logo
Newsom insults California voters by not funding Proposition 36

Newsom insults California voters by not funding Proposition 36

SACRAMENTO — This just seems wrong: Californians overwhelmingly approved an anti-crime ballot measure in November. But our governor strongly opposed the proposition. So he's not funding it.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic legislative leaders, however, are now under pressure to fund the measure in a new state budget that's being negotiated and must pass the Legislature by June 15.
A core principle of democracy is the rule of law. A governor may dislike a law, but normally is duty- bound to help implement and enforce it. Heaven save us if governors start traipsing the twisted path of President Trump.
But this isn't the first time for Newsom. Voters twice — in 2012 and 2016 — rejected ballot measures to eliminate the death penalty. Moreover, in 2016 they voted to expedite executions. But shortly after becoming governor in 2019, Newsom ignored the voters and declared a moratorium on capital punishment.
Nothing on California's ballot last year got more votes than Proposition 36, which increases punishment for repeated theft and hard drug offenses and requires treatment for repetitive criminal addicts.
It passed with 68.4% of the vote, carrying all 58 counties — 55 of them by landslide margins, including all counties in the liberal San Francisco Bay Area.
'To call it a mandate is an understatement,' says Greg Totten, chief executive officer of the California District Attorneys Assn., which sponsored the initiative. Big retailers bankrolled it.
'It isn't a red or blue issue,' adds Totten, referring to providing enough money to fund the promised drug and mental health treatment. 'It's what's compassionate and what's right and what the public expects us to do.'
Proposition 36 partly rolled back the sentence-softening Proposition 47 that voters passed 10 years earlier and was loudly promoted by then-Lt. Gov. Newsom.
Proposition 47 reduced certain property and hard drug crimes from felonies to misdemeanors and arrests plummeted, the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California found.
Proposition 36 was inspired by escalating retail theft, including smash-and-grab burglaries, that were virtually unpunished. Increased peddling of deadly fentanyl also stirred the public.
The ballot measure imposed tougher penalties for dealing and possessing fentanyl, treating it like other hard drugs, such as heroin and cocaine. But the proposition offered a carrot to addicted serial criminals: Many could be offered treatment rather than jail time.
Newsom adamantly opposed Proposition 36.
'We don't need to go back to the broken policies of the last century,' the governor declared. 'Mass incarceration has been proven ineffective and is not the answer.'
Newsom tried to sabotage Proposition 36 by crafting an alternative ballot measure. Top legislative leaders went along. But rank-and-file Democratic lawmakers rebelled and Newsom abandoned the effort.
The Legislature ultimately passed 13 anti-theft bills that Newsom and Democrats hoped would satisfy voters, but didn't come close. Totten called the legislative product 'half measures.'
Proposition 36 was flawed in one regard: It lacked a funding mechanism. That was part of the backers' political strategy. To specify a revenue source — a tax increase, the raid of an existing program — would have created a fat target for opponents.
Let the governor and the Legislature decide how to fund it, sponsors decided.
'We didn't want to tie the hands of the Legislature,' Totten says. 'The Legislature doesn't like that.'
Without funding from Sacramento, Proposition 36 won't work, says Graham Knaus, chief executive officer of the California State Assn. of Counties.
'We believe strongly that if it's not properly funded, it's going to fail,' Knaus says. 'Proposition 36 requires increased capacity for mental health and substance abuse treatment. And until that's in place, there's not really a way to make the sentencing work.'
There's a fear among Proposition 36 supporters that if treatment isn't offered to qualifying addicts, courts won't allow jail sentencing.
'That will probably get litigated,' Totten says.
'Counties can't implement 36 for free,' Knaus says. 'Voters declared this to be a top-level priority. It's on the state to determine how to fund it. Counties have a very limited ability to raise revenue.'
The district attorney and county organizations peg the annual cost of implementing the measure at $250 million. State Senate Republicans are shooting for the moon: $400 million. The nonpartisan legislative analyst originally figured that the cost ranged 'from several tens of millions of dollars to the low hundreds of millions of dollars each year.'
Newson recently sent the Legislature a revised $322-billion state budget proposal for the fiscal year starting July 1. There wasn't a dime specifically for Proposition 36.
The governor, in fact, got a bit surly when asked about it by a reporter.
'There were a lot of supervisors in the counties that promoted it,' the governor asserted. 'So this is their opportunity to step up. Fund it.'
One supervisor I spoke with — a Democrat — opposed Proposition 36, but is irked that Newsom isn't helping to implement it.
'It's disappointing and immensely frustrating,' says Bruce Gibson, a longtime San Luis Obispo County supervisor. 'Voters have spoken and we need to work together with the state in partnership.'
In fairness, the governor and the Legislature are faced with the daunting task of patching a projected $12-billion hole in the budget, plus preparing for the unpredictable fiscal whims of a president who keeps threatening to withhold federal funds from California because he doesn't like our policies.
'I am quite concerned about adequately providing the necessary funding to implement Proposition 36,' says state Sen. Tom Umberg of Santa Ana, a strong Democratic supporter of the measure.
He's fearful that the Legislature will approve only a token amount of funding — and the governor will veto even that.
Under California's progressive system of direct democracy, voters are allowed to bypass Sacramento and enact a state law themselves. Assuming the statue is constitutional, the state then has a duty to implement it. To ignore the voters is a slap in the face of democracy.
The must-read: Villaraigosa, despite climate credentials, pivots toward oil industry in run for governor The what happened: Trump threatens to strip federal funds to California over transgender youth athletes The L.A. Times Special: Killing wolves remains a crime in California. But a rebellion is brewing
Until next week,George Skelton
—Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up here to get it in your inbox.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump and Musk to speak today after feud escalates
Trump and Musk to speak today after feud escalates

