Federalism · 5 posts
Lede Brief 3h ago

California's Governor Had the Authority. He Chose Inaction.

Genevieve Adaline Moreno was kidnapped, raped, and strangled in Nipomo, California, on the night of June 17, 1974. Her body was found the next morning in a grove of eucalyptus trees. Alberto Tamez Jr. was identified that same day — blood on his hands, debris from the crime scene on his clothing. He was convicted of first-degree murder, robbery, kidnapping, and rape by force, and sentenced in September 1974 to life with the possibility of parole.

The California Board of Parole Hearings granted Tamez parole on December 30. Governor Newsom, who held the constitutional authority to reverse that decision, declined to act. San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Dan Dow fought the release at every stage. Said Dow: "Genevieve Moreno deserved better. She deserved the full protection of justice, and it is my solemn obligation as District Attorney to ensure that her story is not forgotten."

The oath of office exists for moments exactly like this one. The republic's first duty to its citizens is the protection of the innocent — and when a governor has the power to honor that duty and walks away, the people are owed an explanation.

Source: New York Post RuleofLawExecutiveFederalism
Brief 17h ago

California Stuck Its Small Businesses With a $20 Billion Tab

While every other state used federal stimulus money to pay down its unemployment insurance debt, California spent it elsewhere — and now employers are eating the bill. California businesses will pay a 5.2% payroll tax, nearly nine times the rate in debt-free states, according to the California Business Roundtable.

Said State Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones: "Businesses that survived shutdowns, kept employees on payroll, and held their communities together will pay for Gavin Newsom's failures." California's Employment Development Department also paid out an estimated $20 billion in fraudulent unemployment claims during the pandemic — money gone, debt real, nobody held accountable.

Small businesses — 99.8% of all California businesses, supporting 7.6 million jobs — are first in line for the hit. Rob Lapsley of the California Business Roundtable warned the per-employee penalty could eventually top $400 if the debt isn't resolved. The tab got run up in the boardroom of state government. Main Street is being handed the check.

Source: New York Post EconomyAffordabilityFederalism
Brief 17h ago

Newsom Threw Out the Voters' Commission — Now the Map Unravels

California's Governor Gavin Newsom pushed Proposition 50 to dismantle the state's independent redistricting commission — a body created by voters precisely to keep partisan hands off the map — and spent hundreds of millions of dollars the state does not have to redraw congressional lines and eliminate Republican-held seats.

The gambit spread. Democrats backed a new Virginia map that would have flipped an evenly divided 6-to-5 congressional delegation into a 10-to-1 Democratic sweep. On Friday, Virginia's Supreme Court struck it down. Republican-run states that had held back then moved: Florida swiftly passed its own new map, projected to cost Democrats four additional seats.

The Founders designed Article I to make representation a compact between the people and their legislature — not a chessboard for a single party's presidential ambitions. When one faction tears up that compact to grab the board, the republic's answer has always been the same: the other side picks up pieces too, and everyone ends up worse off than when they started.

Source: New York Post RedistrictingFederalismArticleI
Brief 17h ago

LA County Wants a Billion More — With Zero Strings Attached

The LA County Board of Supervisors voted 4-1 to put Measure ER on the June 2026 ballot — a half-cent sales tax that would push rates past 10.25% countywide, the highest sales tax burden in the nation. The county projects $1 billion per year in new revenue, all flowing into the general fund with no legally binding restrictions, no independent audits, and no enforceable accountability.

Sound familiar? The city tried this play in 2022 with Measure ULA, the so-called mansion tax. Supporters promised up to $1 billion annually for housing. It pulled in $280–$350 million — and a Harvard, UC San Diego, and UC Irvine study found that between 63 and 138 percent of that revenue was wiped out by lost future property tax receipts. The tax may have cost the city money.

Said Aidan Chao, Chairman of the LA County Taxpayers Association: "You cannot ask families already paying over ten cents on the dollar and facing a cost-of-living crisis to hand another billion dollars annually to a general fund with no strings attached." A March poll put opposition at 47%. The boardroom always wants more. Working folks are done writing blank checks.

Source: New York Post EconomyAffordabilityFederalism
Brief 1d ago

Virginia's High Court Holds the Line on How Laws Are Made

The Virginia Supreme Court ruled 4-3 on Friday to void a redistricting referendum that would have redrawn the state's congressional map to a 10-1 Democratic tilt — overturning it before a single candidate filed under the new lines. The court found the legislature cast its first required vote on October 31, 2025, after early voting had already begun and 40 percent of ballots were already cast, violating the constitutional requirement that two separate legislative sessions — with an intervening election between them — must approve any amendment.

Said Justice Arthur Kelsey for the majority: "While the Commonwealth is free by its lights to do the right thing for the right reason, the Rule of Law requires that it be done the right way."

The constitutional order does not bend because the calendar is inconvenient. The Founders built procedural guardrails for exactly this reason — so that no faction, in any season of power, could rewrite the rules of self-governance on the fly. The 6-5 map holds.