A couple of years ago, California’s left-leaning interest groups — those seeking a more expansive array of social and medical services to benefit workers and the state’s large population of low-income residents — seemed to be making a breakthrough after decades of frustration.

With Gov. Gavin Newsom bragging about a nearly $100 billion state budget surplus, progressive coalitions gained footholds on some long-sought priorities, such as medical coverage for undocumented immigrants, income supports for the working poor and more expansive care and education for preschool children.

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(2) comments

Terence Y

Another well-written and informative column, Mr. Walters. My takeaway is to pay special heed to requests for tax increases and vote NO. California has shown they’ll happily waste more money during alleged surpluses and then attempt another withdrawal from the tax-payer ATM.

Not So Common

Terrence, you hit it on the nose, if the deficit is 20%, they should simply cut all programs throughout California by 20%. That is the right way to approach the situation. I would actually cut it 25%, and take the extra 5% and set aside for another nightmare Democrat shortfall.

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