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Poli 103A, California Politics Bargaining with Governors - Reminder: Midterm is in two weeks, May 3 - Books are now on reserve.

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Presentation on theme: "Poli 103A, California Politics Bargaining with Governors - Reminder: Midterm is in two weeks, May 3 - Books are now on reserve."— Presentation transcript:

1 Poli 103A, California Politics Bargaining with Governors - Reminder: Midterm is in two weeks, May 3 - Books are now on reserve

2 Edmund G. “Jerry” Brown, Governor 1975-1983

3 Bargaining with Governors Formal Powers of Governors Informal Powers of Governors The Legislature vs. the Governor Budget Bargaining Everyday Oversight

4 The Formal Powers a Governor Does Have Propose a budget Gov’s budget due in early January Constitutional deadline June 15

5 The Formal Powers a Governor Does Have Thousands of Appointments Cabinet members, agency officials Judges, board members But California has a plural executive, which means that the executive branch is split into many (8) elected offices. The Lt. Governor, Treasurer, Controller, etc. do not serve the Gov.

6 The Formal Powers a Governor Does Have Executive Orders – car tax Veto powers The governor can veto any bill passed by the legislature, and it takes a 2/3 vote to override the veto. The governor can pocket veto a bill by failing to act on it. The governor can line item veto some portion of a bill, striking a clause or, more often, a dollar figure.

7 The Formal Powers a Governor Does Not Have Propose legislation. The governor cannot author a bill. Put an initiative on the ballot. Can’t do it. Enact a budget without reaching an agreement with the Legislature. Nope. Increase funding through a line item veto. Not happening.

8 Informal Powers of Governors The Power of Initiation. (Alan Rosenthal, Governors and Legislatures: Contending Powers ) Inaugural address and State of the State allow governors to argue for change. Executive orders can get part of a proposal done. Governors can call special sessions for particular purposes

9 Informal Powers of Governors The Power of Provision. “Any legislator who says he needs nothing from the Governor’s office is either lying or stupid.” Appointments are legislators’ patronage as well as governors’. Roads and other state projects. Social events.

10 Informal Powers of Governors The Power of Publicity Governors are almost always more popular than the Legislature This gets them on TV, etc. Ever-elusive “political capital”

11 The Legislature vs. the Governor: Budget Bargaining After the governor proposes a budget, the Legislature does whatever it wants. Senate and Assembly both hold subcommittee hearings, Budget Committee hearings, and pass bills. Then the real bargaining begins. The budget needs to pass with a 2/3 majority, giving minority party a voice.

12 The Legislature vs. the Governor: Budget Bargaining “The Big Five” often negotiate the real budget deal: The Governor: Arnold Schwarzenegger Assembly Speaker: Fabian Nunez Assembly Minority Leader: Kevin McCarthy Senate President Pro Tempore: John Burton Senate Minority Leader: Jim Brulte

13 The Legislature vs. the Governor: Budget Bargaining

14 The Legislature vs. the Governor: Everyday Oversight Types of Oversight Activity: Oversight hearings in the interim between sessions. Audits performed by the Joint Legislative Audit Committee and the Bureau of State Audits. Senate approval of appointments. Informal communication between legislative and executive staff.

15 The Legislature vs. the Governor: Everyday Oversight

16 Discussion Questions John Jacobs contrasts four governors’ styles. Can these styles help to explain their power? Is oversight really more important than making laws? What are the lessons that you draw from the Quackenbush investigation?


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