The California Supreme Court is the only piece of government in the state that has any common sense left.— Andrew Pollack (@AndrewPollackFL) November 24, 2019
President Trump became a billionaire BEFORE he was elected.
California politicians like Nancy Pelosi became a millionaire AFTER she got elected.
https://t.co/iIc8wUgjub
Fox News
written by Andrew O'Reilly
Thursday November 21, 2019
The California Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a state law that would have required President Trump to release his tax returns in order to appear on the state’s primary ballot.
Justices in Sacramento said that the law – which required all candidates for president and governor to submit five years’ worth of personal income tax returns in order to be included on primary ballots – was unconstitutional.
“Whatever authority the Legislature may have in defining how presidential primaries are to occur in this state, the challenged sections of the act exceed such authority and are unenforceable,” California Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye wrote in the opinion.
Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, had signed the bill into law in July.
The state Republican Party and Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson challenged the bill, while the state has defended the law by arguing tax returns are a simple way for voters to weigh candidates’ financial status.
The ruling by the state’s highest court – which is a rare win for Trump in the Democratically controlled state – comes more than a month-and-a-half after a federal judge temporarily blocked the state law in response to a different lawsuit.
California Secretary of State Alex Padilla appealed the federal judge’s ruling, in a legal dispute that remains ongoing. The state court’s decision, however, means the tax return requirement cannot be enforced, even if it were found to be constitutional under federal law.
Jesse Melgar, the governor’s spokeswoman, previously told the Los Angeles Times that Newsom supported an appeal, adding: “States have a legal and moral duty to restore public confidence in government and ensure leaders seeking the highest offices meet minimal standards.”
The deadline for submitting tax returns to get on the primary ballot under the bill, though, is next week.
Under California’s so-called jungle primary system, all candidates, regardless of party, vie for the same elected office and the top two vote-getters move on to the general election. Since it was implemented in California in 2010, this system has often ensured a Democrat-vs.-Democrat general election battle in all but California’s most conservative areas.
— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) December 6, 2019
The Sacramento Bee
written by Bryan Anderson
Thursday November 21, 2019
President Donald Trump won’t have to release his tax returns to get on California’s 2020 primary ballot following a unanimous ruling from the state Supreme Court on Thursday that invalidated a new state law.
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 27 into law in July to compel presidential and gubernatorial candidates to release five years of tax returns to get on California’s primary ballot. Jessica Patterson, chairwoman of the Republican Party then sued the state.
The court ruled the added requirement for tax returns “is in conflict with the (state) constitution’s specification of an inclusive open presidential primary ballot.”
“This is a tremendous and convincing victory that defends the First Amendment and the right of people to associate and choose their own candidates for office,” Jay Sekulow, counsel to the president, said in a statement. “...This should put the matter to rest for good.”
Under California’s constitution, the state must administer an “open presidential primary whereby the candidates on the ballot are those found by the secretary of state to be recognized candidates throughout the nation or throughout California.”
Republicans arguing against California’s law claimed it would force “recognized candidates” off the ballot and discourage potential candidates from running for office, thus defying the constitution’s mandate for an “open” primary.
“Lawmakers didn’t even take into account the conflicts it may have with the state constitution,” Patterson said. “This is a pretty direct example that California Democrats here have been completely arrogant and their overreach knows no bounds. This was a solution in search of a problem.”
Patterson had worried fewer Republicans would show up for the primary if Trump weren’t at the top of the ticket, especially as Democrats appear fired up going into the 2020 primary, which the state had bumped up from June to March.
Under the state’s primary system, the two highest vote-getters could both be Democrats, which would prevent a Republican from advancing to the general election in down-ballot races.
“If we didn’t have our presumed nominee on the ballot in the 2020 primary, there would be Republicans that stayed home,” Patterson said.
Jesse Melgar, a spokesman for Newsom, said in a statement that the governor will “continue to fight against the self-dealing, conflicts of interest and blatant corruption that have pervaded the Trump presidency” and “urge all presidential candidates to voluntarily release their tax returns.” The administration believes the law will still apply to candidates running for governor.
The bill targeting Trump’s taxes came with a pressing deadline, and the Supreme Court’s decision provides clarity ahead of a key date. The law Newsom signed would have required those running for president to submit their tax returns to Secretary of State Alex Padilla by Nov. 26 in order to appear on the primary ballot.
With little time remaining until that deadline, California appears to have exhausted its most viable legal options to implement the law ahead of the March 3, 2020 primary election. The California Supreme Court ruling cannot be appealed.
“I would characterize this law as cremated, not just dead,” said Jessica Levinson, a professor at Loyola Law School. “There’s no chance of bringing it back. It’s not on life support. It’s gone.”
While she said she agrees with the idea that all presidential candidates should release their tax returns, she criticized the state’s decision to do so through a law. “California pushed its luck too much on this one. Is it good policy? Absolutely. Is it good law? Absolutely not. Not everything that’s beneficial should be mandated through a law.”
In September, a federal judge in Sacramento granted the Trump campaign’s request to temporarily halt the law, and the state appealed. Padilla announced on Thursday that he’ll dismiss the state’s appeal of that decision.
During oral arguments earlier this month, a majority of state Supreme Court justices grilled an attorney representing California.
Some justices questioned whether lawmakers considered the state constitution as it drafted the bill, while others worried it could pave the way for a “laundry list of requirements.”
“We’ve searched the record to determine whether or not the California Legislature even considered the California constitution in the drafting of SB 27. We didn’t find anything. Did you?” asked Chief Justice Tani Gorre Cantil-Sakauye.
The justices also highlighted arguments former Gov. Jerry Brown articulated when he vetoed a similar bill in 2017, saying such a proposal could set a “slippery slope precedent.”
“Where does it end?” added Justice Ming Chin. “Do we get all high school report cards?”
The state argued its law was simply a routine administrative step similar to that of a candidate filing fee. Advocates, including author state Sen. Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg, have said voters have a right to know whether presidential candidates have potential conflicts of interest, such as business relationships with foreign governments.
The decision from the California Supreme Court will reverberate through the 10 states that had similar bills to California’s at the time Newsom signed it. Proposals from other states sought to force Trump to release anywhere from one year to 10 years of tax returns in order to get on the primary ballot.
"Another Pelosi son married William Newsom’s daughter, Barbara. Until they divorced, that made Nancy Pelosi something like an aunt by marriage to Gavin Newson (Nancy Pelosi’s brother-in-law was Gavin Newsom’s uncle)."https://t.co/MT5guWLESW— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) October 9, 2019
4 Corrupt Families Of California ~ Newsom, Brown, Pelosi & Feinstein.https://t.co/JzVgrQQyMA— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) October 9, 2019
Nancy Pelosi doesn't practice what she preaches. Have you seen the disgusting living conditions in her California district?— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) December 2, 2019
Shouldn't her district be a posterboard for what she's selling us? Garbage needle filled neighborhoods are not protecting the planet, public health hazard.
One America News Network published Nov 27, 2019: Paul Pelosi, Jr. faces allegations of abuse, fraud. While the Ukraine scandal revealed the Biden family's ties to the country, the less-told story surrounding Paul Pelosi, Jr. is still unraveling on the sidelines. One America's Rachel Acenas caught up with journalist Patrick Howley, who has been covering the story of the House speaker's son.
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