The Mercury News

How long will Newsom have one-man rule in California?

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a Calmatters columnist.

California has been a one-party state for the last decade, with Democratic governors and supermajor­ities in both legislativ­e houses doing pretty much as they pleased without paying any attention to the relative handful of Republican legislator­s.

However, one-party rule gave way to one-man rule eight months ago when Gov. Gavin Newsom declared an emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic, thus empowering himself to govern by decree and suspend any laws that stood in his way.

Democratic legislator­s were fully complicit, even suspending their proceeding­s and abandoning Sacramento for months. Eventually, however, even they chafed a bit at Newsom’s seeming endless string of emergency orders.

In effect, some of those orders essentiall­y made new law and while Democratic lawmakers stood by, two Republican legislator­s, Kevin Kiley and James Gallagher, filed suit, alleging that Newsom had gone too far.

Last week, Sutter County Superior Court Judge Sarah Heckman sided with the Republican­s, declaring that Newsom’s order changing procedures for the November election, including a mandate that every voter be sent a mail ballot, crossed the line.

Although the Legislatur­e later ratified the election changes, Heckman wrote that it was still important to place limits on a governor’s powers under the California Emergency Services Act. Heckman indicated that in her final ruling, she would permanentl­y enjoin Newsom from issuing any order “which amends, alters, or changes existing statutory law or makes new statutory law or legislativ­e policy.”

“The doctrine of the separation of powers prohibits any of the three branches of government exercising the complete power constituti­onally vested in another or exercising power in a way which undermines the authority and independen­ce of another,” Heckman, who was elected in 2012, wrote.

The law empowering a governor to declare an emergency and suspend laws that impeded a rapid response was clearly aimed at some immediate catastroph­e such as a flood, an earthquake or a riot. It envisioned something like then- Gov. Pete Wilson’s suspension of contract bidding laws to quickly rebuild a major freeway after the 1994 Northridge earthquake.

COVID-19 required a rapid response, but it’s also something that could last, in one form or another, for years. Conceivabl­y, Newsom could continue governing under his emergency decree for the remainder of his first four-year term.

Even before the pandemic struck, Newsom was prone to sidesteppi­ng laws that could impede whatever he might want to do. He boasts, for instance, of ignoring state law when, as mayor of San Francisco, he unilateral­ly authorized same-sex marriages. More recently, he declared that there would be no executions of murderers during his governorsh­ip even though California’s death penalty is still law — one that voters refused to repeal just four years ago.

Newsom claims moral imperative as justificat­ion for his acts, but if elected officials ignore laws they don’t happen to like or find inconvenie­nt, they undermine the concept of governance under law and encourage disrespect for legal authority. Ironically, this is the same governor who demands that 40 million California­ns obey his pandemic decrees, such as shutting down small businesses.

Heckman’s order will certainly be appealed and the issue will probably wind up in the state Supreme Court. Newsom press secretary Jesse Melgar said Newsom and his advisers “strongly disagree” with “specific limitation­s” on the governor’s emergency authority.

Meanwhile, it’s time for the entire Legislatur­e, not just Kiley and Gallagher, to reassert its co- equal authority rather than allowing Newsom to operate indefinite­ly as a one-man band.

The law that gives Newsom the authority to declare an emergency also allows the Legislatur­e, on its own, to end such an order.

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