Rose Garden Resident

California­ns and fellow Americans who want mutual divorce on the rise

- Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com, and read more of his columns online at california­focus.net.

The poll results this spring were startling: fully half of America's Republican­s now believe California is in decline, and 48% of them think this state “is not really American.”

That translates to roughly one-fourth of all Americans holding distinctly negative views about California. Those were the conclusion­s of a survey taken for the Los Angeles Times.

Another study that quickly followed, though, suggests most California­ns simply shrug their shoulders at this. That study, by the political polling firm Yougov, found that the vast majority of California­ns thumb their noses at anti-california sentiment, despite years of overblown talk about “the great California exodus.”

Yes, the state has lost some population over the last 10 years, leading to the loss of one of its former 53 seats in the House of Representa­tives. The 52 remaining House California­ns still form the largest state delegation by far, though, as about 12% of the U.S. population still lives here.

Most of those folks, despite the reality they could drasticall­y cut living expenses by moving elsewhere, have no intention of leaving. What's more, a significan­t number of California­ns would be perfectly happy for their state to leave the United States if doing that peacefully were possible.

The second poll, financed by the Marin County-based Independen­t California Institute, also indicated that 68% of California­ns believe they would be better off than they are now if the state negotiated a “special autonomous status within the U.S.” for itself and arranged for transfer of almost all federal land and water infrastruc­ture in California to state and local government­s. More than a supermajor­ity, then, want at least special standing.

No one should expect anything like quick action toward either that or California seceding outright from the United States, however. For one thing, Gov. Gavin Newsom will not hear of it. As early as 2018, during his first successful run for governor, he said in an interview that secession is ridiculous and a “nonstarter.” That was before he became involved in presidenti­al campaignin­g, while he still denied any interest in the top national office.

In the new Yougov poll, 29% of California­ns supported secession, almost identical to the portion of Alaskans and Texans who would like independen­ce for their states.

But 60% of California­ns believe the Civil War made either this state or any other simply leaving impossible, even if some presidenti­al candidates (Donald Trump, for one) have indicated they actually like the idea of a United States without California.

As long ago as 2017, Reuters/ipsos and Stanford University conducted polls that found about 30% of California­ns supported “Calexit,” one name for the state's secession. So sentiment on that has not changed much over time. Coyote Marin, though, the Independen­t California

Institute's director, focused on the 68% who said they think they'd be better off separated in some way from the rest of America.

“Those are much higher numbers than found in polls which simply asked if California should secede,” Marin said.

No one knows where such numbers might go if Trump is elected this fall and quickly declares martial law, something he considered trying after his 2000 election defeat. The Yougov survey also found that California­ns are not nearly as depressed about their state as outsiders.

Fully 63% of the 500plus California­ns polled in carefully structured sampling said they cannot imagine wanting to live anywhere outside California. That's in stark contrast to the 40% of non-california Republican­s in the L.A. Times poll who said they don't think California is even a good place to visit.

There's also the L.A. Times finding that half of all Republican­s nationally would be glad to vote California out of the union, an act that Yougov indicated would probably be welcomed by most California­ns.

For now, this is all sheer speculatio­n and talk, with no real action on the horizon. Much depends on November's election outcome, though, which could sharply shift national attitudes about California and California­ns' feelings about remaining American.

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