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Dec 02, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO California Playbook PM Newsletter Header

By Lindsey Holden

Presented by 

Food & Water Action

Robert Rivas talks to reporters.

Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas played up economic issues plaguing Californians during his address opening the legislative session. | Rich Pedroncelli/AP

DOLLARS AND CENTS: California Democrats kicked off their Donald Trump-proofing special session today, but leaders also took a page from the president-elect’s playbook.

Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire opened the legislative year with a call to uphold “California values,” such as abortion rights and protections for the LGBTQ community. But they sent a concurrent message about the economic issues that have plagued the state since before Trump won in November.

It’s a version of the “we feel your pain” populist messaging Trump and down-ballot Republicans used nationwide to secure a powerful trifecta in Washington.

“Our constituents, they don’t feel that the state of California is working for them,” Rivas said. “That's their lived experience in this moment. Californians are deeply anxious about our state's cost of living. They're anxious about the challenges of doing business here. They're anxious because they feel it.”

McGuire hit a similar note.

“This Senate must double down on our efforts to make life more affordable and livable,” McGuire said. “Make our economy work for all, and not just a privileged few.”

The leaders’ message comes as Assembly Democrats are about to lose two open Southern California seats, and Senate Republicans have reclaimed a hard-fought Orange County seat.

Although Democrats still maintain a legislative supermajority in Sacramento, that’s not a great look for Rivas and McGuire. Especially for two fairly new leaders trying to assert themselves against Gov. Gavin Newsom, who typically sets the agenda in the Capitol. McGuire knows this particularly well after his failed power play during the governor’s last special session.

Newsom has also reached out to voters struggling to make it in California — recently traveling to Fresno and other inland parts of the state that are considered Trump strongholds to play up jobs and economic programs.

So just as Rivas and McGuire talked up safeguarding immigrants and climate progress, they also focused on cost-of-living issues.

Rivas, in particular, doubled down on the subject while tailoring it to a blue-state audience. He called affordable housing “the civil rights struggle of our time” and said “every worker has the right to live near their jobs in the communities that they help build, serve and enrich.”

He requested the Assembly Utilities and Energy Committee probe energy costs and asked the Housing and Budget committees “to investigate and review every state agency that has oversight over California's housing supply.”

As Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration looms, Rivas and McGuire may actually see embracing economic concerns as equally important to their anti-Trump efforts, rather than pushing them to the background.

— with help from Eric He

IT’S MONDAY AFTERNOON. This is California Playbook PM, a POLITICO newsletter that serves as an afternoon temperature check on California politics and a look at what our policy reporters are watching. Got tips or suggestions? Shoot an email to lholden@politico.com.

 

A message from Food & Water Action:

Will Gov. Newsom side with the oil and gas industry or Californians after the “worst gas leak in US history?" In 2015, the Aliso Canyon Gas Storage Facility released 100,000 tons of methane and toxic chemicals, endangering public health. Governor Newsom vowed to shut down Aliso Canyon, but his Public Utilities Commission appointees voted to expand it. The PUC will decide Aliso Canyon’s future on December 19th. Learn more.

 
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

An overhead view of the California Assembly floor shows lawmakers working at their desks.

California lawmakers in each chamber voted to limit themselves to 35 bills each over the two-year legislative session. | Rich Pedroncelli/AP

PUT A LID ON IT: California lawmakers in each chamber voted to limit themselves to 35 bills each over the two-year legislative session shortly after they gaveled in today, our Blake Jones reports.

"We're doing so because we want every leader in this room to have the greatest possible bandwidth to focus on laws that uplift affordability and prosperity," Rivas said. "Make no mistake: This will not prevent us from standing up for California's values."

The new ceiling will apply to bills and constitutional amendments, but not to resolutions. Rules committees could suspend the limits if a member hits the bill ceiling.

POLITICO Pro subscribers can read more here.

CA vs. TRUMP

MONEY MOVES: The Senate’s special session proposal is already online and would fund Newsom’s request for $25 million for the Department of Justice and other state agencies while adding $10 million for city attorneys and county counsels to defend themselves in court.

Two draft bills from the Assembly shared with Playbook would set aside $500,000 for the state to begin preparing its legal cases in addition to the $25 million to cover potential litigation costs.

The two chambers’ proposals differ both in how much they’d appropriate and how funding would be split up — discrepancies that will have to be ironed out in negotiations between legislative leaders and Newsom before Trump’s inauguration. — Blake Jones

 

Want to know what's really happening with Congress's make-or-break spending fights? Get daily insider analysis of Hill negotiations, funding deadlines, and breaking developments—free in your inbox with Inside Congress. Subscribe now.

 
 
ON THE BEATS

Gavin Newsom, left, talks with Rob Bonta.