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump and Musk to speak today after feud escalates

Good morning, all. It's National Donut Day. Celebrate by treating yourself to a free doughnut. Here's where you can get one. Now, on to the news. Subscribe to get this newsletter in your inbox each morning. President Trump and Elon Musk are reportedly scheduled for a call one day after their alliance appeared to crumble in a tit for tat that began with Trump saying he was 'disappointed' by Musk's criticism of his 'big, beautiful bill.' Escalating rhetoric: After the president's comment, Musk suggested Trump couldn't have won the 2024 election without him. Trump threatened to revoke Musk's government contracts, and Musk, without evidence, claimed Trump was in the so-called Epstein files. [CNN] Reactions: Congressional Republicans criticized Musk, while some Democrats reacted with glee. 'This is like the Real Housewives of Foggy Bottom,' Rep. Jared Moskowitz quipped. The internet responded in typical meme fashion. [USA Today/TheWrap] Bill updates: Trump's tax and spending bill is currently moving through the Senate, where Republican lawmakers are considering more Medicare changes. Meanwhile, GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said she would vote no on the bill when it returns to the House. [The Hill] 🏀 Haliburton's Hail Mary With 0.3 seconds left in Game 1 of the NBA Finals, Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton sank a buzzer-beater to defeat the Thunder 111-110, completing yet another epic playoff comeback that even stunned one NBA legend. Watch it. [Yahoo Sports] ⚖️Colorado suspect in court ⚖️ hamed Soliman is scheduled to appear in federal court today after a state hearing yesterday in which he was charged with 118 counts, including 28 counts of attempted murder, in relation to the fire attack that injured at least 15. [CNN] ➡️ Sean 'Diddy' Combs's trial After the judge in Sean Combs's sex trafficking trial warned that he could be excluded from court for gesturing at the jury, another one of Combs's exes, 'Jane,' testified that she was forced to participate in his 'freak offs.' [Yahoo News] 🏛️Harvard visa update A federal judge temporarily blocked Trump's proclamation that would've banned foreign students from getting visas to attend Harvard University, saying it would sustain 'irreparable injury.' A hearing is set for later this month. [The Hill] 🎬 Tom cruises to a world record Tom Cruise's preference for doing his own stunts won him a Guinness world record for the most burning parachute jumps, which he did 16 times while filming the latest Mission: Impossible. Watch the footage. [Entertainment Weekly] 🎵 New music drops: TikTok star Addison Rae released her debut, self-titled album, and Sabrina Carpenter debuted her first single of 2025, a country pop song called 'Manchild.' [Billboard] 🎬 Now in theaters: Ballerina, the 'entertaining, ultraviolent' John Wick spinoff starring Ana de Armas and Keanu Reeves, and The Ritual, an exorcism horror film featuring Al Pacino. [Variety/IndieWire] ⚾ On the field, cross-state rivals, the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Philadelphia Phillies, play at 6:40 p.m. ET on the MLB app. [AP] 🏀 On the court, the Dream tip off against the Sun at 7:30 p.m. ET on Ion. [Norwich Bulletin] 🏒 On the ice, the NHL Stanley Cup Final continues with the Oilers and the Panthers facing off in Game 2, starting at 8 p.m. ET on TNT. [Yahoo Sports] ☀️ And don't forget to: Read your daily horoscope. Play the crossword. Check the forecast in your area. In 1944, Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy, France, on D-Day to begin liberating German-occupied Western Europe during World War II. Photographers accompanied the infantrymen as they ran headfirst into enemy fire. See some of their incredible photos. [Yahoo News] Getting ready for the summer and need a new book? Yahoo Entertainment reporter Kelsey Weekman has some ideas. Jessica: What are the hot new releases people are talking about? Kelsey: Atmosphere, by internet darling Taylor Jenkins Reid, might just be the beach read of the year! For my fellow romance lovers, I'd suggest Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry — I always see at least three copies of it when I board a plane. And if you're in the mood for something hard-hitting, try Flashlight by Susan Choi. Kelsey: Everyone's talking about the Mark Twain biography by Ron Chernow. It's 1,200 pages long, so they must mean business. Matriarch by Tina Knowles is my favorite recent celebrity memoir, and Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green has a head-turning cover, but it's illuminating and surprisingly hopeful. Kelsey: For the YA crowd, you can never go wrong with the new Hunger Games book, Sunrise on the Reaping, by Suzanne Collins. And for younger kids, Lulu Is a Rhinoceros by Jason and Allison Flom seems like a sweet one — it was just adapted for TV! Ready to read? Here are more new summer releases. Betsy Shortsleeve thought she was joining her daughter, Kathryn, on a work trip to Washington, D.C. Instead, Kathryn surprised her with a six-day European vacation. 'It was truly one of the most special weeks — everything just clicked,' Kathryn said. [People] Have a great weekend. See you Monday! 💡 P.S. Before you go, your daily advice: If you want to simultaneously limit your screen time and increase your step count, this app has you covered. [Yahoo Life] About The Yodel: The Yodel is a morning newsletter from Yahoo News. Start your day with The Yodel to get caught up on weather, national news, politics, entertainment and sports — in four minutes or less. Did you like this morning's newsletter? Subscribe to have it sent to you on weekdays. By signing up, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

