California
Gavin Newsom vetoes bill to end indefinite solitary confinement in California, citing safety concerns
Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a invoice Thursday to restrict solitary confinement in California’s jails, prisons and personal detention facilities, rejecting advocates’ hopes to limit a observe that many specialists have likened to torture.
In his Meeting Invoice 2632 veto assertion, Newsom mentioned he supported “limiting using segregated confinement” however claimed the measure was too expansive.
“Segregated confinement is ripe for reform in america — and the identical holds true in California. AB 2632, nonetheless, establishes requirements which can be overly broad and exclusions that might threat the protection of each the workers and incarcerated inhabitants inside these amenities,” he mentioned.
Newsom mentioned he would direct the California Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation “to develop rules that will limit using segregated confinement besides in restricted conditions, reminiscent of the place the person has been discovered to have engaged in violence within the jail.”
Assemblymember Chris Holden, the Pasadena Democrat who wrote AB 2632, mentioned in a press release that the proposal was California’s probability to appropriate a “darkish historical past” of solitary confinement and “get it proper on this subject.”
“The scientific consensus and the worldwide requirements are clear. Solitary confinement is torture, and there have to be limitations and oversight on the observe,” he mentioned.
Dubbed the California Mandela Act for the late South African civil rights activist who spent many years in jail, AB 2632 would have outlined solitary, or segregated, confinement because the holding of a person in a cell or related area, both alone or with a cellmate, for greater than 17 hours a day and with restricted or no entry to bodily motion and companies or contact with these apart from corrections workers.
The invoice additionally would have restricted confinement to not more than 15 consecutive days, or 45 days in a six-month interval. The remoted people would nonetheless be allowed day trip of their cells for recreation and meals, together with remedy and companies, so long as there wasn’t a big threat to the protection of different individuals.
Corrections workers would have needed to doc every incident of segregated confinement completely, together with a cause for the isolation, and conduct common psychological well being check-ins and monitoring of the incarcerated particular person.
The observe would have been banned for weak populations, outlined as pregnant or postpartum individuals, people with sure bodily and psychological disabilities and people 25 and youthful or 60 and older.
Advocates mentioned the brand new guidelines would have ensured that solitary confinement wasn’t being abused in California’s corrections amenities, significantly for individuals with psychological diseases, in a means that counters rehabilitation efforts.
Craig Haney, a distinguished professor of psychology at UC Santa Cruz who has lengthy studied the results of solitary confinement, mentioned the observe is “traumatizing.” Those that’ve skilled lengthy durations of segregated confinement, Haney mentioned, report excessive charges of despair, exhaustion and anxiousness, nightmares and insomnia and cognitive decline.
“They’ve reminiscence issues, they’ve difficulties concentrating, they will’t assume as successfully as they as soon as did. They neglect names, they neglect faces, they discover their recollections are fading. They attempt to learn a guide … they will’t do it,” Haney mentioned. “Generally this stuff accumulate, and the sense of desperation is so deep that individuals start to harm themselves and start to consider taking their very own lives.
“There may be nothing rehabilitative in any respect about inserting someone in solitary confinement,” Haney mentioned. “Individuals who have been in solitary confinement for lengthy durations of time really feel lucky to have survived it. However they’re not rehabilitated by it.”
The United Nations’ ”Nelson Mandela Guidelines,” a doc that lays out the usual minimal guidelines for the remedy of prisoners, prohibits indefinite or extended solitary confinement, outlined as 22 hours or extra a day “with out significant human contact” for greater than 15 consecutive days.
Segregated confinement must be used solely in “distinctive circumstances as a final resort,” in line with the foundations, and banned altogether for these with psychological and bodily disabilities whose situations would decline in isolation.
It was unclear all through this 12 months’s legislative session whether or not AB 2632 had the help essential to make it to Newsom’s desk. A number of average Democrats both abstained from voting on the measure or joined Republicans in opposing it.
Legislation enforcement teams raised severe issues with eradicating a device they mentioned prevents violence and retains amenities safer, and argued that the Board of State and Neighborhood Corrections was the right company to set these requirements.
The California Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation hooked up a hefty price ticket to AB 2632 with an estimate of greater than $1 billion in one-time prices to develop programming area and train yards at its amenities, and $200 million extra yearly to extend the mandatory workers to stick to the rules.
Advocates have disputed these numbers, saying they’re inflated. Others say the associated fee is value it.
Michael Romano, director of the Stanford Legislation College Three Strikes Undertaking, mentioned California has an “antiquated and brutal jail and jail system” that requires change, even when it’s going to be costly.
