To: Governor Jerry Brown of California and Governor Greg Abbott of Texas
From: Joe Mathews
Re: Summit
If North and South Korea can have a peace summit, why can’t California and Texas do the same?
The United States desperately needs its two biggest states to figure out how to keep the country together.
Our nation’s political leaders are committed to dividing us; their business model for elections and fundraising depends on ever-greater polarization of the American electorate. And so the U.S. government’s mission now amounts to three things: mismanaging entitlement programs, handing our tax breaks to donors and favored demographics, and wasting trillions of dollars on endless wars.
So if the country is to be saved, it will be up to your two states. You’re the two most successful examples of American regions—capable of attracting millions of Americans and their dreams. Sure, you represent different constituencies and versions of the American idea. Texas represents the cheap, lightly regulated, freedom and gun-loving counterpoint to California’s progressive, cultural and technological powerhouse.
But you have one big thing in common: the American predicament. You are both nation-sized places stuck inside an even larger country. California, with nearly 40 million people, has the world’s fifth-largest economy; while Texas, approaching 30 million people, has the 10th-largest economy in the world. If you were presidents and your states were countries, they would be the 38th and 49th most populous nations on earth, respectively.
All of this gives California and Texas a common enemy: federal power.
Fora century, whichever party is in power in Washington has seized more authority for the federal government. Recent presidents of all stripes—from Bill Clinton to Donald Trump—have ruled increasingly by executive order.
Quite often, this increasingly dictatorial federal power has been aimed at the two of you.
By now, the drill is familiar. A Democratic administration seek to impose policies that run contrary to Texas’s conservative preferences on health care, the environment, criminal justice, or labor. And so Texas, often with some of its Southern state friends, fights and sues. That’s why, when you were state attorney general, Governor Abbott, you famously described your job as: “I go into the office in the morning, I sue Barack Obama, and then I go home.”
Now that Republicans are in power, it’s California’s turn to be targeted for its progressive policies on climate, pollution, immigration, and health care. So now the state gets together with its Western (and some Northeastern) friends and resists with lawsuits, more than two dozen against the Trump administration. This endless cycle of litigation is escalating so fast that The New York Times called it a legal civil war.
All this fighting isn’t good for the country. And it takes time and resources away from efforts to improve the lives of your states’ own citizens. The resentments also create internal divisions. Both of your states have movements seeking secession from the United States. And the fights with the federal government often inspire internal battles between your states and their cities.
The good news is: you don’t have to live like this! Together, the two of you can break the cycle.
That’s why you need a peace summit. The goals of the talks should be twofold.
First, for both states to reaffirm their American-ness and commit to peaceful coexistence.
Second, for both states to work together to reduce federal power, and enhance their own independence.
This must go beyond reaffirming the 10th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which reserves for the states the powers not given to the federal government. California and Texas are now so big that they need more explicit autonomy so they can pursue their own destinies without interference..
The D.C. Mandarins will call this a revolution. So be it. California and Texas must declare that this is not the United States of 13 states and less than million people that adopted the constitution in 1789. Our country of 320 million is simply too big to be governed centrally from Washington, much less by the sort of people—first-term U.S. senators and reality TV stars—who get elected president these days.
The best argument for greater state autonomy is a democratic one. Our country barely passes as a democracy at the federal level, with a presidency sometimes won by the candidate who lost the popular vote, a U.S. Senate that makes a mockery of equal representation, and powerful bureaucracies that defy accountability.
You’ll have to figure out through negotiations what your joint agenda is. But both states will want more taxing and regulatory power transferred back to the state level, so they can pursue very different policies in climate change, health care, and maybe immigration.
I realize this will be hard politically: You both will lose the political crutch of blasting the other state, and your voters will accuse you of compromising your principles. Gov. Abbott might even have to cool down his “Don’t California my Texas” rhetoric. (Though, c’mon, Greg, it ain’t so bad having In-N-Out Burger and Trader Joe’s in your state, right?)
But a concerted effort to demand greater autonomy for both states— pursued jointly through politics, lawsuits, and even a constitutional amendment—would be healthy. It would be harder for you to blame the federal government for your own follies. Instead, California might have to confront how its oppressive environmental regulatory regime has made it impossible to build sufficient housing. And Texas might have to face how its lack of planning puts its people in flood plains that stand in the path of hurricanes.
And yes, I know you might miss the good times, when your states were politically aligned with the federal government. But admit it: even those times weren’t easy, and your federal friends are never that friendly.
President Obama, after all, broke up many California immigrant families and was little help to the state during its housing and budget crises. And President Trump’s trade protectionism is causing headaches for Texas, which has invested heavily in infrastructure and companies that support international trade, especially with its neighbor, Mexico.
Your two states also have more common ground than you might think, even on immigration. While the federal government under Obama and Trump oversaw massive and inhumane deportation of your residents, your two states have invested in educating young immigrants, including the undocumented. It’s no accident that 350,000 of the estimated 800,000 “Dreamers” call one of your two states home.
To get the talks started, California should immediately revoke its counterproductive ban on government-funded travel to Texas. Yes, the Lone Star State has laws that discriminate against LGBTQ families, but how do you change minds if you can’t meet with people? And you two governors seem to have a civil relationship: You issued joint statement about natural disasters and the Dodgers-Astros World Series last fall.
Each of your states offers places where a visitor from the other would be comfortable. Why not start the talks in Austin, a chunk of California in the heart of Texas, where Apple employs more than 6,000 people? In California, I can see Gov. Brown taking his Texas counterpart to oil-rich Bakersfield, where you two could chat at Wool Growers, which serves the food of the Basques—a people who know something about the fight for sovereignty.
I’m not expecting you to produce the political equivalent of “Pancho & Lefty,” the iconic joint album of California’s late Merle Haggard and Texas’s Willie Nelson. (Though bringing Willie to the summit is not a bad idea.) But developing a strong working relationship will be important if Washington totally melts down, and creates a constitutional crisis for the republic, as many fear. In that case, California and Texas may have to put things back together.
In the meantime, regular California-Texas summits would remind us that, while we will never be the most cohesive country, we are a collection of states that requires some unity.
And that, in a country as diverse as ours, there may be no agreement as powerful as an agreement to disagree.
Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.