punish people for being poor and we punish people for having mental illness.”

Homelessne­ss and crime were among the top three concerns for California registered voters in a UC Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies poll conducted this spring, and Newsom is well aware of the potential political liabilitie­s he faces if he fails to address those issues.

Despite the criticism from the left, Newsom isn’t expected to face much, if any, retributio­n from California liberals when he comes up for reelection in November. A recent poll found that Newsom led his challenger, state Sen. Brian Dahle (R-Bieber), by more than a 2-1 margin. Many of the conservati­ve Republican’s policy positions, including his opposition to abortion rights and government mandates of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns and restrictio­ns, are denounced by Democrats.

Newsom and Democratic lawmakers this year did notch big wins on gun control legislatio­n, an issue embraced by the left, after a wave of mass shootings this spring and summer shocked the nation.

Newsom and legislator­s pledged swift action on more than a dozen gun control bills, including one modeled after Texas’ vigilante abortion law that will allow private people to sue anyone who imports, sells or distribute­s illegal firearms in California. Nearly every measure passed, and Newsom has already signed the majority into law.

But Newsom couldn’t win over enough state lawmakers to pass a concealedc­arry proposal. He made national headlines in June when he introduced the legislatio­n alongside California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and state Sen. Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge) in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling against restrictiv­e opencarry laws in New York, California and other blue states.

Senate Bill 918 would have designated dozens of places as “sensitive,” meaning off-limits to carry firearms, and added new licensing criteria to determine whether applicants presented a danger to themselves or others. The proposal fell two votes shy of passage early Thursday morning, after several moderate Democrats either abstained or voted against the measure.

“He wants to be a player in national Democratic politics,” said Jack Pitney, a professor of American politics at Claremont McKenna College. “He also has to attend to the mundane business of running California. And both of those things are on his mind.”

Newsom surely remembers what happened to the last blue-state governor who won the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, Pitney said. Michael S. Dukakis took positions that looked good in Massachuse­tts but made him vulnerable to GOP attacks in the 1988 presidenti­al race.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM angered some progressiv­es with his recent centrist policy victories at the Capitol.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM angered some progressiv­es with his recent centrist policy victories at the Capitol.

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