Los Angeles Times

Divided states of America face even more polarizati­on

With Congress soon to be split, political battles will shift to California and others.

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — Florida is a “refuge of sanity” and a place where “woke goes to die,” Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said after winning reelection earlier this month. California is a “true freedom state” that rejects “demonizati­on coming from the other side,” Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom promised.

The two governors’ declaratio­ns of independen­ce are only the latest signs that the next two years’ fiercest political battles will be fought not in Washington, but among clashing states.

Divided government is returning to the nation’s capital. President Biden, who turned 80 on Sunday and is suffering from low polling numbers amid high inflation, is seen as vulnerable by members of both parties, giving him less leverage to find common ground with Republican­s, who will control the House of Representa­tives.

But come January, more than 80% of Americans will live in states with govern

ments entirely controlled by one of the two major parties. After new legislator­s and governors are sworn in, the governorsh­ip and both chambers of the legislatur­e will be controlled by the same party in at least 39 states, a seven-decade high.

As a result, Americans will see even more difference­s in their schools, workplaces and doctors’ offices when they cross state lines.

“We’ve got Texas going, ‘We’re going to do our own thing,’ run by a conservati­ve governor, and you’ve got in California a liberal governor wanting to do their own thing,” Pat McCrory, former GOP governor of North Carolina, said in an interview.

Citizens’ rights to carry a gun, get an abortion or join a union and their rate for a minimum wage job now depend almost entirely on whether their state is blue or red. Biology and American history texts offer different curricula on slavery, Jim Crow and human sexuality.

Few areas — large or small — are left undivided. California and New York, another blue state, passed job rules this year to foster pay equity, joining Colorado in requiring employers to disclose more about salaries. Texas, Florida and other red states passed laws against gender-affirming care for children — protected in many blue states — while imposing rules intended to keep transgende­r girls out of youth sports.

As a conservati­ve Supreme Court grants states more leeway to make their own rules on abortion and voting rights, those combustibl­e issues are in play as well.

States’ attorneys general and legislator­s have joined governors in the national fray, hoping to gin up their fundraisin­g and expand their online fan bases.

Since Biden took office in January 2021, Republican attorneys general have filed 50 lawsuits against his administra­tion over a host of issues, including California’s fuel standards, financial industry regulation­s and protection­s for LGBTQ students. In the four years former President Trump was in office, Democratic attorneys general sued him 155 times over such issues as his travel ban on people from Muslim countries and his decision to end legal protection for people who arrived in the country illegally as children.

Multistate litigation against the federal government — once rare — has increased dramatical­ly since the Obama administra­tion, which was sued 58 times by Republican attorneys general over the course of two terms, according to Paul Nolette, a Marquette University political scientist who tracks such lawsuits.

At the same time, state government­s are enacting bolder legislatio­n, often taking on issues such as immigratio­n and climate treaties that were once the exclusive purview of the federal government.

California’s climate agenda mixes the symbolic with the substantiv­e. In June, Newsom signed a climate pact with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during the Summit of the Americas conference in Los Angeles.

Newsom has also signed laws casting California as a “sanctuary state” from red states that restrict access to abortion and gender-affirming care for trans children.

The partisan clashes between red- and blue-state governors and the widening gaps between the experience of living in a red state and a blue state are dividing the country more distinctly into two societies.

In the last 80 years, the policy and partisan chasm between liberal and conservati­ve states has grown wider than ever, according to Christophe­r Warshaw, co-author of a new book called “Dynamic Democracy: Public Opinion, Elections, and Policymaki­ng in the American States.”

Since the civil rights era, all states have moved to the left, with some exceptions, including on gun and abortion rights. But in the past, you might have had a few more liberal policies in a conservati­ve state like Idaho, and a few conservati­ve policies in a liberal state like Maryland, Warshaw said.

“Today, the liberal states have mostly liberal policies and conservati­ve states have mostly conservati­ve policies,” he said. “Lots of things that affect people’s everyday lives are quite different.”

Some conservati­ves applaud the trend toward a less centralize­d country.

“It’s important for our country that Washington be functional,” said Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican who will finish his term in January and is considerin­g a run for president. “But in the absence of that, the governors are always addressing these issues as well.”

Hutchinson concedes that some problems have to be tackled by the federal government. He noted that Republican governors like him have given tax breaks and that Democrats have offered rebates intended to combat inflation.

Both methods offer relief, he said, but don’t “get to the core problem.”

Even some fellow Republican­s cringed when DeSantis flew migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., in September with false promises that they would find jobs in Boston.

“Regretfull­y, I think you’ll continue to see some of the flashiness that, you know, captures national attention,” Hutchinson said when asked about the flights and Newsom’s sanctuary state declaratio­ns. “There’s a balance there between sending important messages to Washington that something needs to be done, [and] simply trying to grab a headline.”

The fight to seize issues can get confusing for voters, as they watch national figures campaign on traditiona­lly local issues such as crime and education and local figures campaign on national issues such as immigratio­n.

Engaging in national politics is a way for state and local politician­s “to distract from the things they’re responsibl­e for,” said McCrory, the former North Carolina governor, who was in officer during a battle over transgende­r rights that prompted California to ban spending state money on travel to states with antiLGBTQ laws. “It’s a common pivot for politician­s.”

Liberals have been slow to respond to conservati­ves’ long-term strategies on issues such as abortion at the state level, where the GOP has chipped away at rights for decades while building a Supreme Court majority that would give states more power to restrict them further, said Meaghan Winter, the author of “All Politics Is Local: Why Progressiv­es Must Fight for the States.”

“Democrats and people on the left, and even centrists, from my perspectiv­e, don’t take seriously that we live in a federalist system, because they ideologica­lly don’t agree” with the concept, she said.

The result, she said, has been widened inequity.

Conservati­ve policymake­rs are often more responsive to national Republican politics than to local concerns, said Jamila Michener, author of the book “Fragmented Democracy: Medicaid, Federalism, and Unequal Politics.” For example, after Democrats expanded Medicaid — the health insurance program for poor people, pregnant women and people with disabiliti­es — to cover more people, some conservati­ve states refused to expand it, even though the federal government would cover the majority of the cost.

Now rural hospitals across the South are closing because state lawmakers have rejected the federal funding that could save them, Michener noted.

Corporatio­ns and wellfunded interest groups have more money and clout to fight policy debates in 50 different states, she said, than do vulnerable people and the groups that represent them.

Some evidence suggests voters still prefer moderation — when they can get it. Govs. Charlie Baker of Massachuse­tts and Larry Hogan of Maryland, both Republican­s leading blue states, have topped lists of the nation’s most popular governors.

“A Republican running in a more liberal state and governing in a liberal state, you have no choice but to moderate your viewpoints and get something done,” said Baker’s chief of staff, Tim Buckley, repeating Baker’s mantra.

That may be true, but both Baker and Hogan are leaving office in January, and will be replaced by Democrats who easily defeated Trump-backed Republican­s.

‘Democrats and people on the left, and even centrists ... don’t take seriously that we live in a federalist system, because they ideologica­lly don’t agree.’

— Meaghan Winter, author of “All Politics Is Local: Why Progressiv­es Must

Fight for the States”

 ?? Giorgio Viera AFP/Getty Images ?? FLORIDA Gov. Ron DeSantis inserted himself into the immigratio­n debate earlier this year, f lying migrants from Texas to Massachuse­tts under false pretenses.
Giorgio Viera AFP/Getty Images FLORIDA Gov. Ron DeSantis inserted himself into the immigratio­n debate earlier this year, f lying migrants from Texas to Massachuse­tts under false pretenses.

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