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By Eric Johnson
Published Jul 03, 2023

Independence, California Style

Robert Rivas, who was sworn in as speaker of the California Assembly on Friday, pointed out an important way that our state leads the country.

“I’m proud to lead an assembly that is the most diverse in California’s history, and among the most diverse legislative bodies in the world,” he said. “We have to always remember that our diversity is our collective heritage as Californians. Our diversity is what built this state. It is our greatest strength today and it is the foundation of our future.”

Diversity was abundantly evident at the swearing-in ceremony. The convening prayer was spoken by the Assembly’s first Muslim chaplain, Imam Yasir Khan. Rivas was sworn into office by Patricia Guerrero, chief justice of the California Supreme Court—the first Latina to hold that position. Also on the rostrum were Dr. Shirley Weber, California’s first Black Secretary of State, and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who, let’s not forget, was the first woman elected to that post.

Our friend Sara Rubin, editor of Monterey County Weekly, has been following Rivas’ work for the better part of a decade. In an inspiring report from the Assembly floor during the ceremony, Rubin explained one reason his speakership is historic.

“He is a unique person to fill the role, who comes from humble beginnings and who represents a rural area, Assembly District 29, which includes the Pajaro Valley and Salinas Valley,” Rubin writes. “He shared the story of his own beginnings and his farmworker family—grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins—pooling their savings to buy a house in Hollister in 1988, for $140,000. … The question now is whether that dream can continue to be available for future generations.”


What Makes California Different

Speaking of California leaders from the Monterey Bay Area, Sen. John Laird made a statement last week while we were discussing challenges faced by the LGBT community: “California is different.”

Laird's point was that we have a unique responsibility here—one that involves blazing trails that lead to a world where there is more justice, freedom and dignity for all of the diverse communities in our state. Two events coincided last week that show how California is forging its own way forward while forces elsewhere undermine progress.

Sadly, predictably, the US Supreme Court on Thursday declared that it is now unlawful for colleges and universities to use race as one criteria when considering applications to join their student bodies. That same day, California’s Reparations Task Force—the first such body in the nation, convened via a law authored by Secretary of State Weber when she was in the Assembly—submitted its final report. In addition to calling for direct monetary payments to “individuals who are able to demonstrate that they are the descendant of either an enslaved African American in the United States, or a free African American living in the United States prior to 1900,” the report details ways the state can provide justice to an African-American community that has suffered innumerable harms as a result of systemic racism.


Supreme Court Bans Affirmative Action: What it Means for California

Six of the nine Supreme Court justices, all appointed by Republican presidents, have voted to end affirmative action.
The Supreme Court has now overturned decades of precedent in a new ruling that bans affirmative action, the consideration of race in college admissions as a way to create campus diversity.

Reparations Panel Delivers Hundreds of Recommendations

California's Reparations Task Force meets for the final time to deliver its comprehensive report.
The first-in-the-nation state-appointed task force report contains hundreds of recommendations for reparation, including a proposal that the state apologize and make financial amends for slavery and decades of racist policies.


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Freedom from the Climate Crisis

California independence also means our state must lead the way toward making the big changes that are required if we are going to restore nature and leave a habitable planet to future generations. Wondering what it might cost to help save the world? How about $15 billion or so?


$15.5 Billion ‘Climate Bond’ Headed For 2024 Ballot

California looks to send a huge bond issue to voters, to prepare the state for extreme climate events.
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