Attorney General Rob Bonta told reporters the $25 million the Department of Justice is seeking for Trump-related lawsuits represents a "down payment." | AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, Pool

MORE TO COME: The main business of the special session that began today is getting the $25 million in funds to the Department of Justice for Trump-related lawsuits. That figure will be a “down payment” and “the beginning, not the end,” Attorney General Rob Bonta told reporters at a press conference right before the Legislature gaveled in today. The money will be spent “prudently and wisely” to beef up some of DOJ’s legal teams, Bonta said, adding that he would go back to lawmakers later if more is needed.

Unlike during “Trump 1.0,” Bonta said his office hasn’t reached out to Eric Holder, the former U.S. attorney general hired by the Legislature as outside counsel last time around. Instead, DOJ will be staffing up on attorneys and paralegals internally who will “be ready to file cases within 24 hours of an action from the Trump administration,” Bonta said. — Rachel Bluth

 

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PICK UP THE PACE: Assemblymember Marc Berman is making good on his promise to expedite the state’s vote-counting after some county elections officials blamed his legislation for slow ballot processing.

Berman today announced he plans to convene stakeholders “to evaluate what is working and what we can do better to maintain our nation-leading voting rights while speeding up the count.”

A bill Berman authored this year set a statewide certification date 28 days after the election, legislation meant to provide clarity around the deadline for ballot-curing. But the clerk-recorder and registrar of voters for Stanislaus County — part of the yet-to-be-called 13th House District — said her staff was working less with the extended deadline to cut down on overtime.

Berman told Playbook last month this is an “unintended consequence” of his bill that he would work to remedy.

WHO SAID IT?

CONTEST ALERT: ROOKIE CLASS QUIZ — We’ve been reaching out to the large class of newly elected state lawmakers about what’s topping their to-do lists next year, and we asked you to match their names and responses for a chance to win POLITICO swag. The quiz closed at noon today.

We’re not revealing who won yet, but here are some fun statistics to tide you over until we announce the champ at our new member reception this evening and tomorrow morning in Playbook. RSVP here.

  • Our competitors had a median score of five correct answers — a solid performance, even if it would be a D- in most classrooms. 
  • Most of you correctly identified which quotes came from Assemblymembers Patrick Ahrens, Carl DeMaio and Maggy Krell. But you might want to study up on Assemblymember Jeff Gonzalez and Sen. Suzette Valladares: only a quarter of quiz-takers correctly identified both Republicans’ quotes.
  • Six nerds — sorry, we mean “eagle-eyed legislative observers” — guessed all eight answers correctly. They’ll answer a tiebreaker question to determine the winner.
 

Policy Change is Coming: Be prepared, be proactive, be a Pro. POLITICO Pro’s platform has 200,000+ energy regulatory documents from California, New York, and FERC. Leverage our Legislative and Regulatory trackers for comprehensive policy tracking across all industries. Learn more.

 
 
WHAT WE'RE READING TODAY

— Why the House GOP’s plan for a big immigration crackdown may be doomed. (POLITICO)

— Top California Democrats say they want to go beyond “Trump-proofing” the state and make living here affordable again. (CalMatters)

— Middle-aged survivors of sex trafficking in San Francisco say they feel “forgotten” as resources devoted to combating exploitation go toward rescuing younger victims. (San Francisco Standard)

 

A message from Food & Water Action:

Will Gov. Newsom side with the oil and gas industry or Californians after the “worst gas leak in US history?" In 2015, the Aliso Canyon Gas Storage Facility released 100,000 tons of methane and toxic chemicals. SoCalGas’ disaster forced thousands to evacuate their homes to avoid further exposure to cancer-causing benzene and other chemicals.

SoCalGas took four months to seal the gas leak. Families near Aliso are still suffering the consequences. Instead of shutting it down like Gov. Newsom promised, the PUC allowed Aliso to expand by 3,000%, perpetuating the public health threat.

Over 150 organizations have come together to call for a shutdown of Aliso by 2027, but the PUC is considering kicking the can down the road instead of protecting communities. Gov. Newsom and allies should stand with families, not SoCalGas’ profits. On December 19th, the PUC will decide the future of Aliso Canyon. Learn more.

 
AROUND THE STATE

— Rumble, a conservative video platform, is suing California over the state’s controversial ban on election-related deepfakes. (Sacramento Bee)

— California’s national forests will lose nearly 400 U.S. Forest Service staff next year due to federal budget cuts. (San Francisco Chronicle)

— Passing cellphone bans is the easy part. Confiscating the devices from a generation of screenagers is more challenging. (Los Angeles Times)

— Inside California’s nearly 300-page plan to save the western Joshua tree. (LAist)

— San Francisco welfare recipients could count going to church or ballet as treatment under a new city program. (San Francisco Chronicle)

— compiled by Tyler Katzenberger

 

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