Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Reflecting on 50 Years of Writing About California's Politics — and Still Counting
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 3 months ago on
March 4, 2025

Veteran columnist Dan Walters shares insights from five decades of covering California's political landscape. (CalMatters/Miguel Gutierrez Jr.)

Share

This commentary was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.

This week is a personal milestone, marking a half-century of writing about California’s ever-changing political ambiance.

Dan Walters Profile Picture

By Dan Walters,

CalMatters

Opinion

My move into the Sacramento Union’s Capitol bureau on March 3, 1975, was part of its effort to become more competitive with The Sacramento Bee.

The Bee had a large Capitol staff and believed that its only real competition in the political arena was the Los Angeles Times. Al Donner, who had been the Union’s sole Capitol reporter, and I were determined to change that situation.

The Capitol was undergoing one of its periodic political upheavals, so it was — in a journalistic sense — a target-rich environment. Jerry Brown, the 36-year-old son of former governor Pat Brown, had been inaugurated as governor just two months earlier and was already becoming something of a political pop star.

Jerry’s vaguely left-leaning political persona contrasted sharply with that of predecessor Ronald Reagan, and he was making waves by filling his administration with civil rights advocates, farmworker-union sympathizers and environmental zealots.

Although Brown’s fellow Democrats held majorities in both houses of the Legislature, he was unpopular, having based his campaign on picturing the Capitol as a cesspool of corruption that needed cleansing. He had sponsored a successful 1974 ballot measure, the Political Reform Act, to limit campaign contributions and what lobbyists could spend on legislators to, as he put it, “two hamburgers and a Coke.”

Brown’s youth and brash disdain for unwritten Capitol protocol irritated a Legislature composed almost entirely of white middle-aged or even elderly men. One senator had been first elected to the Legislature in 1938, the year Brown was born.

There were a few women in the Assembly, but the first woman wasn’t elected to the Senate until 1976. Brown, on the other hand, appointed a number of women to major administration posts, most notably Rose Bird, whom he later named as chief justice of the state Supreme Court, and Adriana Gianturco, who earned legislators’ scorn for blocking new freeway construction and helping institute carpool lanes.

Brown’s clashes with the Legislature, his two presidential campaigns and battles between the two parties for control provided copious opportunities for scoop-minded journalism as Donner and I waged guerrilla war against the Bee. For several years, we beat everyone to the state budget before it was officially released by Brown.

Donner and I — and later a third Union reporter — had a lot of fun in those days. However, after covering the Capitol for a few years, I came to believe that California politics needed another approach and began writing a daily column about the relationship between California’s evolution and its politics.

That column launched in January 1981, continued for three years in the Union and 33 years more in The Bee before changing venues again in 2017 to CalMatters — about 11,000 columns so far, and still counting.

Among other things, the column allowed me to appraise the huge contrast between Brown’s first governorship and his second several decades later.

The contrasts extend beyond Brown’s persona, however. As California’s demography evolved, so did the Legislature’s — many fewer white men, many more women, Latinos and Asian Americans and many with gender identities or sexual orientations that people were less tolerant of in 1975.

That said, today’s Legislature is less overtly corrupt but more secretive and less deliberative than it was 50 years ago. Committee hearings on bills were genuinely pertinent then but are mostly meaningless charades now.

California has nearly twice as many people as it did in 1975 and its demographic attributes and its economy have undergone massive transformations. Sadly, the Capitol’s ability — or willingness — to deal with the political issues arising out of those changes has diminished.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to bmcewen@gvwire.com for consideration.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

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

UP NEXT

Fresno County Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Hundreds of Dead Animals Found

‘Dried Out Prune’? ‘Corrupt’ and ‘Incompetent’? It’s Getting Nasty Between Springsteen and Trump

11 hours ago

Newsom’s Budget Cuts Anger Allies and Leave the State’s Chronic Deficit Unresolved

11 hours ago

Southwest Airlines To Require Chargers Be in View During Use Due to Fire Concerns

Passengers on Southwest Airlines flights will soon be required to keep their portable chargers in plain sight while using them because of co...

11 hours ago

11 hours ago

Southwest Airlines To Require Chargers Be in View During Use Due to Fire Concerns

11 hours ago

Fresno County Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Hundreds of Dead Animals Found

11 hours ago

The Personal Secretary and Adviser to Mexico City’s Mayor Are Shot Dead

11 hours ago

‘Dried Out Prune’? ‘Corrupt’ and ‘Incompetent’? It’s Getting Nasty Between Springsteen and Trump

11 hours ago

Newsom’s Budget Cuts Anger Allies and Leave the State’s Chronic Deficit Unresolved

12 hours ago

Fresno Unified Delegation Takes Field Trip to Bus Depot

Golden Dome for America
12 hours ago

Trump Selects Concept for $175B ‘Golden Dome’ Missile Defense System

U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy speaks to the media outside the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 6, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura/File Photo
13 hours ago

US Expected to Declare Biden Fuel Economy Rules Exceeded Legal Authority

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

Search

Send this to a friend