GOP backing for wind and solar is cratering, new poll shows
GOP backing for wind and solar is cratering, new poll shows

Axios

time13 minutes ago

  • Axios

GOP backing for wind and solar is cratering, new poll shows

New polling shows steep declines in Republicans' support for solar and especially wind power — data that lands as GOP lawmakers weigh bills to curtail incentives. Why it matters: The Pew Research Center survey reveals Democrats' challenge in trying to exact a political price for scuttling IRA credits. If this poll is right, it doesn't look like ending the credits would create jeopardy with the GOP base — especially if these trend lines continue. But roughly 9 in 10 Democrats polled support more wind and solar, making renewables popular on an overall basis. That matters in swing districts. The big picture: The poll of 5,085 U.S. adults — conducted from April 28 to May 4 — shows steep erosion in just five years among Republicans (see above). Support for wind, which President Trump especially dislikes, is under 50%. "Republicans' views on the nation's energy priorities are now the reverse of what they were in 2020," Pew said. A few other data points from the wide-ranging poll... Nuclear support is growing across the aisle. Sixty-nine percent of GOP and GOP-leaning respondents want to see more nuclear power, up from 51% in 2016. Among Dems and Dem-leaners, it's at 52%, up from 38% in 2016. Pew highlights a wider GOP shift. Today 67% of Republicans surveyed say producing fossil fuels should be a more important priority than wind and solar. In 2020, 65% said renewables should be the higher priority. There's a sharp divide on regulations, too. Seventy-seven percent of Republicans say it's possible to cut back environmental rules while still protecting air and water. Just 32% of Democrats have the same view. What we're watching: George Mason University's Ed Maibach tells me that Pew's renewables results track with a soon-to-drop survey from the school's Center for Climate Change Communication and Yale researchers. "The erosion of support for clean energy among Republicans is almost certainly driven primarily by Donald Trump's, his administration's, Fox News' and other MAGA pundits' relentless bad-mouthing of clean energy," he said via email. "Relentless message repetition is the key to public communication effectiveness, even [when] the messages are factually wrong," said Maibach, the group's director and founder. The other side: Republicans who are paring back hundreds of billions of dollars in IRA credits and grants for renewables, EVs and much more call them part of a "green new scam." Senate environmental committee Republicans, in releasing their portion of the budget plan yesterday that scuttles many grants, said it "promotes fiscal responsibility by rescinding taxpayer dollars spent through the wasteful and bloated IRA." Of note: Responses from the entire sample of 5,085 adults has a margin of error of plus or minus 1.6%.

