CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2024 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“STAKES HIGH FOR CALIFORNIA IN TRUMP V.
HARRIS RACE”
Ever since California gave Hillary Clinton a vote margin of
almost 3 million in 2016 – thus assuring Trump would lose the overall popular
vote and become a minority president installed by the Electoral College and not
the majority of voters – he’s had it in for the Golden State.
As President, Trump delayed
aid for wildfire victims in California until forced to act. He tried mightily
to eliminate the state’s strict smog control rules. He attempted to overrule
state laws that restrict offshore oil drilling. And much more, enough that many
observers saw it as a consistent Trump “War on California.”
Now it’s Californian Kamala
Harris standing between Trump and a second term in the White House, one that
would make him only the second U.S. president to recover from a reelection
defeat and later retake the office.
The first was Grover
Cleveland, who won a second term in 1888 after losing an 1884 reelection bid.
It’s pretty plain from
statements by Trump and some of his family members that Californians can expect
a resumption of Trump’s war on California policies and practices if he wins
this fall.
The alternative is Harris, a
former San Francisco district attorney, state attorney general and successor to
longtime California Democrat Barbara Boxer in the Senate.
A win for her would likely
mean much more for California than merely increased traffic around her presumed
Western White House in the Brentwood section of Los Angeles, where she lives
with husband Doug Emhoff, a longtime entertainment industry lawyer.
Start with the fact that
California electric taxpayers right now are “lending” more than $1 billion to
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. in order to keep the Diablo Canyon Nuclear
Generating Station open at least five years past its prior closure date of 2030,
set by state officials in 2018. The money is supposed to be repaid by the
federal government.
That almost certainly would
happen under a President Harris, but likely not under a reinstated President
Trump.
Under Trump, federal
authorities would probably reassert their effort to limit or end California’s
unique authority over automotive smog, while Harris would let it stand. A
Harris administration might include Gov. Gavin Newsom in a cabinet role if he
wants it, elevating Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis to governor almost two years
before she’s planning to run for the office anyhow. Big boost for Kounalakis.
Trump and former officials of
his administration indicate in various ways they will try for a national ban on
abortions, which would negate the abortion rights clause California voters
inserted in the state Constitution via a successful ballot proposition. Under
Harris, California’s law might serve as a national model for states to adopt if
they choose.
Trump also has said he would
not oppose state governments tracking pregnant women to prevent their seeking
abortions. Harris would try to ban that proposed practice.
As state attorney general,
Harris fostered a strong environmental unit in her office, working to head off
both air and water pollution at its sources. A Harris-appointed national
attorney general might set up a similar office within the Justice Department,
offering strong backing to California’s toughest-in-the-nation conservation
policies.
As President, Trump sought
often to cut welfare and other benefits to poor Americans, including millions
of Californians. A President Harris would likely try the reverse.
Trump promises to extend the
wall that already covers many parts of California’s border with Mexico. It’s
unclear whether Harris might expand that wall. Republicans often claim she was
President Biden’s “border czar,” when in fact he placed her in charge of trying
to better conditions in Latin America that foster illegal immigration. Harris
might continue some of her efforts in that direction, which have not yet
accomplished very much.
One thing for sure: As both
senator and vice president, Harris frequently spent weekends and holidays in
California. Trump never did. If Harris continued that practice, it would mark
the first time since Ronald Reagan’s era that a President was intimately
familiar with California’s problems and policies.
All of which makes the
California stake in this fall’s election more direct that it has been since the
time of Ronald Reagan.
-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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