CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NO SURPRISES AS FIRST TRUMP BUDGET HITS AT CALIFORNIA”
The bleats have been long and loud in
California since President Trump’s administration released its first proposed
budget, one that won’t be finalized for several months.
This budget can be read many ways, including these:
As an initial negotiating position from the author of “The Art of the Deal.” As
revenge for California depriving the president of the popular vote victory he
so ardently craved. As a prototypical Republican attack on federal spending the
party has long opposed in fields from health care to sanctuary cities. It may
be all of those and more.
But this spending plan should not have
surprised anyone in California public affairs. Presidents often suggest cuts or
additions to federal spending even when they know the items will not fly. This
can take public attention away from others they deem truly important. It can represent
some first moves toward compromise.
And presidents have always favored
states that favor them and punished those that don’t. So California fared well
under Presidents Clinton and Obama. Just ask the tens of thousands of homeowners
who collected large sums from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
after the 1994 Northridge earthquake under Clinton or the health insurance
clients who got premium subsidies under Obama.
But California had problems securing grants for
everything from transportation to education under both Presidents Bush. The new
budget indicates there could be worse trouble getting desired federal grants
under Trump. So California’s problems in getting its fair share of federal
spending will likely grow as the Trump years progress.
Why be surprised at this when the
state’s top officials loudly and proudly bill themselves as leaders of national
resistance to Trump’s agenda?
Yet, those same officials now sound
stunned. Said Gov. Jerry Brown, “(The proposed budget) gives a massive break to
the wealthiest, while imposing painful and debilitating burdens on tens of
millions of decent and hard-working people. It’s unconscionable and
un-American.”
In other words, it’s a fiscal plan
promoting the Republican Party’s platform stances of minimizing “entitlement”
programs, welfare and federal healthcare subsidies. It’s also a plan that
favors the party’s biggest political donors, who often are corporate leaders.
Election results matter. So does the Electoral College.
That’s not to minimize this plan’s
potential effects here. The Health Access California organization, for one,
says this budget would “rip health care from over 4 million Californians, cut
Medi-Cal by 25 percent” at a cost of over $24 billion a year to California. The
organization’s executive director, Anthony Wright, complained the budget “would
savage California’s health care system, cutting…tens of billions of dollars to
hospitals and health providers…(it) would cause carnage to key safety-net
services, all to finance massive tax cuts to corporations and the wealthiest.”
California public and charter schools
would also lose about $400 million if a proposed total of $9 billion is cut nationally
from education spending. This would affect everything from teacher training and
preparation to after-school programs and student loans. Moaned state Schools
Supt. Tom Torlakson, “I give this budget an ‘F’ grade for failing public school
students.”
There’s also a new bid to punish
sanctuary cities, which include California’s largest urban centers. This one would
rewrite a federal code section so that cities could no longer block police and
other employees from communicating with federal officials about the immigration
status of any individual. The budget would condition federal homeland security
and law enforcement grants on guarantees that cities comply. And it includes a
mandate that local jailers hold releasable prisoners up to 48 hours when federal
agents issue requests called “detainers.”
Taken together, this budget attacks
many items that are political dogma in California, but anathema in Southern and
Midwestern states that voted heavily for Trump.
Anyone who’s surprised by all this
wasn’t paying attention to the promises Trump made during his campaign last
year. Or when Trump appointed key budget officials who have long advocated
precisely the changes they now propose.
The challenge for Californians in
Congress and state government who oppose all this will be to find Republicans
who back at least some programs that now are threatened. Judge their
effectiveness by what’s in the final budget.
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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