While the rest of the nation is about to enjoy a much-needed corrective to President Barack Obama's big-government fright fest, Californians can expect election results that range from disappointing to depressing. Perhaps it's fitting that pre-election hysteria peaks right at Halloween.
There are scary candidates on the ballot. We've got the prospect that Jerry Brown – the man most responsible for gumming up the state's infrastructure thanks to his "small-is-beautiful" approach during his first governorship (1975-83), and who will bet our economic future on a "green jobs" fantasy – will take over as the head of our state. Meg Whitman is fading, a reflection of her principle-lacking positions and the perception that she is a billionaire just trying to buy an election.
The lieutenant governorship may go to Gavin Newsom, the San Francisco mayor who simply defied the state's law against same-sex marriages. I couldn't care less about gay marriage, but there's something wrong with a mayor picking and choosing which state laws to follow. His Republican alternative, Abel Maldonado, is best-known for his support for tax increases. If he wins, he will position himself as the voice of the state Republican Party, which is worse than a grade-B slasher flick.
Among the ballot measures, there are other harrowing choices: Proposition 22 would give the state's ham-fisted redevelopment agencies a permanent hand in the till; Prop. 27 would undermine redistricting reform, thereby allowing politicians to go back to picking their own voters to assure reelection. There's good stuff, but most of those items are down in the polls.
But nothing on Tuesday's ballot is scarier than Prop. 25. "Every year, budget gridlock and political games hurt schools, threaten vital services and cost taxpayers millions. Prop 25 reforms this broken system, holding legislators accountable when they fail to pass the budget on time," argues the Yes on 25 website. Backers resolve that problem by eliminating Prop. 13's requirement for a two-thirds legislative vote majority to pass budgets and replacing it with a simple majority of the Legislature. The initiative would dock the pay of legislators who fail to pass a budget, but that's populist window-dressing.
If passed, Prop. 25 means that the same Democrats who view tax increases and government expansion as the answers to every problem can go ahead and pass their budgets without input from the Republican minority. There's a reason the "Yes on 25" side is funded almost entirely by the public employee unions and the Democratic Party. Under the current situation, even though Republicans have a minority of members, they are able to extract concessions for budget passage.
Then, imagine this new world with Brown as governor.
Debate centers on what Prop. 25 means for tax increases. One has to be naïve to think the backers of this initiative are driven by their desire to end budget delays. The unions' goal is to get more money from taxpayers to fund their programs and priorities. To win support, they claim the initiative will not affect the two-thirds legislative vote requirement to hike taxes. As the Legislative Analyst's Office explains, "[T]he measure states that its intent is not to change the existing two-thirds vote requirement regarding state taxes."
But opponents argue that, once Prop. 25 passes, taxes will soar. They make persuasive technical arguments. First, the initiative creates a new type of bill that would be defined in the state constitution as follows: "Bills providing for appropriations related to the budget bill," and such bills may be passed by a simple majority. Prop. 25 foes argue that there's nothing keeping an appropriation bill from including a tax increase, which could then be approved by a majority.
Second, they point to the direct language of the initiative: "Notwithstanding any other provision of law or of this constitution, the budget bill and other bills providing for appropriations related to the budget bill may be passed by ... a majority of the membership." The first 10 words suggest this initiative supersedes Prop. 13 and all other provisions of law as related to these specific types of bills, thereby, arguably, allowing tax hikes if they are part of a budget package. So, while stand-alone bills to raise taxes – i.e., an effort to raise taxes on oil companies – would clearly still require a two-thirds vote, Prop. 25 foes argue that budget-related bills with hidden tax increases would only require only a simple majority. They say Prop. 25 drafters could have placed language in the actual measure – and not just in the summary – preventing tax increases, but chose not to do so.
Once it passes, expect the supporters, who now insist Prop. 25 does not apply to tax increases, and opponents, who argue the reverse, to switch sides. The initiative's backers will insist that, yes, tax increases are allowed under the proposition – just look at what the bill's opponents said during the election. Anti-tax activists will then insist that the courts uphold the intent stated by Prop. 25's backers.
Even if these worries are for naught, and tax increases are still held to a supermajority vote standard, I foresee this scenario: The Democratic-controlled Legislature votes for a $100 million budget even though it's clear that revenue will be $85 billion. That brings on a constitutional crisis – as the state budget comes into conflict with the tax-increase restriction. States aren't allowed to run a deficit, but the constitutionally approved budget is $15 billion off the mark, and the state cannot muster the sufficient votes to raise taxes to fill the gap. The courts could step in – as they have done in Nevada – and impose a $15 billion tax increase. It's just a theory, but why take the chance?
Knowing how cynically state government operates, it's wise to expect the worst. California taxes will go up early and often, Republicans will be pushed further to the margins, and Democrats and public employee unions will have deeper control of the Legislature.
That scares me far more than Jerry Brown.
By Steven Greenhut Speicial Editor to the Register
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