CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“REFERENDA ONE SIGN GOP HAS THROWN IN A
TOWEL”
There was a time, and not so long ago,
when politicians who flouted deeply held public feelings often faced survival
threats the next time they ran for reelection.
Those days may not be totally over in
California, but for the most part they are now confined to intra-party disputes
during primary elections. The times appear long gone when the Legislature’s
minority party would seriously try to regain a majority in either the state
Assembly or Senate as a result of votes by their political opponents.
Republicans, with fewer than 30
percent of the state’s registered voters, harbor no illusions they will soon
win back control of the Legislature. So when conservatives viscerally dislike
and detest something, they are now taking the referendum route, asking voters
to overturn laws before they take effect.
California voters will see on their
ballots next November some products of the GOP’s throwing in that legislative
towel.
When Democrats in the 1960s passed the
Rumford Fair Housing Act banning racial and religious discrimination in real
estate rentals and sales, Republicans made a strong effort to oust many of them
and retake a majority.
There has been no
similar issue-driven effort in half a century.
Before last year, Californians had not
faced a serious referendum drive since 1982 (like ballot initiatives, referenda
quality for the ballot by gathering voter signatures). A bipartisan popular
vote then overturned the Legislature’s plan to build a Peripheral Canal to
bring Northern California river water south around the Delta of the Sacramento
and San Joaquin rivers.
In 2012, voters faced one referendum,
placed on the ballot by Republicans unhappy with a nonpartisan citizens
commission remap of state Senate districts. The measure lost by 72-28 percent.
There was some confusion, as there often is with referenda: A yes vote on the
referendum actually supported the law the measure sought to overturn.
It will be similar next year, when
voters will likely face three referenda, on the social issues of gambling,
abortion and gender identification.
The anti-abortion and anti-transgender
rights measures both are the work of conservative political activists, while
the anti-gambling referendum is funded mostly by casino Indian tribes disliking
the idea of other tribes building gaming resorts off their remote reservations.
“Don’t allow gambling where it’s convenient,” they will essentially beseech
voters. “Instead, keep using our remote locations.”
In fact, more money could be spent on
both sides of that referendum, which aims to overturn gambling compacts
approved for two small tribes, than on the transgender- and abortion-related
ones.
The gender identification measure,
which may often be called a “bathroom battle,” targets a new law letting
transgender students in public schools use whichever sex rest room they feel
most comfortable in. It also lets them compete in sports with the gender of
their choice. So you could have some boys who identify as girls playing on
girls’ teams without undergoing sex-change operations.
The abortion-related referendum, for
which signatures are now being gathered, seeks to block a new law allowing
early-term abortions by specially trained nurse practitioners, nurse-midwives
and physicians assistants. That law resulted from a six-year pilot program at
the University of California at San Francisco which saw more than 8,000
early-term aspiration abortions conducted and no more complications than when
the same procedure is done by doctors.
The idea of that new law is to make
abortions more available in more than 25 counties that now have no abortion
providers.
Leading opponent the Most Rev. Gerald
Wilkerson, president of the California Catholic Conference, maintains that
“Until (abortion) becomes illegal, we will oppose measures which expand it.”
Abortion foes hope to get the same degree
of volunteer support enjoyed by opponents of the new transgender law. Most
signatures to quality the referendum to overturn that one were obtained by
volunteers.
But referenda are a piecemeal
approach. Even in a day when they are becoming more common, voters offended by
some new laws will not get a chance to try repealing most of what they dislike.
And yet, with one party essentially
giving up on taking over significant parts of the state’s decision-making
process, referenda may be the only recourse for deeply offended voters.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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