California Policy Shifts: Immigration Enforcement Bills, Housing Funding Victory, and 2024 Gubernatorial Race Heat Up
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概要
The state legislature advanced controversial measures this week targeting immigration enforcement. On a party-line vote, California's Senate public safety committee passed legislation that would disqualify individuals who participated in federal immigration enforcement beginning January 20, 2025 from becoming local or state police officers. According to CalMatters, two similar bills also cleared the Assembly's public safety committee, with one authored in part by Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas that would ban current immigration agents from California police jobs. State Senator Dave George stated the bill recognizes that individuals who have participated in unlawful enforcement practices should not occupy roles of public trust in California.
In a legal setback for the Trump administration, California secured a victory regarding federal homelessness funding. The administration dropped its effort to change how federal homelessness funds are distributed to states. CalMatters reports the Trump administration had attempted to cap how much federal funds states could use toward permanent housing, sparking court battles with California, Santa Clara County, and San Francisco. Governor Newsom announced 145.4 million dollars in HHAP funding to help eight California regions reduce homelessness, underscoring the state's continued commitment to addressing the crisis.
Meanwhile, a federal appeals court rejected California's Vigilance Act requiring federal agents to wear identification. NBC4 News reports the Ninth Circuit Court blocked the state law, determining it appears to violate the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The gubernatorial race remains highly competitive with just months until November's general election. Six major candidates participated in a debate on April 22, featuring Steve Hilton, Chad Bianco, Tom Steyer, Katie Porter, Xavier Becerra, and Matt Mahan. NBC 7 San Diego reports the race for California's next governor has changed drastically over the past two weeks, with the contest remaining tight despite recent candidate shakeups. Early debate topics included whether candidates would eliminate the state's gas tax.
On infrastructure, Governor Newsom touted what the Modesto Bee describes as the biggest expansion of state parks in decades, with California adding three Central Valley state parks and plans for additional expansions announced on April 22.
Looking ahead, listeners should watch for continued legislative action on immigration enforcement policies, the ongoing gubernatorial campaign leading to November ballots, and developments in California's persistent housing and homelessness challenges.
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