CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL TRUMP MAKE CALEXIT A SERIOUS QUESTION?”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL TRUMP MAKE CALEXIT A SERIOUS QUESTION?”
As recently as last July, just 22
percent of Californians favored the idea of California risking a new civil war
by declaring its independence from the rest of America. But barely six months
later, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found support for California exiting the Union
peacefully had moved above 40 percent.
That’s not a majority, by a long shot.
But it is almost a doubling of support, and the reason consists of one name:
President Trump.
Several of the record-number executive
orders Trump issued during his first weeks in office implied he has it in for
the Golden State which voted very strongly against him. So did testimony in
several Senate confirmation hearings for his cabinet appointees and other Trump
threats.
That is spurring a reaction. Right
now, many Californians are incensed at seeing Trump fulfill campaign promises
on immigration, the environment and other issues that were essentially voted
down by about 3 million votes nationally; by more than 4 million in California.
It’s not exactly taxation without
representation, but to a lot of Californians, it feels similar.
Trump, for example, said he’ll order an investigation of voting
fraud despite an utter lack of evidence it happened. He named two states as the
biggest alleged offenders: California and New York, the two states that voted
most strongly against him. One possible goal of such an investigation by an
administration which invented the notion of “alternative facts” might be to
suppress minority votes in California as Republicans have done in states like
North Carolina and Florida.
Trump’s immigration orders could have more impact in California
than anywhere else. His appointee to head the Environmental Protection Agency
said he will “review” all waivers allowing California to have tougher pollution
standards than the rest of America. The target-California list is long.
The latest poll on secession indicates
that with each such Trump action or
stated intent, the separation idea grows more palatable to more Californians.
The sentiment has grown to a point
where there’s now competition to lead the “Calexit” movement: The Yes
California group that began under a different name in 2014 vs. a newer outfit
organized in 2015 calling itself the California National Party (CNP).
Yes California, whose leader Louis
Marinelli currently teaches English in Russia, is circulating a proposed
secession initiative, aiming for the November 2018 ballot. This measure would
erase from the state constitution a statement that California is an inseparable
part of the United States. It asks California voters to decide in a 2019 special
election whether the state should secede. Passage would require participation
in that election by at least 50 percent of registered voters and a 55 percent
yes vote.
The CNP, acting like a rival rather
than an ally of Yes California, takes no position on this. “Our path to
independence is through building a movement and CNP voter registration…Our
model is based on strategies that have put independence within arm’s reach in
both Scotland and Catalonia, (the Spanish state that includes Barcelona),” said
Theo Slater, the CNP’s “national chairperson.”
The CNP also claims Yes California has
ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who would enjoy splintering America.
Meanwhile, Yes California’s in-state
leader, Marcus Ruiz Evans of Fresno, wrote the only recent book on California independence, and notes that
in a primary election run for a San Diego seat in the state Assembly last year,
Marinelli became the first modern candidate to back California independence.
Yes California, then, is the only outfit that has actually made moves toward
secession.
There is, of course, no legal process
for any state to leave the Union and none has tried since the Civil War. In
1776, there was also no such process for leaving the British empire.
Secession skeptics note that
California uses large federal grants for everything from roads to health care.
But the state gets back just 78 cents for every dollar its citizens pay in
federal taxes. All federal grants could easily be made up for if those taxes
were paid instead to Sacramento, should it remain the California capital.
This all is no more than talk today,
but for Trump there’s a serious question to ponder: Does he want to risk a new
civil war by driving America’s largest and most inventive state into an attempt
to leave the Union?
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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