Constitutional Convention Town Halls

As the Big 5 careen toward yet another bad budget deal that will leave California even worse off than before, it’s worth recognizing that despite the individual failures of politicians like Arnold Schwarzenegger – and let’s face it, his failure is massive – California’s crisis is a crisis of a broken governmental system.

For the last 30 years we have lived under a right-wing constitution. Prop 13 imposed a conservative system of government on California, where the state’s tax revenues were set to an artificially low level and both the legislature and the people were denied the right to change this through a majoritarian process. As Congressman Sam Farr (CA-17) put it:

We can go to war on a simple majority vote. We can take away life and property with a simple majority vote. If it’s worked for 200 years for a nation, why does it have to be different for California?

The reason it is different is because conservatives are not a majority in the legislature or the population of California, haven’t been for a VERY long time (if ever), and aren’t going to be anytime in the foreseeable future. So they set up a system that is built to ensure they and their ideological desires are given priority. And it’s working out pretty well for them.

Which means that for the rest of us, it’s time to get to work changing that system. We’ve been kicking around the Constitutional Convention for a little while now on Calitics, but we need to bring this out to a wider audience. And that’s what’s going to happen in Southern California this weekend, with two town hall events on the Constitutional Convention.

The first is in Santa Monica on Friday night from 6-9pm at Santa Monica College. The second, co-sponsored by the Courage Campaign (where I work as Public Policy Director) along with the Bay Area Council and the William C. Velasquez Institute, is at USC on Saturday from 9am to 3:30pm. Rick Jacobs, chair of the Courage Campaign, will be moderating the morning session on the problems with California’s government. Panelists will include Assemblymember Kevin DeLeon, LA City Councilmember Eric Garcetti, Common Cause’s Kathay Feng, and Dr. Jose Calderon of Pitzer College.

For those of you Northern Californians who don’t want to spend your weekend in LA, I will be speaking on a panel “Business vs. the California State Constitution” at the CDP E-Board meeting in Burlingame at 8am on Saturday morning. Joining me will be Senator Loni Hancock, Roger Noll of Stanford University, and Sunne Wright McPeak of California Forward.

UPDATE by Dave: I’ll be milling about the Santa Monica event tonight, so come by and say hi if you see me.

3 thoughts on “Constitutional Convention Town Halls”

  1. The notion that California does not have a conservative majority is error.  Let us remember that in a recent poll 65% of Californians enthusiastically were in favor of the death penalty.  There is no more conservative position.

  2. I think that if you brought this to San Diego, you would find an enthusiastic activist base that is very interested in the Constitutional Convention idea. Our north county Progressive Democrats club has started talking about it, and I know other groups are doing the same.

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