“It would take reconfiguring amenities. It would take further workers,” Romano mentioned. “However these are the issues that we must always do and might do so as to cease torturing individuals.”
California
California may exclude Tesla from EV rebate program
California Gov. Gavin Newsom may exclude Tesla and other automakers from an electric vehicle (EV) rebate program if the incoming Trump administration scraps a federal tax credit for electric car purchases.
Newsom proposed creating a new version of the state’s Clean Vehicle Rebate Program, which was phased out in 2023 after funding more than 594,000 vehicles and saving more than 456 million gallons of fuel, the governor’s office said in a news release on Monday.
“Consumers continue to prove the skeptics wrong – zero-emission vehicles are here to stay,” Newsom said in a statement. “We’re not turning back on a clean transportation future – we’re going to make it more affordable for people to drive vehicles that don’t pollute.”
The proposed rebates would be funded with money from the state’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which is funded by polluters under the state’s cap-and-trade program, the governor’s office said. Officials did not say how much the program would cost or save consumers.
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They would also include changes to promote innovation and competition in the zero-emission vehicles market – changes that could prevent automakers like Tesla from qualifying for the rebates.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who relocated Tesla’s corporate headquarters from California to Texas in 2021, responded to the possibility of having Tesla EVs left out of the program.
“Even though Tesla is the only company who manufactures their EVs in California! This is insane,” Musk wrote on X, which he also owns.
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Those buying or leasing Tesla vehicles accounted for about 42% of the state’s rebates, The Associated Press reported, citing data from the California Air Resources Board.
Newsom’s office told Fox Business Digital that the proposal is intended to foster market competition, and any potential market cap is subject to negotiation with the state Legislature.
Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
---|---|---|---|---|
TSLA | TESLA INC. | 338.59 | -13.97 | -3.96% |
“Under a potential market cap, and depending on what the cap is, there’s a possibility that Tesla and other automakers could be excluded,” the governor’s office said. “But that’s again subject to negotiations with the legislature.”
Newsom’s office noted that such market caps have been part of rebate programs since George W. Bush’s administration in 2005.
Federal tax credits for EVs are currently worth up to $7,500 for new zero-emission vehicles. President-elect Trump has previously vowed to end the credit.
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California has surpassed 2 million zero-emission vehicles sold, according to the governor’s office. The state, however, could face a $2 billion budget deficit next year, Reuters reported, citing a non-partisan legislative estimate released last week.
California
STEVE HILTON: Five things California Democrats still don't get
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Along with most other Democratic politicians in California, Gov. Gavin Newsom still doesn’t seem to understand what happened in the 2024 election.
For years, Newsom, along with California cronies like former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and, of course, Vice President Kamala Harris, bragged about their state being a “model for the nation.”
In one sense–not the one they intended, of course–that’s true. California became a model of what not to do.
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The terrible combination of elitism and extremism that has defined Democratic policymaking in my home state for at least the last decade has delivered failure on every front.
Despite having the highest taxes in the nation, despite the state’s budget nearly doubling in the last ten years (even as our population has been falling, in the exodus from blue state misrule), California has the highest rate of poverty in America. We have the highest housing costs, the lowest homeownership, highest gas and utility bills, and the worst business climate–ten years in a row.
This record of failure is exactly why Democrats lost so badly on November 5th. Voters had a clear choice: between more of the same Democrat policies that raised the cost of living and lowered their quality of life, or a return to the peace and prosperity of the Trump years.
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In many ways, the contest between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris represented a battle between the ‘blue state model’ championed by Gavin Newsom in California, and the ‘red state model’ that has driven people and businesses out of California and into the arms of more welcoming states like Texas, Tennessee and Florida.
Of course, the red state model won and the blue state model was roundly rejected.
You would think that would make blue state leaders like Newsom pause and reflect. But the exact opposite has happened. Gavin Newsom immediately called a “special session” of the California legislature to “Trump-proof” his state.
What California really needs is “Newsom-proofing.”
Instead, California Democrats are doubling down on the exact same agenda that was defeated across the country – including in California, which saw the biggest shift from Democrats to the GOP in decades.
Here are the five things California Democrats still don’t get:
1. People want results, not lectures
Democrats and their media sycophants can do all the self-righteous, sanctimonious bloviating they like about “our democracy” and “equity”, but in the end people want the basics of the American Dream: a good job that pays enough to raise your family in a home of your own in a safe neighborhood with a good school so your kids can have a better life than you. No amount of moral superiority from the people in charge will make up for that if they fail to provide it.
2. Enough with the ‘climate’ extremism
“Climate” has become a religion for Democrats, and you see that especially clearly in California. But when you look at the main reason life is so unaffordable for working people, whether that’s gas prices, utility bills or housing costs, extreme climate policies are to blame. Working-class Americans can’t afford these ‘luxury beliefs.’
