A Fresh Start for Term Limits and California
Yesterday, the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, in concert with the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor/AFL-CIO turned in more than one million signatures for a term limit reform ballot measure. In order to qualify for the November 2010 ballot, 694,354 valid signatures are required. This initiative, if certified by county registrars this June and approved by voters this coming November, would fundamentally change the tone and temperament in Sacramento.
The term limit reform initiative we filed is simple and straightforward. Beginning in 2012, it reduces the time a politician can spend in the State Legislature from 14 to 12 years. Time can be served entirely in the Assembly, the Senate or a combination of the two. After 12-years of public service, a lawmaker is termed out of state Legislative office permanently. No exceptions! Equally important, this term limit change does not benefit any current or former lawmakers or anyone on the ballot this fall.
Voters passed the current 14-year term limit law in 1990 and it fundamentally changed Sacramento. The unintended consequence has been an electoral merry-go-round in which legislators are focused on winning the next office instead of developing the expertise and independence needed to tackle the State’s complex issues. An objective look at the political climate and lack of results in Sacramento shows that the current system is broken and not working.
Rush to Implement ObamaCare Could Weaken California’s Fiscal Health
California faces a 12.6% unemployment rate, and a $20 billion budget deficit. Assembly Democrats seem to believe that the solution to these problems is to rush to implement ObamaCare.
Assembly Speaker John A. Pérez introduced a bill this week to conform parts of state law to ObamaCare and set up a massive new state health care bureaucracy. Given that even the federal government is still figuring out exactly how they are going to implement this sweeping new law, there is no need for California to push a bill prematurely through the Legislature right now.
ObamaCare is facing Constitutional challenges and the threat of repeal at the moment, not to mention a tide of negative public opinion. However, if we are to ultimately implement this enormous new government-run healthcare scheme at some point in the future, we need to make sure that we are doing it the right way. The Governor’s Administration, the Legislature, stakeholders and the experts should convene a working group on all of the steps that California would need to take to most effectively implement this extremely complex new law, not just hurry to pass a piecemeal approach.
Politicians’ Ongoing Quest to Avoid Accountability
In their ongoing quest to avoid accountability, many California politicians have thrown their support behind a measure that will gut the 2008 Proposition 11 redistricting reforms which took the job of drawing legislative districts out of the control of legislators and gave it to an independent Citizens Redistricting Commission. And if they have their way, their measure will derail a November congressional redistricting reform ballot measure, the Voters FIRST Act for Congress that transfers the drawing of congressional districts to the citizens’ commission and away from self-serving, career politicians, as well. Although these politicians try to frame their effort as being in the interest of voters, one only need take a look at the history of this issue to understand their true motives: self-interest.
During the 2001 redistricting, California congressional representatives from both parties cut deals to protect the seats of incumbents. In the process, several members of Congress gave $20,000 to a consultant to help ensure their seats were safe. They got what they paid for; only one congressional seat has changed parties in the last decade. That wiz of a redistricting consultant, Michael Berman, also happens to be the brother of Rep. Howard Berman, whose seat was spared from what many agree should have been a challenge from a Latino candidate – considering the changing demographics of his district.
Risky business – going it alone with AB 32
The effort to regulate greenhouse gas emissions in California has evolved from grand statements of global leadership to the nitty-gritty chores of program design, regulation writing, and selection of economic winners and losers.
In 2006 the authors of AB 32 could confidently write, in the bill’s findings and declarations, “(A)ction taken by California to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases will have far-reaching effects by encouraging other states, the federal government, and other countries to act.”
But it hasn’t quite worked out that way, and California now faces a crossroads: should the state implement far-reaching, costly regulations to reduce GHGs ahead of other efforts by neighboring states, Canadian provinces, and the national government? Four years ago it seemed the world – or at least America – was moving inevitably toward a unified regulatory scheme for carbon emissions, and just needed a nudge from California. Today, even after the election of a President and Congress who declaim the urgent need for these policies, California is still alone in its legislative commitment to action.
A just-released study emphasizes the risk to California from going it alone.
California leads “Redistricting In America”
California’s new Citizens Redistricting Commission
represents the only redistricting system in the nation that entirely separates
redistricting from legislative influence. California’s unique status is
detailed in "Redistricting in America," a new report I co-authored
with Ian Johnson and David Meyer for the Rose Institute of State and Local
Government at Claremont McKenna College. The report details the congressional
and legislative redistricting processes in all fifty states.
The problem of gerrymandering is not a new one. In fact, it
predates the infamous 1812 partisan redistricting overseen by Massachusetts
Governor Elbridge Gerry that gave the practice its name. Our research uncovered
the story of then-Virginia Governor Patrick Henry’s 1788 congressional
districting plan that unsuccessfully attempted to deny James Madison a seat in
Congress. More recently, Californians will recall the 1981 plan that linked
Vallejo to a San Francisco congressional district using nothing but the waters
of the San Francisco Bay (the voters rejected that plan in a 1982 referendum).