Federal vs. state power at issue in a hearing over Trump's election overhaul executive order
Federal vs. state power at issue in a hearing over Trump's election overhaul executive order

Chicago Tribune

time17 minutes ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Federal vs. state power at issue in a hearing over Trump's election overhaul executive order

BOSTON — Democratic state attorneys general on Friday will seek to block President Donald Trump's proposal for a sweeping overhaul of U.S. elections in a case that tests a constitutional bedrock — the separation of powers. The top law enforcement officials from 19 states filed a federal lawsuit after the Republican president signed the executive order in March, arguing that its provisions would step on states' power to set their own election rules and that the executive branch had no such authority. In a filing supporting that argument, a bipartisan group of former secretaries of state said Trump's directive would upend the system established by the Constitution's Elections Clause, which gives states and Congress control over how elections are run. They said the order seeks to 'unilaterally coronate the President as the country's chief election policymaker and administrator.' Elon Musk's threat to withdraw Dragon capsule would leave NASA with 1 option: RussiaIf the court does not halt the order, they argued, 'the snowball of executive overreach will grow swiftly and exponentially.' Trump's election directive was part of a flurry of executive orders he has issued in the opening months of his second term, many of which have drawn swift legal challenges. It follows years of him falsely claiming that his loss to Democrat Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election was due to widespread fraud and an election year in which he and other Republicans promoted the notion that large numbers of noncitizens threatened the integrity of U.S. elections. In fact, voting by noncitizens is rare and, when caught, can lead to felony charges and deportation. Trump's executive order would require voters to show proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote in federal elections, prohibit mail or absentee ballots from being counted if they are received after Election Day, set new rules for voting equipment and prohibit non-U.S. citizens from being able to donate in certain elections. It also would condition federal election grant funding on states adhering to the strict ballot deadline. The hearing Friday in U.S. District Court in Boston comes in one of three lawsuits filed against the executive order. One is from Oregon and Washington, where elections are conducted almost entirely by mail and ballots received after Election Day are counted as long as they are postmarked by then. The provision that would create a proof-of-citizenship requirement for federal elections already has been halted in a lawsuit filed by voting and civil rights groups and national Democratic organizations. In that case, filed in federal court in the District of Columbia, the judge said the president's attempt to use a federal agency to enact a proof-of-citizenship requirement for voting usurped the power of states and Congress, which at the time was considering legislation that would do just that. That bill, called the SAVE Act, passed the U.S. House but faces an uncertain future in the Senate. Trump's executive order said its intent was to ensure 'free, fair and honest elections unmarred by fraud, errors, or suspicion.' The Justice Department, in arguing against the motion by the attorneys general for a preliminary injunction, said the president is within his rights to direct agencies to carry out federal voting laws. The order tasks the U.S. Election Assistance Commission with updating the federal voter registration form to require people to submit documentation proving they are U.S. citizens. Similar provisions enacted previously in a handful of states have raised concerns about disenfranchising otherwise eligible voters who can't readily access those documents. That includes married women, who would need both a birth certificate and a marriage license if they had changed their last name. A state proof-of-citizenship law enacted in Kansas more than a decade ago blocked the registrations of 31,000 people later found to be eligible to vote. The two sides will argue over whether the president has the authority to direct the election commission, which was created by Congress as an independent agency after the Florida ballot debacle during the 2000 presidential election. In its filing, the Justice Department said Trump's executive order falls within his authority to direct officials 'to carry out their statutory duties,' adding that 'the only potential voters it disenfranchises are noncitizens who are ineligible to vote anyway.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store