On Friday, CA Gov. Gavin Newsom nixed a bill that would have allowed some undocumented immigrants to apply for state-backed home loans.
“Given the finite funding available for CalHFA programs, expanding program eligibility must be carefully considered within the broader context of the annual state budget to manage our resources effectively. For this reason, I am unable to sign this bill.”
Politico’s Eric He gives both a great look at both the detailed policy that Newsom vetoed and the political context in which the veto occurred.
Of the political context, He notes:
Newsom has repeatedly warned fellow Democrats in Sacramento not to provide cannonfire for Republicans in an election year, issuing pleas for them to tamp down the raging culture wars rather than provoke them with hot-button issues ranging from banning youth tackle football to reparations. On other proposals that were unlikely to become law, he pushed state Democrats to subordinate their virtue signaling so conservative media outlets couldn’t paint the state as wildly out of touch with America.
That’s an important consideration, especially considering Trump might have brought it up at the debate tomorrow.
2028 implications: Newsom is watching a fellow California governor get hammered for being seen as too leftwing for centrist voters, as well as carrying the additional Rust Belt baggage of hailing from California.
Newsom is a more daring politician than Harris (to wit: she’s given only one interview to CNN, while Newsom has debated opponents on Fox News frequently and effectively), and he also boasts a genuinely more centrist record than Harris.
He’s termed out in 2027, so it wouldn’t be surprising to continue seeing him try to shed the “California liberal” label.