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3. Who cares about Hollywood?
This election destroyed forever the myth that fancy celebrities can sway votes. Oprah, Beyonce, George Clooney, Taylor Swift…nobody cares! The new cultural powerhouses are the podcast hosts, comedians…the raw power of UFC is where it’s at, not the decadent Hollywood elite who won’t even turn up to support “their” candidate without a multimillion dollar paycheck.
4. ‘Little tech’ beats Big Tech
Democrats may console themselves with the knowledge that California’s Big Tech monopolies are on their side. But in this election we saw the rise of what famed Silicon Valley investor Marc Andressen calls “little tech”, the upstarts and rebels who reject leftist groupthink. They got engaged in this election in a way we’ve never seen before. It’s a massive shift and will be a huge force for the future.
5. Working class beats the elite
Back in 2016, after the Brexit vote, and then Donald Trump’s victory here, shocked the world, I predicted that the Republican Party had the opportunity to become a “multiracial working class coalition.” Trump’s 2024 victory has delivered that — a revolutionary shift in our political landscape. The other part of my prediction? Democrats will be left as the party of the “rich, white and woke.”
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Unless Democrats come to terms with these realities and change course, they can expect to lose elections for years to come. The reaction in California – epicenter of today’s Democrat elite — shows that there is zero sign of this happening.
They just don’t get it.
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California
California proposes its own EV buyer credit — which could cut out Elon Musk's Tesla
- Gov. Gavin Newsom plans to revive California’s EV rebate if Trump ends the federal tax credit.
- But Tesla, the largest maker of EVs, would be excluded under the proposal.
- Elon Musk criticized Tesla’s potential exclusion from the rebate.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom is preparing to step in if President-elect Donald Trump fulfills his promise to axe the federal electric-vehicle tax credit — but one notable EV maker could be left out.
Newsom said Monday if the $7,500 federal tax credit is eliminated he would restart the state’s zero-emission vehicle rebate program, which was phased out in 2023.
“We will intervene if the Trump Administration eliminates the federal tax credit, doubling down on our commitment to clean air and green jobs in California,” Newsom said in a statement. “We’re not turning back on a clean transportation future — we’re going to make it more affordable for people to drive vehicles that don’t pollute.”
The rebates for EV buyers would come from the state’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which is funded by polluters of greenhouse gases under a cap-and-trade program, according to the governor’s office.
But Tesla’s vehicles could be excluded under the proposal’s market-share limitations, Bloomberg News first reported.
The governor’s office confirmed to Business Insider that the rebate program could include a market-share cap which could in turn exclude Tesla or other EV makers. The office did not share details about what market-share limit could be proposed and also noted the proposal would be subject to negotiations in the state legislature.
A market-share cap would exclude companies whose sales account for a certain amount of total electric vehicle sales. For instance, Tesla accounted for nearly 55% off all new electric vehicles registered in California in the first three quarters of 2024, according to a report from the California New Car Dealers Association. By comparison, the companies with the next highest EV market share in California were Hyundai and BMW with 5.6% and 5% respectively.
Tesla sales in California, the US’s largest EV market, have recently declined even as overall EV sales in the state have grown. Though the company still accounted for a majority of EV sales in California this year as of September, its market share fell year-over-year from 64% to 55%.
The governor’s office said the market-share cap would be aimed at promoting competition and innovation in the industry.
Elon Musk, who has expressed support for ending the federal tax credit, said in an X post it was “insane” for the California proposal exclude Tesla.
The federal electric vehicle tax credit, which was passed as part of the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act in 2022, provides a $7,500 tax credit to some EV buyers.
Musk, who is working closely with the incoming Trump administration, has expressed support for ending the tax credit. He’s set to co-lead an advisory commission, the Department of Government Efficiency, which is aimed at slashing federal spending.
The Tesla CEO said on an earnings call in July that ending the federal tax credit might actually benefit the company.
“I think it would be devastating for our competitors and for Tesla slightly,” Musk said. “But long-term probably actually helps Tesla, would be my guess.”
BI’s Graham Rapier previously reported that ending the tax credit could help Tesla maintain its strong standing in the EV market by slowing its competitors growth.
Prior to the EV rebate proposal, Newsom has already positioned himself as a foil to the incoming Trump administration. Following Trump’s election win the governor called on California lawmakers to convene for a special session to discuss protecting the state from Trump’s second term.
“The freedoms we hold dear in California are under attack — and we won’t sit idle,” Newsom said in a statement at the time.
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