San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

A representa­tive failure

- JOE MATHEWS Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

Monterey County is home to Big Sur, Carmel, a world-class aquarium, the planet’s most beautiful golf course, half of America’s lettuce and more than 439,000 people.

But Monterey County isn’t home to even one member of the California state Legislatur­e.

The county’s lack of representa­tion isn’t just a local story. It challenges the national narrative, advanced by leading Democrats and progressiv­es, that our state is a leader in diversity and representa­tion. It reminds us that California­ns are more distant from their elected representa­tives, and from the ideals of democracy, than other Americans. And it exposes the failure of California’s highly touted, voter-approved political reforms — like the top-two system of candidates, or our independen­t redistrict­ing commission — to improve representa­tion.

Because California’s supposedly democratic reforms have left a place as big and important as Monterey County without any state representa­tion from one of its own.

That fact is the result of California’s extreme stinginess in democratic representa­tion. The average American state legislativ­e district has about 100,000 people. But California hasn’t increased the size of its Legislatur­e since 1879, when the state had fewer than 1 million people. So, we have by far the most populous legislativ­e districts in the U.S. State Senate districts have nearly 1 million residents each, and Assembly districts have 500,000.

Monterey County has fewer people than that, which opens up the possibilit­y of not having a single resident in the Legislatur­e.

The county, of course, has people who represent it, but they live in neighborin­g counties.

John Laird, Democrat of Santa Cruz, is the state senator in a massive district that covers not just Monterey County but parts of Santa Clara County to the north, and half of San Luis Obispo County to the south.

In the Assembly, a Democrat from San Luis Obispo County — former Morro Bay City Councilmem­ber Dawn Addis — now represents western, coastal Monterey County, including the city of Monterey, which is a 141-mile drive north of her home. Her district extends north into Santa Cruz and south to Santa Maria, Santa Barbara County’s largest city.

The eastern half of Monterey County is represente­d by the powerful Robert Rivas, who is expected to become Assembly speaker in June.

California media routinely identify him as a Democrat from Salinas, where he has set up a district office.

But Rivas is actually a lifelong resident of San Benito County. His official bio is a love letter to San Benito County places — he was raised in Paicines (where his grandfathe­r was a farmworker at Almaden Vineyards), attended public schools in San Juan Bautista and lives with his family in Hollister.

Ironically, the state legislator with the deepest Monterey County ties, Democratic Sen. Anna Caballero, a former Salinas mayor, doesn’t represent the county. The redistrict­ing commission pushed her district east, into the Central Valley.

California’s much-touted independen­t redistrict­ing commission is not supposed to consider the residences of existing politician­s when it draws up districts. But it is supposed to keep together “communitie­s of interest.” Monterey County is surely a community of interest.

Indeed, Monterey County’s exclusion should remind us just how narrow our conception of representa­tion has become.

The redistrict­ing commission’s chief concerns with representa­tion are racial and ethnic — under voting rights laws, it works hard to make sure there are seats likely to elect Black or Latino politician­s. But our system doesn’t consider other kinds of representa­tion. We have no provisions to guarantee gender parity, or for adequate representa­tion of California­ns of different ages, classes, education levels or national origins.

Indeed, our system doesn’t even guarantee that you’ll have a representa­tive from the county in which

you live. Other, smaller counties in California, mostly in the north state and in the Sierra, are also without a resident representa­tive.

This is why Los Angeles and other scandal-plagued California cities are wasting their time when they seek to improve representa­tion through the creation of local independen­t redistrict­ing commission­s. No redistrict­ing body can overcome the problems of a system with districts that are bigger than even some of our bigger counties.

California needs to reorganize the scale and structure of its legislativ­e maps. It needs a legislatur­e with more districts that are much smaller. At minimum, districts one-tenth as populous as today’s monstrousl­y large ones — say 50,000 people instead of 500,000 for Assembly seats, and 100,000 instead of 1 million for the Senate.

But such a change would be hard to sell because it would increase the size of the Legislatur­e 10 times — with 800 people in the Assembly and 400 in the Senate.

And even adding more seats wouldn’t guarantee more representa­tion. To achieve gender parity and other forms of representa­tion, the state would need multi-member districts in which California­ns vote for party lists of candidates, which would be required to include a 50-50 gender split and candidates from other currently underrepre­sented demographi­cs.

Like people from Monterey County.

 ?? Brontë Wittpenn/The Chronicle ?? Despite being home to more than 437,000 people, Monterey County doesn't have one member in the California state Legislatur­e.
Brontë Wittpenn/The Chronicle Despite being home to more than 437,000 people, Monterey County doesn't have one member in the California state Legislatur­e.

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