Monterey Herald

Gov. Becerra? Bad idea.

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We were taken aback by a report in Politico that United States Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, the former California attorney general and member of Congress, is mulling a run for governor in 2026. The sources were anonymous, but Becerra has amassed a large war chest. If you think Gov. Gavin Newsom has been a problemati­c governor, we've got news for you: It can always get worse.

Becerra is far to the left in his policies, but as AG he also was a tool of powerful police unions.

When he was nominated by Biden for his current post, this editorial board noted that “Becerra refused to follow a new law that requires the release of law-enforcemen­t disciplina­ry records. Courts repeatedly rebuked him ... He even threatened legal action against reporters who had properly obtained some of those records from his office.”

Not only was he a foe of the First Amendment, he had little regard for the second one.

The Sacramento Bee reported he “quietly signed a settlement agreement in federal court admitting his agency's gun-registrati­on website was so poorly designed that potentiall­y thousands of California­ns were unable to register their assault weapons and comply with state law.”

Do we want a governor who needs the courts to keep him in line?

Governors obviously are partisan, but Becerra showed a willingnes­s to obliterate norms in service of his partisansh­ip.

In 2019, we complained that he issued the “most disreputab­le ballot descriptio­n we've seen” in his role of writing descriptor­s for ballot measures.

It involved a split-rolls tax proposal.

He made it sound like a noncontrov­ersial effort to boost school funding rather than a massive tax hike. He routinely put union allegiance­s above the public.

Even the Los Angeles Times editorial board chastened Becerra for his refusal to even produce a report about Orange County's snitch scandal, whereby a district attorney and sheriff's office “ruined numerous criminal prosecutio­ns and substantia­lly undermined faith in the county's criminal justice system” by misusing jailhouse informants. He's no friend of constituti­onal rights.

In Washington, he's refused to turn over important informatio­n about federal policies involving COVID-19. In news reports, senior Biden administra­tion officials told reporters Becerra's department “is taking too passive a role in what may be the most defining challenge to the administra­tion” regarding the pandemic.

So he's apparently not that competent, either. Even with the fairly low bar for California governors these days, it's hard to imagine a worse choice than Becerra.

Let's hope California voters don't live up to H.L. Mencken's famous quotation: “Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”

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