California lawmakers take anti-Trump
stance as session ends
Send a link to a friend
[September 16, 2017]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
lawmakers voted to become a sanctuary state, tussled over hot-button
environmental issues and urged other states to refuse to cooperate with
President Donald Trump's Election Integrity Commission as their
legislative year ended early on Saturday.
The majority Democratic lawmakers headed back to their districts having
positioned the state in opposition to conservative policies proposed by
the Republican-dominated U.S. Congress and President Donald Trump on
immigration, the environment and other issues.
"It's a purposeful positioning," said political analyst Sherry Bebitch
Jeffe, a senior fellow at the University of Southern California. "We
have a different political path and a different ideological path than
the Republican-controlled Congress and White House have."
This year, California lawmakers have strengthened protections for
undocumented immigrants, increased the gasoline tax and extended a
program aimed at compelling businesses to reduce air pollution, all in
opposition to federal policies.
Early on Saturday, lawmakers gave last-minute support to a bill barring
local governments from forcing undocumented immigrants to spend extra
time in jail just to allow enforcement officers to take them into their
custody.
The bill, a compromise from a version that sought to severely restrict
interactions between law enforcement and immigration officials, does
allow communities to notify the federal government if they have arrested
an undocumented immigrant with a felony record. It also allows
enforcement agents access to local jails.
It came a day after a federal judge barred the U.S. Justice Department
from denying public-safety grants to so-called sanctuary cities in
retaliation for limiting cooperation with the Trump administration's
crackdown on illegal immigration.
The bill goes now to Democratic Governor Jerry Brown for his signature.
Trump issued an executive order in January targeting funding for cities
that offer illegal immigrants safe harbor by declining to use municipal
resources to enforce federal immigration laws. A San Francisco judge
blocked the order.
Illinois' Republican Governor signed a bill last month protecting people
from being detained because they are the subject of an
immigration-related warrant.
[to top of second column] |
California Governor Jerry Brown attends the International Forum on
Electric Vehicle Pilot Cities and Industrial Development in Beijing,
China June 6, 2017. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
FOSSIL FUELS
Although California lawmakers have enacted several environmental
protections this year, a measure aimed at weaning the state's power
grid entirely off fossil fuels by 2045 died for the year after
lawmakers adjourned without voting on it.
California's three investor-owned utilities, Pacific Gas & Electric
<PCG_pa.A>, Southern California Edison <SCE_pe.A> and San Diego Gas
& Electric [SDGE.UL], said the bill does not protect customers from
the cost of switching from fossil fuels.
Assemblyman Chris Holden, who held the measure in his Utilities and
Energy Committee, said he would consider it again when the
legislature returns in January for the second half of their two-year
session.
The legislature also passed a package of bills aimed at increasing
the availability of affordable housing in the notoriously expensive
state, and approved a plan for spending $1.5 billion in income from
the state's cap-and-trade air quality program, which raises money by
selling businesses limited rights to emit pollutants.
They passed a resolution condemning the election integrity
commission, calling it an effort to suppress the voting rights of
minorities and others, and voted to move up the state's presidential
primary from June to March.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Nichola Groom in Los
Angeles and Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Andrew Bolton)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|