Ending poverty in California requires good policy, not platitudes – Pasadena Star News

Michael Tubbs’ “The Deeper The Roots” is both a personal memoir and a book of his policy beliefs. (Photo credit: Timothy Archibald/Courtesy of Flatiron Books)

SACRAMENTO – At times, the California Legislature is reminiscent of a high-school student council, except that instead of working with few-hundred-dollar activities budget lawmakers are spending more than $300 billion in revenues. I’m not the first commentator to notice that politicians often promise things they can’t possibly provide – and are no more realistic than a student-body president offering free pizza on Fridays.

What can you do? Democracy is, as Winston Churchill said, “the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.” Fast forward to the latest Capitol silliness. A group of Democratic lawmakers is starting the End Poverty In California caucus, which is unlikely to be as EPIC as its name suggests. Ending poverty is a large promise – and the Legislature is much better at passing laws that exacerbate poverty (minimum wage, anti-competitive union work rules, onerous licensing requirements) rather than reduce it.

For starters, legislative caucuses are notoriously ineffective. They’re the equivalent of those high-school clubs where like-minded people get together engage in virtue signaling and whatnot. The Legislature has 16 caucuses centering on identity (gender, ethnicity), issues (aviation, environment) or locale (rural communities, the Bay Area).

The latest newsworthy caucus formation is the Problem Solvers Caucus, which promises to put good policy over partisanship, but which has accomplished nothing remarkable. We can only hope the “ending poverty” effort is equally ineffective given the people whose ideas it is based upon. Politico reports the name is a “nod to Upton Sinclair’s 1934 gubernatorial campaign” and is the “brainchild” of former Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs.

Sinclair was a socialist and Tubbs is best known for promoting “universal basic income.” Sinclair’s EPIC campaign plan promised to “develop a state managed cooperative economy that would initially provide livelihoods for the unemployed while pointing the way to the eventual replacement of the private economy based on profit,” the University of Washington explains.

The new EPIC chairman is Assembly Majority Leader Isaac Bryan, D-Los Angeles, so this comes from one of the Legislature’s most-powerful members. Tubbs has created a nonprofit group of the same name. He served as the mayor of one of the state’s most impoverished cities – a San Joaquin Valley industrial city best known for its municipal bankruptcy (caused in part by excessive benefits for city employees) and atrocious crime rates.

Tubbs apparently was so busy basking in his national attention as a young progressive rising star that he didn’t tend to matters at home. He lost re-election to a Republican political neophyte in a city with a two-to-one Democratic voter-registration advantage. After his loss, he became an economic adviser to Gov. Gavin Newsom. Tubbs’ major initiative was that privately funded project to provide $500 monthly in free money to select residents.

If you’re still not understanding where this caucus is headed, then I’ll quote from Tubbs’ testimony at an Assembly subcommittee on poverty and inclusion, as captured in a videothat his nonprofit released. Tubbs said the state has a “unique opportunity” to pass “common-sense, well-researched policies from baby bonds to guaranteed income to housing as a right to more affordable housing to truly make the state a golden one for all.”

Baby bonds would have the government provide a set amount of money to every newborn child. Guaranteed income means the government would provide a stipend to everyone. Turning housing into a “right” means that landlords would lose the ability to evict tenants and also includes rent controls – even though “well-researched” studies have found such policies deplete the housing stock. More “affordable housing” means more subsidized housing.


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