Newsom’s Claims He’s “Winning” in Court After String of Losses

Source:

A few days ago, Gavin Newsom made a startling claim. Asked about lawsuits filed against him, he said: “We’re winning.”

Having prevailed against the Governor in court, that came as a surprise. I actually had no idea what he was talking about, but to be honest that’s often the case. It appears that the state supreme court simply declined to review one petition from a county that hadn’t gone through the lower courts.

On the other hand, our victory over Newsom was finalized by the Superior Court on November 13, and the Court of Appeal spurned Newsom’s wish for an immediate reversal despite his hysterical assertion that the ruling “calls into question vast swaths of the State’s emergency response to COVID-19.” The higher court’s decision, which is still pending, could potentially result in an even greater loss for the Governor.

Newsom has had other recent losses. The U.S. Supreme Court called into doubt his restrictions on churches and has now demanded a response from him. Another court, in San Diego, ruled that “given every opportunity, the State has provided the Court with no evidence” to justify an outdoor dining ban, and the appeals court did not question that finding. Newsom also faces a flurry of new lawsuits just filed in the last few weeks, including one yesterday over youth sports.

But let’s pretend for a moment that Newsom was right, that he’s actually “winning.” Then who’s losing? Student-athletes, parents, small business owners, faith leaders, salon owners, restauranters – those are the plaintiffs in these cases. Newsom apparently views them as adversaries to be defeated, not constituents to be served. It betrays his attitude towards millions of Californians: one of antagonism.

I’ve never viewed our case against Newsom as about us winning or him losing. Neither law nor politics should be gladiatorial combat. The case is rather about redeeming our representative government. That’s the proper role of the court, incidentally: not to control our lives but to stop anyone else from doing so – to protect our personal freedoms as autonomous individuals and our collective freedom as a self-governing community.

I touched on this point in a speech yesterday to a large gathering of student-athletes at a “Let Them Play” rally. These kids are seeing everything that’s wrong with our government, but they’re also discovering their own power to make their voices heard. It’s so important that young people come out of this dark era not with a tolerance for authoritarianism but with an appreciation for its evils. They can help light the new spark of self-government we’re already seeing in the 1.3 million Recall signatures.

By the way, the Let Them Play resolution I introduced with James Gallagher now has dozens of coauthors from both parties in the Legislature.

Finally, it certainly feels like I’ve aged more than one year since last January 30. If I could ask you for one birthday wish, it would be to mail in another page of Recall signatures! That will help make this next year a whole lot better.

Donate

Share on Facebook

To receive updates from Kevin Kiley, signup directly through his website here (form at the bottom): https://blog.electkevinkiley.com.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Follow Kevin Kiley on:

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments