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Katy Grimes

California’s new undocumented jurors

The dead Boston Bomber, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, would have been eligible to serve on a jury in California, if state legislators have their way.

The Assembly passed a bill Thursday that would allow non-citizens who are in the U.S. legally to serve on jury duty.

Just when you thought the state couldn’t favor non-citizens any more, once again California is racing to be the first state in the country to pass a ridiculous law affording non-citizens rights previously reserved only for American citizens.

But that’s not all.

Democratic lawmakers at the state Capitol are currently trying to pass a law allowing illegal immigrants to obtain a California driver’s license. Last year they passed a law allowing illegal immigrants to apply for and receive student financial aid benefits and state-funded grants for college.

But here is an interesting thought: The dead Boston Bomber, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, would have been eligible to serve on a jury since he was a “legal immigrant” but not yet a citizen.

This is what life in California has become under a Democratic supermajority.

“Assemblyman Bob Wieckowski, D-Fremont, said his bill,… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Democrats “Battle” Over Education Non-Reforms

Much will be in the main stream media today about the “battle” shaping up between Governor Jerry Brown and Democrat legislative leaders, each of whom are putting forward plans that they say would improve the education for young children in California. However, when you look at their two plans, and then look at the vast challenges facing the state’s K-12 education system, you literally have to shake your head because, frankly, neither plan appreciably moves the needle. But yet the “warring parties” are so passionate about that which is so uninspiring.

It reminds me of one of the classic Star Trek episodes from the last season, Let This Be Your Last Battlefield. Two humanoid aliens, Bele and Lokai, are locked in a 50,000-year-long battle, into which the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise is drawn in. The passion between these two warring aliens was fierce — their dislike for one another immense. In the end, you find out that the reason for the hatred comes down… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Pics From The George W. Bush Library Opening Ceremony

This morning the Presidential Library of former President George W. Bush was opened in Dallas, Texas. Much can be read online about the event, and you can re-watch the ceremony on C-SPAN amongRead More

Katy Grimes

Gov. Brown calls for ‘social justice;’ redistribution of school funding

Citing a lack of civil rights and social inequities as what is wrong with California public schools, Gov. Jerry Brown vowed Wednesday at a Capitol press conference to give more money to the K-12 school districts that serve poorer students and English-language learners.

Brown said state funding needs to balance social equity and restore school funding cuts; and provide supplemental funding to children in high-poverty schools.

Following passage of Proposition 30 last November, raising taxes $6 billion, Brown’s controversial plan to shift money from wealthier schools to poor ones is a result of an emboldened Democratic supermajority.

Lawmakers and the governor are clearly preparing for the state’s looming June 15 budget deadline, with Brown working hard to get his proposal passed. Earlier this week, state Senate Democrats announced they had their own education funding… Read More

Jason Cabel Roe

The Voting Rights Act is Political Segregation

Few would argue the importance of the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA), legislation passed by Republicans in Congress, though signed by Democrat President Lyndon Johnson. The Act applied a nationwide prohibition against the denial or abridgement of the right to vote through among other things intimidation, suppression, literacy tests and poll taxes.

However, the Act also requires minority congressional and legislative districts be drawn with at least 50% minority voting age population in certain jurisdictions, and has contributed to the fracture between Republicans and minority voters.

Consider this: The redistricting tool which forces “majority-minority districts” compacts more minority voters into a district, while increasing the number of white voters in another. This limits the influence minority voters have in those districts by increasing the white percentage of the voters. In short, the VRA puts minority voters in one district and white voters in another, thus creating a political segregation.

It is not unheard of, and in fact, well-documented for Republican legislators to ally with black Democrats to gerrymander state and federal… Read More

Katy Grimes

Illegal immigrant driver’s license bill races through Legislature

SACRAMENTO — Driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants is back on the table and making its way through the Capitol once again. But this latest bill asserts a licensed driver is a safer driver, based on a new California Department of Motor Vehicles study.

The study, “Fatal Crash Rates for Suspended/Revoked and Unlicensed Drivers,” found that, compared to licensed drivers, suspended or revoked and unlicensed drivers are nearly three times more likely to cause a fatal crash.

Supporters of issuing driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants have jumped… Read More

Jon Fleischman

GOP Majority In Irvine Defeats Proposed Massive Fee Increases

Yesterday I penned a column on the FlashReport, concerned about a proposal coming before the Irvine city council that would have raised most of the fees charged by the city for everything you can imagine. The staff report estimated the annual increase in fee revenues for approving these increases to be well north of a million bucks a year.

I am very pleased to report that tonight the new Republican majority in the city not only rejected the proposal to raise all of these fees (after the two Democrats on the Council, Beth Krom and Larry Agran, spoke in support of hiking them), but on a substitute motion from Councilmember Christina Shea and supported by her colleagues Mayor Steven Choi and Councilmember Jeff Lalloway, all of the fee increases were defeated, and in some cases fee reductions were made.

This is a sharp contrast to the tax and spend mentality that dominated the Irvine Council for a full decade. Congratulations to the Republican Majority in Irvine, and to everyone who played a role in bringing this reality to fruition.… Read More

Edward Ring

What If Every Worker Made What City of Irvine Workers Make?

“Jennifer Muir, a spokeswoman for the Orange County Employees’ Association, which represents more than 18,000 public employees in Orange County, said the California Public Policy Center’s study was a politically motivated attack on public employees and unions.Aside from promoting the center’s anti-public employee union agenda, Muir said, the reports are misleading and shift focus away from the discussions that matter most. Union leaders have long urged for people to consider the possibility that private-industry employees are being undercompensated and should receive retirement benefits and health coverage.” Orange County Register, April 19, 2013

The study Muir refers to, entitled “Irvine, California – City Employee Compensation Analysis,” was published on April 8th, 2013, by the California Public Policy Center. To call this study“a politically motivated attack on public employees and unions,”as Muir alleges, is itself a distraction. It’s easy, and necessary, to impugn the motives behind information when the… Read More

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