CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2024, OR THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DON’T EXPECT A HARRIS ROLE ON PROP. 36”
Kamala Harris played almost no role in
the key decision on crime made by California voters in the 2014 election, when
they passed Proposition 47 and reduced penalties for many types of crime.
As state attorney general at the time,
Harris said professional ethics forced her into a neutral role. It was a
convenient stance allowing her to escape unscathed to the U.S. Senate two years
later, then become vice president in 2020 and now emerge as the Democratic
presidential nominee.
So don’t expect her to say much about
this year’s Proposition 36, a measure backed by prosecutors who have long
claimed Prop. 47 made life easier for criminals. Of course, don’t expect Harris
to spend much time in California this fall, either, as her home state is
regarded by all sides as immutably blue and all but absolutely certain to
provide Harris with 54 electoral votes.
The main thrust of Prop. 47 was to
reduce many property and drug crimes to misdemeanors from their previous status
as felonies. That, say many, opened the door to rampant shoplifting and a spate
of what appeared to be highly organized and coordinated “snatch-and-grab”
burglaries.
Few of the criminals involved have paid
much of a price for those crimes, almost all of which have been considered
misdemeanors under Prop. 47, which set a $950 floor for the value of any theft
to be treated as a felony. This has usually allowed even thieves who are caught
to avoid jail time.
Ten years ago, Prop. 47 split the
state’s dominant Democrats, with Harris doing little on it, while Gov. Gavin
Newsom, then lieutenant governor, was a backer. Then-Gov. Jerry Brown opposed
it even though the measure boosted his effort to cut down the prison
population.
Then-Sen. Dianne Feinstein was also
opposed, warning that “wholesale reclassification of many dangerous felonies as
misdemeanors would put the people of California at continuous risk…”
Meanwhile, current Los Angeles District
Attorney George Gascon, now in a tough reelection fight, signed the ballot
argument favoring Prop. 47. He was then the DA in San Francisco.
Retailers
are one business segment that definitely feels at risk because of Prop. 47 and
its standard for felonies. Outfits like Target, Walgreen’s and Rite-Aid have
closed stores because of rampant shoplifting. Big Box stores like Walmart,
Target and Home Depot are among the chief financial backers of Prop. 36, which
would roll back much of 47.
The
new measure would make any third conviction for theft of any size a felony
punishable by three years in prison. It would also make possession of fentanyl
a felony and make any third drug possession conviction a “treatment-mandated
felony,” depriving those convicted of any right to refuse treatment.
Newsom
has been anything but neutral on Prop. 36, pushing through a 10-bill
legislative package that aims to upstage and replace Prop. 36. So he won’t be
endorsing 36. His successor several times removed as mayor of San Francisco,
London Breed, has been a prime backer of the proposition.
Meanwhile,
Harris took no position on the original 47, her campaign manager of the time
saying attorneys general are like umpires, “the objective observer calling
balls and strikes.” He said that role was thrust on Harris because the attorney
general by law must write fair and objective ballot titles and summaries for
all initiatives.
And
yet, previous attorneys general, like Republican Dan Lungren in the 1990s and
Democrat Tom Lynch in the 1970s, took strong positions on ballot measures.
Harris
will not be obliged to do much with Prop. 36, and might be wise to avoid it
altogether as a party-splitting hazard, even though that would leave her open
to criticism for ducking the issue.
Doing
that never hurt her before, so there seems no large and obvious advantage to
changing her tactics now.
Which
would make it no surprise if the California resident even mentions the issue
this fall, despite sharing the ballot with it.
-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
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