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CDP Legislative Committee: a clarification

by: Dante Atkins

Fri Aug 28, 2009 at 14:57:02 PM PDT


CDP inside baseball time.

I made a post earlier about the CDP Legislative Action Committee that I refuse to link to because it was that shoddy.  Essentially, the piece implied that there was a subcommittee meeting in Sacramento this upcoming Tuesday because John Hanna was unhappy with the way the Committee currently functions.

That's not at all true, and I apologize for the implication.  After further discussions with more of the people involved, I have come to realize that there are plenty of issues with the Legislative Action committee as it currently stands that need resolution, including, but not limited to:

Message consistency.  The Party already has two policy committees--platform and resolutions.  Should the Legislative Action committee be a third policy committee, or a legislative action "branch" of the other policy committees?  Should the Legislative Action committee only support bills for which it can find a precedent for party support in a resolution or in the Party Platform?

What types of bills?  Should the committee consider federal, state and local bills, or just state bills?

Gut-and-amend.  If the committee supports a bill that then gets gutted and amended in a legislative session, how can the Party's support of the bill be rescinded?

Propositions.  Should the LAEOC consider ballot measures?  Technically, props are legislation, but currently those decisions are handled by the Resolutions Committee.  There's some inconsistency there.

Those are some of the key issues, though there are plenty of other logistical issues involved as well--and in this, we haven't even discussed the "action" portion of the Legislative Action Committee's responsibility.  Bear in mind that I still stand by everything I wrote about John Hanna's solution to these problems--his emails do speak for themselves, after all--but it was severely wrong of me to imply that that's the only reason the Rules Committee was meeting on this topic.

If it were up to me, the Legislative Action committee would convene to decide a slate of key California bills (including propositions) the Party should support, in conjunction with the Resolutions and Rules Committee, and should then be tasked with developing a Legislative Action Plan to promote the passage of those bills.  If any of these bills were to be substantially gutted and amended, the Chair would have the discretion to rescind the Party's support.

Maybe I'll submit that as written testimony--even though I'm not any committees any more.

Dante Atkins :: CDP Legislative Committee: a clarification
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Even if you're not on a committee (0.00 / 0)
You should submit your testimony on this and any other issue that strikes your fancy.

JHotchkiss2
"Be yourself, everyone else is taken."Oscar Wilde


Legislative Action (0.00 / 0)
The Legislative Action committee should have wide scope to study and recommend support or opposition to both state and federal legislation that the members believe is of importance to the purposes and interests of the California Democratic Party.  The Resolutions committee does not deal with specific legislation and the final decision as to action, as with every committee falls to the full California State Central Committee or its Executive Board.

Absolutely agree (0.00 / 0)
The resolutions committee does sometimes submit resolutions to the body to support current legislation--at it did at the convention in April when it recommended support for the budget propositions.

But it does not regularly track and recommend support for legislation, but rather considers resolutions submitted to it on other matters.

I think most delegates hope resolutions that pass will impact legislators, though I have to say I have seen little evidence of that. I think they hope the same of the state party platform. But, again, I have my doubts--as do others. Both are a source of some frustration to many delegates.

Personally, I see a need for a separate committee to do track and evaluate legislation. It would be great to have a strategic plan to support important bills. And I think Dante raises a good point about bills that are substantially changed, and that there needs to be a mechanism to alter support and/or tactics on them.


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