CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHAT A TRUMP WIN COULD MEAN FOR
CALIFORNIA”
A year ago, as the presidential
campaign swung into high gear, no one in either major political party – except
Donald Trump – took seriously the possibility he might win the Republican
nomination for president.
Turns out Trump was right; everyone
else was wrong. It didn’t matter how much he lied: The fact checking service
Politifact finds there’s significant untruth in 84 percent of what Trump says
publicly, but he’s expanded his likely voting base from about 30 percent of
Republicans during the early primary season to at least 40 percent overall.
(Hillary Clinton’s falsehood rating: 63 percent.) That’s a huge achievement,
demonstrating his adherents don’t much care what he says. They figure after
years of watching his television reality show, they know him and what he means,
even when he’s lewd.
Meanwhile, some recent polls show
Democrat Hillary Clinton winning New York by a 20 percent vote margin and
California by at least 17 percent. Sure, she consistently has had a small
overall edge over Trump in national polling, but with so much of her support
coming from just two states, she could win the popular vote but lose in the
Electoral College if Trump wins battleground states like Ohio and Florida by
thin margins, still getting all their electoral votes.
So despite revelations of past
vulgarity and misogyny, victory for Trump is possible, even if oddsmakers give
Clinton better than a 70 percent chance of winning.
If Trump wins, there could be enormous
effects on California, with its tough environmental laws and its giving
citizens more rights than the federal government does, in everything from
marijuana use to assisted suicide in limited circumstances.
Federal law almost always trumps (no
pun intended) state laws, and it’s likely a Trump win would leave Republican
majorities in both houses of Congress. So there could be plenty of actions to
reverse the agenda pushed here for the last 12 years by Govs. Arnold
Schwarzenegger and Jerry Brown.
They’ve insisted on tougher pollution
standards for cars than the federal ones. Brown this year won an extension of
the state cap-and-trade program aimed to cut down greenhouse gas production and
reduce dangers of climate change.
But Congress and a President Trump
could pass laws with completely different standards and negate what California
has done.
If Trump wins, the bullet train
project that’s been the apple of both Brown’s and Schwarzenegger’s eyes could
abruptly stop. Yes, there would still be funding from voter-approved state
bonds, but no more from the federal government. And if Trump and congressional
Republicans outlaw cap-and-trade programs, another bullet train funding source
would dry up quickly. Viaducts already underway or built in Fresno and Madera
counties could become monumental bridges to nowhere.
While Brown in the interest of
fighting climate change resists letting coal trains traverse California to ship
supplies from ports at Oakland and elsewhere, a Trump-controlled Energy
Department would likely demand the use of California ports for coal and shale
oil exports to places like China and the Philippines.
If Trump imposed heavy new tariffs on
Chinese goods, prices for furniture, toys and many other categories would rise
precipitously in California – unless there’s a sudden revival of domestic makers
for these items.
And if Trump really does build a long,
high wall along the Mexican border (regardless of who pays for it), the flow of
undocumented immigrants will slow. That would raise prices for everything from
hotels and car washes, roofing and strawberries, just some of the industries
employing many of the undocumented.
There are signs that illegal
immigrants, who often anticipate political events that may affect them, realize
Trump could win. One indicator: Undocumented immigration increased considerably
in late summer, with a near-record 10,000 Central Americans – most traveling as
families – caught at the border in August, for a total of more than 68,000 in
the first 11 months of federal fiscal 2016. Altogether, 370,000 undocumented
migrants were apprehended in those same 11 months, surpassing the total for
2015 with a month to go.
When big numbers of the undocumented
try to crowd in, it usually means they anticipate changes in immigration policy
– and only one candidate promises that.
All of which means a Trump presidency
would have huge consequences for California, even if the state votes heavily
against him.
-30-
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, visit www.californiafocus.net
Interesting information that could be used by Trump in some of his debates especially in this state in how it could affect us Californians. Trump just wont quit his "liar" campaign and give us anything positive that might make sense if elected.
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