California Sees Gridlock Ease in Governing
From The New York Times:
Before Washington, California was the national symbol of partisan paralysis and government dysfunction.
Before Washington, California was the national symbol of partisan paralysis and government dysfunction.
This was the place where voter initiatives slashed the
power of state lawmakers, runaway deficits and gridlocked budgets were the rule
of the day, and a circus of a recall election forced a governor out of office 10
months into his second term.
But in the past month, California has been the stage
for a series of celebrations of unlikely legislative success — a parade of bill
signings that offered a contrast between the shutdown in Washington and an
acrimony-free California Legislature that enacted laws dealing with subjects
including school financing, immigration, gun control and abortion.
The turnaround from just 10 years ago — striking in
tone, productivity and, at least on fiscal issues, moderation — is certainly a
lesson in the power of one-party rule. Democrats hold an overwhelming majority
in the Assembly and Senate and the governor, Jerry Brown, is a Democrat. The
Republican Party, which just three years ago held the governor’s seat and a
feisty minority in both houses, has diminished to the point of near irrelevance.
But the new atmosphere in Sacramento also offers the
first evidence that three major changes in California’s governance system
intended to leach some of the partisanship out of politics — championed by
reform advocates — may also be having their desired effect in a state that has
long offered itself as the legislative
laboratory for the nation.
“You see Republicans voting for immigration reform,
you see Democrats voting for streamlining environmental regulations,” said Dan
Schnur, the director of the Jesse M.
Unruh Institute of Politics at the University of Southern California. “You
never would have seen that before.”
Lawmakers came into office this year representing
districts whose lines were drawn by a nonpartisan commission, rather than under
the more calculating eye of political leaders. This is the first Legislature
chosen under an election system where the top two finishers in a nonpartisan
primary run against each other, regardless of party affiliations, an effort to
prod candidates to appeal to a wider ideological swath of the electorate.
And California voters approved last year an initiative
to ease stringent term limits, which had produced a Statehouse filled with
inexperienced legislators looking over the horizon to the next election.
Lawmakers can now serve 12 years in either the Assembly or the Senate.
The other day, Anthony Cannella, a Republican state
senator, joined Democrats as Mr. Brown signed a bill co-sponsored by Mr.
Cannella permitting
unauthorized immigrants to obtain driver’s licenses. Mr. Cannella said his
district, which was 35 percent Republican when he was elected in 2010, will have
considerably fewer Republican votes under district lines drawn by the
independent commission for the next election.
Unlike Republicans in other parts of the country, Mr.
Cannella is far from insulated from the demographic shifts in California, where
growing Latino and Asian populations favor Democrats. Mr. Cannella, who
described himself as a longtime supporter of the immigration bill, said the
redistricting and nonpartisan election changes were freeing lawmakers from
obedience to their party bases.
“It’s given more courage to my Republican colleagues,”
he said. “They were afraid of getting primaries. Now, it’s not just their base
they have to appeal to.”
Adam
Mendelsohn, a former senior adviser to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a
Republican who championed the ballot changes, said they were altering the nature
of the Legislature but also his own party.
“It gives Republicans the chance to break from their
caucus on certain issues,” he said. “It is very different than it was four or
five years ago.”
Democrats may also be changing. The state Chamber of
Commerce reported last month that 39 of the 40 bills it had described as
“job-killing” — regulatory legislation that typically was supported by Democrats
— had been defeated this year.
“In the freshman class, a lot of the folks had
moderate voting records,” said Anthony
Rendon, a Democrat who was elected to the State Assembly last year, evidence
of the need for many legislators to appeal beyond the Democratic base.
But Mr. Rendon, who is also a political scientist,
said that of the three changes, term limits were having the most immediate
effect. Mr. Rendon said he had held back a child care bill that would have
permitted unions to represent home-based child care workers this year, so he
could draft a bill that would draw a broader coalition of support next year.
“We don’t need to solve all the state’s problems in
the first year out,” he said.
The fact that these reforms are kicking in at the same
time that Democrats enjoy ironclad control of the government makes it difficult
to draw long-term conclusions about their effectiveness. Some critics of state
governance argued that Democratic dominance and the fact that Mr. Brown has
proved to be a moderating force on his party, vetoing certain bills on gun
control and immigration, were as much driving factors.
“It’s sort of like the good government community and
political elite are doing an end-zone dance at the 45-yard line,” said Joe Mathews, a
longtime critic of California’s governance system. “We’ve been in this box for
so long, there’s such a natural hunger to say things are doing better that
things are going better.”
Senator Kevin de León, a Democrat from Los Angeles,
said the chorus crediting the reforms for a turnaround came from the same
government reform groups who advocated them — over (not incidentally) the
opposition of many political leaders.
“Some years we are the cover of Time magazine as the
model state that can teach the country what to do,” he said. “The next cycle
it’s, ‘The California Dream has popped.’ It’s too premature.”
As Mr. Mathews noted, ballot initiatives continue to
be a force for disruption in California governance — the most notable example
being Proposition 13, which severely limited the ability of governments to raise
taxes. Two years ago, voters rolled back the requirement that two-thirds of
lawmakers approve any spending increase, removing a major impediment in
Sacramento, but there remains a two-thirds requirement for raising taxes.
J. Stephen Peace, a former Democratic legislator who
is head of the Independent Voter
Project, which pressed for the top-two voting system, said the very fact of
Democratic dominance was actually evidence of how the reforms were changing the
way business is done.
“Only with a top-two majority would you have an
overwhelming Democratic Legislature which is also the most moderate Legislature
in 30 years,” he said. “Look at the Chamber
of Commerce job kills list — every measure on it was defeated except the
increase in the minimum wage.”
The sunny assessment of the changes has widespread
support, voiced by people inside and outside the government. “They have already
started to create a more functional Legislature,” said Kathay
Feng, the California executive director of Common Cause. “In light of the
shutdown on the federal level, what happened in California has provided even
more of a contrast.”
There is reason to think that changes in legislative
behavior might get more pronounced with turnover and as incumbent legislators
who have not faced competitive elections before begin confronting a more
competitive electoral landscape.
“We can already see that these reforms are improving
the function of the Legislature and forcing people to come out of their partisan
boxes and talk to the broader electorate,” said Sam Blakeslee, head of the California Reform Institute and
a former Republican member of the Assembly. “We’re seeing, almost against the
odds, a more centrist Legislature, at least when it comes to jobs and budget
issues.”
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