California lawmakers to begin special session to 'Trump-proof' state
laws
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[December 02, 2024]
By TRÂN NGUYỄN
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom and state
lawmakers will return to the state Capitol on Monday to begin a special
session to protect the state's progressive policies ahead of another
Trump presidency.
The Democratic governor, a fierce critic of President-elect Donald
Trump, is positioning California to once again be the center of a
resistance effort against the conservative agenda. He is asking his
Democratic allies in the Legislature, who hold supermajorities in both
chambers, to approve additional funding to the attorney general's office
to prepare for a robust legal fight against anticipated federal
challenges.
California sued the first Trump administration more than 120 times to
various levels of success.
“We’re not going to be caught flat-footed,” Newsom said at a recent news
conference.
Trump often depicts California as representing all he sees wrong in
America. Democrats, which hold every statewide office in California and
have commanding margins in the Legislature and congressional delegation,
outnumber registered Republicans by nearly 2-to-1 statewide.
Trump called the Democratic governor “New-scum” during a campaign stop
in Southern California and has relentlessly lambasted the Democratic
stronghold over its large number of immigrants in the U.S. illegally,
homeless population and thicket of regulations.
Trump also waded into a water rights battle over the endangered delta
smelt, a tiny fish that has pitted environmentalists against farmers and
threatened to withhold federal aid to a state increasingly under threat
from wildfires. He also vowed to follow through with his campaign
promise of carrying out the mass deportation of immigrants without legal
status and prosecuting his political enemies.
Before the special session begins, state lawmakers are scheduled to
swear in more than two dozen new members and elect leaders for the 2025
legislative session. Hundreds of people also are planning to march
around the Capitol on Monday to urge the Legislature to try to stop
Trump's mass deportation plans.
State Attorney General Rob Bonta said his office will protect the
state’s immigration population, while Newsom last week unveiled a
proposal to revive a rebate program for electric vehicle purchases if
the incoming Trump administration eliminates a federal tax credit for
people who buy electric cars. Newsom is also considering creating a
backup disaster relief fund for the wildfire-prone state after Trump’s
threats.
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Republican lawmakers blasted Newsom and his Democratic allies over
the special session. Rep. Vince Fong, who represents the state’s
Central Valley farm belt, said California should work with the
incoming Trump administration instead.
“Gavin Newsom’s actions are tone-deaf to the concerns of
Californians who disapprove of the direction of our state and
country,” Fong said in a video on social media.
Legislators also are expected to spend the year discussing ways to
protect dozens of laws expected to be targeted by the Trump
administration, including one that has made the state a sanctuary
for people seeking abortions who live in states where such practices
have been severely limited.
California, the nation’s most populous state, was the first to
mandate that by 2035 all new cars, pickup trucks and SUVs sold in
California be electric, hydrogen-powered or plug-in hybrids. The
state also extends state-funded health care to all low-income
residents regardless of their immigration status.
Newsom hasn't provided details about what actions the lawmakers will
consider but said he wanted funding in place before Trump's
inauguration day, Jan. 20. The state spent roughly $42 million in
litigation costs during the first Trump administration, officials
said.
California is projected to face a $2 billion budget deficit next
year, with bigger shortfalls ahead. Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel,
who sued the first Trump administration in 2017 when it tried to end
a program to shield young immigrants from being deported, said
lining up the funding now is “a wise investment."
California successfully clawed back $57 million between 2017 and
2018 after prevailing in a lawsuit to block the Trump administration
from putting immigration enforcement conditions on certain federal
law enforcement grants. Another legal victory over the citizenship
question in the 2020 census forced the federal government to return
$850,000 to the state, according to the attorney general's office.
“We are positioned, if necessary, to be the tip of the spear of the
resistance and to push back against any unlawful or unconstitutional
actions by the Trump administration,” said Gabriel, who chairs the
budget committee.
During Trump’s first presidency, Democratic attorneys general banded
together to file lawsuits over immigration, Trump’s travel ban for
residents of Muslim countries, the environment, immigration and
other topics. But Trump has one possible advantage this time around:
He was aggressive in nominating conservative jurists to federal
courts at all levels, including the Supreme Court.
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