Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters: Banning Not Just a City’s Name
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 6 years ago on
October 21, 2019

Share

Banning is the name of a small city in Southern California, but also applies to a pervasive theme of the Legislature this year.
The 1,042 bills that passed the Legislature and the 870 signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom included an extraordinary number that used the state’s police powers to prohibit activities deemed to violate the Capitol’s often unique sensibilities.


Dan Walters
Opinion
They ranged from the semi-ridiculous, such as banning tiny plastic bottles of shampoo and other toiletries from hotel rooms, to the obviously justified, such as tightening up the ban on unvaccinated school children.
Guns and gun owners were the targets of several legislated bans, such as one on gun shows in San Diego County’s Del Mar fairgrounds and another to limit purchases of rifles to no more than one every 30 days, emulating a pre-existing limit on handgun purchases.
Some of the newly minted prohibitions would affect, or even erase, whole economic sectors, such as eliminating cash bail, banning the sale of some animals, barring circuses from using elephants and other wild animals in their shows, or making it difficult, if not impossible, to work on contract, rather than as a payroll employee.

Newsom Is a More Conventional Liberal

The latter, if not overturned by voters, is one of several union-sponsored bills aimed at changing employer-employee relationships in favor of the latter. Another would prohibit employers from requiring binding arbitration of disputes as a precondition to employment.
In signing both the binding arbitration ban and another measure prohibiting smoking on state beaches and in state parks, Newsom departed sharply from his predecessor, Jerry Brown, who had a streak of libertarianism and sometimes rejected bills he saw as going too far down the path of official nannyism.
Brown vetoed beach smoking bans three times, saying last year, “Third time is not always a charm. My opinion on the matter has not changed. We have many rules telling us what we can’t do and these are wide open spaces.”
Newsom is a more conventional liberal, or “progressive” in the preferred nomenclature of those on the left side of the political scale, and generally endorses their latter-day puritanism.
That said, during his first experience with the Legislature’s 11th-hour blizzard of more than 700 bills approved before adjournment in September, Newsom did show a bit of political fortitude.
Clearly worried about a slowing economy, the freshman governor rejected several bills that would have committed the state budget to multi-billion-dollar spending increases backed by influential interest groups.

Newsom Signed a Bill to Require the State’s Middle and High Schools to Eliminate Early Classes

One would have reinstated a new version of redevelopment, which local governments once used to remake neighborhoods deemed to be blighted. Brown and the Legislature eliminated redevelopment seven years ago, and the revised version Newsom vetoed would have cost the state budget as much as $2 billion a year. In doing so, he bucked local governments and construction unions.
Newsom also vetoed legislation that local governments and their unions had wanted to change the wording of local ballot measures for a tax increase and bond as they were presented to voters. Such measures must now be up-front with voters on their financial consequences, but local officials wanted to bury that information in the voter pamphlet.
Finally, Newsom signed a bill to require the state’s middle and high schools to eliminate early classes that, pediatric physicians said, were depriving teenagers of much-needed sleep. The entire education establishment, including the very influential California Teachers Association, wanted Newsom to veto the bill that Brown had previously rejected.
Scarcely two months hence, the Legislature will return to Sacramento and the whole process will begin again.
CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Poland to Try Suspect in Alleged Russian Plot to Assassinate Zelenskiy

DON'T MISS

Trump to Make Golden Dome Announcement on Tuesday, US Official Says

DON'T MISS

Musk Says He Is Still Committed to Being Tesla CEO in 5 Years’ Time

DON'T MISS

Complaint Filed With Watchdog Group About Celedon. She Calls It ‘Bologna’

DON'T MISS

Supreme Court Allows Trump to Strip Legal Protections for Venezuelans Who Risk Deportation

DON'T MISS

49ers Sign All-Pro Linebacker Fred Warner to $63M Extension

DON'T MISS

Woman Charged With Arson After Grass Fire Threatens Buildings

DON'T MISS

The Tragedy of Joe Biden

DON'T MISS

Teen Girl Stabbed at Porterville’s Monache High School, Suspect in Custody

DON'T MISS

US Senate Democratic Leader Proposes Ban on Foreign Air Force One

UP NEXT

The Day Grok Lost Its Mind

UP NEXT

Democratic Candidates for CA Governor Shy Away From State’s Anti-Oil Crusade

UP NEXT

Trump Navigates Iran Nuclear Talks. Should US Insist on Zero Enrichment?

UP NEXT

Fresno, Wake Up. We’re Numb to Our DUI Problem

UP NEXT

Newsom Reveals His Weaknesses When He Needs Political Hardball to Get His Way

UP NEXT

Democrats Seeking California Governorship Strut Their Stuff for Union Leaders

UP NEXT

How Real ID Can Exclude ‘Real’ Americans From Flying, Voting and More

UP NEXT

What the World Needs From Pope Leo

UP NEXT

Today Harvard Is the Target. Tomorrow It Could Be Your Church.

UP NEXT

Jerry Springer — Yes, That Jerry Springer — Can Save the Democrats

Complaint Filed With Watchdog Group About Celedon. She Calls It ‘Bologna’

15 hours ago

Supreme Court Allows Trump to Strip Legal Protections for Venezuelans Who Risk Deportation

16 hours ago

49ers Sign All-Pro Linebacker Fred Warner to $63M Extension

17 hours ago

Woman Charged With Arson After Grass Fire Threatens Buildings

17 hours ago

The Tragedy of Joe Biden

18 hours ago

Teen Girl Stabbed at Porterville’s Monache High School, Suspect in Custody

18 hours ago

US Senate Democratic Leader Proposes Ban on Foreign Air Force One

19 hours ago

California Lets Students Wear Tribal Regalia at Graduations. Why It’s Still Controversial

19 hours ago

Trump Will Sign a Bill to Make Posting ‘Revenge Porn’ a Federal Crime

20 hours ago

Should CA’s Climate Budget Pay for High-Speed Rail, Firefighters?

20 hours ago

Poland to Try Suspect in Alleged Russian Plot to Assassinate Zelenskiy

WARSAW (Reuters) – Polish authorities have indicted a man charged with planning to help Russian foreign intelligence services prepare ...

5 minutes ago

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrives for the inaugural Mass of Pope Leo XIV in Saint Peter’s Square, Vatican City, May 18, 2025. REUTERS/REMO CASILLI/File Photo
5 minutes ago

Poland to Try Suspect in Alleged Russian Plot to Assassinate Zelenskiy

President Donald Trump signs an executive order related to drug prices, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Monday, May 12, 2025, in Washington. (AP/Mark Schiefelbein)
9 minutes ago

Trump to Make Golden Dome Announcement on Tuesday, US Official Says

17 minutes ago

Musk Says He Is Still Committed to Being Tesla CEO in 5 Years’ Time

15 hours ago

Complaint Filed With Watchdog Group About Celedon. She Calls It ‘Bologna’

16 hours ago

Supreme Court Allows Trump to Strip Legal Protections for Venezuelans Who Risk Deportation

17 hours ago

49ers Sign All-Pro Linebacker Fred Warner to $63M Extension

Diana Rivas, 35, has been arrested on arson charges after a vegetation fire burned several acres in Fresno on Sunday, prompting a large emergency response. (Fresno FD)
17 hours ago

Woman Charged With Arson After Grass Fire Threatens Buildings

18 hours ago

The Tragedy of Joe Biden

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend