California's powerful unions had the Assembly in its usual vise grip Monday as a legislative deadline loomed that made it do-or-die for some bills.
February 4, 2022
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Dear John,
California’s powerful unions had the state Assembly in its usual vise grip Monday as a legislative deadline loomed that made it do-or-die for some bills.
All eyes were on AB1400, the bill that would put the state government in charge of healthcare for every Californian. But Monday afternoon, the legislation’s sponsor, Assemblyman Ash Kalra (D-San Jose), surprised observers and pulled the bill that would have created “CalCare,” a single-payer healthcare system that would be run by the kinds of people who can’t manage the state’s employment department or DMV.
“We did not have the votes necessary for passage and I decided the best course of action is to not put AB 1400 for a vote today,” Kalra said in a statement ([link removed]) .
Sane people everywhere celebrated the reprieve. Imagine handing over one of the most complicated industries in modern civilization to men and women like Ash Kalra, a besuited legislator with whom you would not entrust an electric toothbrush. Imagine handing over life-and-death decisions to the people whose recklessness around systems technology sent more than $20 billion in unemployment benefits to organized criminals.
Kalra’s last-minute move was a savvy act of political self-preservation for Assembly members facing re-election in November. But the union activists behind the bill, the California Nurses Association (CNA) and Service Employees International Union (SEIU), went ballistic. Even knowing the bill had more enemies than friends, they insisted on a kind of last stand. They wanted a vote so that, as one member of the Progressive Caucus of the California Democratic Party put it, they could get “names” to create their own enemies list.
In a press statement, the Progressive Caucus, which threatened to block the endorsements of any Democrat who voted against “CalCare,” declared ([link removed]) it would hunt down defectors despite the lack of a vote: “Our delegates and volunteers have identified dozens of candidates who either indicated they opposed the measure or failed to support it. Our Caucus will continue with its plans to pull their endorsements.”
And so the unions and progressives will continue their political theatrics, punishing any legislator who has the audacity to suggest putting the brakes on a government-run healthcare system that would increase ([link removed]) the top marginal tax rate on wage income to 18.05% and impose a 2.3% gross receipts tax on already beleaguered businesses, and only accelerate the massive California Exodus of people and businesses fleeing the state.
Kalra’s bill is dead for this year, but keep your wooden stakes ready: It’s likely to come back to life after the election.
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Unions Twist Arms with Fast Food Bill
Despite their loss on CalCare, unions are celebrating a big Assembly win on AB257 – the Fast Food Accountability and Standards Recovery Act, or “FAST Recovery Act.” Sponsored by SEIU, AB257 would create a government council that would take over labor “negotiations” with fast-food businesses, setting statewide minimums for wages, working hours, and working conditions for restaurants and workers in the state.
As Assemblyman Kelly Seyarto (R-Murrieta) correctly observed ([link removed]) , the bill’s state-imposed contract would “just drive entire franchises and franchise brands away from California.” And while the unions are using McDonald’s as the face of the “evil corporation” they are up against, the reality is the bill, if it becomes law, will punish existing and potential minority owners of franchises as well as the low-income communities that rely on fast-food restaurants for food and jobs.
In fact, the greedy villain in this story isn’t fast-food chains. It’s the labor unions that are pouring buckets of cash into a bill they don’t actually want to pass. The unions’ real strategy is to use AB257 to strong-arm fast-food restaurants into unionizing.
The payoff? Over a half a million fast-food workers that union leaders hope will soon pay union dues in the hundreds of millions of dollars every year.
Don’t take our word for it. Former Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, the bill’s author, openly admits it. Gonzalez, who recently resigned her seat in the Assembly to head up the California Labor Federation, reportedly ([link removed]) said that state government shouldn’t be in the business of bargaining and that she hopes to encourage more support for labor unions.
“Maybe an individual fast-food franchise or restaurant says ‘You know what, I’d rather have a conversation with my workers in my workplace, allow them if they so want to unionize, and provide them not what these people at the state level are bargaining for but what the workers in my workplace actually want,” Gonzalez said ([link removed]) . “That would be a great solution.”
Translation: Your restaurants must unionize or we will have our politicians in Sacramento crush you.
Since Gonzalez is running the Labor Fed, AB257 is now being carried by Chris Holden (D-Pasadena). It heads next to the State Senate for a vote.
Support the California Policy Center. Donate Today. ([link removed])
Quote of the Week
“Love that some in the Democratic Party celebrate the diversity of people but not the diversity of opinions.” — State Sen. Steve Glazer (D-Orinda), respondin ([link removed]) g to progressives who threatened to primary him for opposing AB1400.
More from CPC
* Single payer diagnosis: the union parasite is eating its own ([link removed]) : California unions and progressives lost the battle for government-run healthcare this week and, as CPC president Will Swaim explains, they’re out for blood.
* National Review’s Radio Free California Podcast: High-Powered Hypocrisy ([link removed]) : Will Swaim and CPC Board Member David Bahnsen take on Governor Gavin Newsom unmasked at the NFL Championship, and Will talks with Pacific Research Institute’s Lance Izumi about his new book, “The Homeschool Boom.”
* Homeschooling: What the Research Shows ([link removed]) : CPC policy analyst Brandon Ristoff examines the data on how homeschool students compare to their peers in government-run schools.
CPC and allies in the news
* How California’s unions can help ALL workers ([link removed]) : CPC co-founder Ed Ring outlines how union efforts that claim to benefit their membership destroy opportunities for everyone else — and what we can do about it.
Classroom headlines
* Hispanic students were forced to learn Critical Race Theory. They hated it. ([link removed])
* California School District tells kids: 'Attacking Whiteness is not enough' ([link removed])
* Maskless students say Gavin Newsom inspired them ([link removed])
Union news
* Bill to increase power, protections of fast food workers passed in Assembly ([link removed])
Other things we’re reading
* California moves to dismantle nation's largest death row ([link removed])
* Orange-based Hyperion is shifting HQ to Ohio from California ([link removed])
* ‘MaskGate’ and the unserious politicians mocking the people of California ([link removed])
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