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    How Toni Atkins made California history

     

    CalMatters

    Lynn La  LYNN LA JULY 7, 2023

    From CalMatters politics reporter Alexei Koseff:

    It wasn’t Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins’ first turn standing in for the governor of California while he was out of the state. (That came in 2014, when she was Assembly speaker and late-night host Jimmy Kimmel tried to get her to invade Oregon during her 10 hours in charge.)

    But the San Diego Democrat did break some new ground this time when she signed a trio of bills into law Thursday, becoming the first openly LGBTQ person to do so in California.

    “I’m thrilled to step into the governor’s shoes,” Atkins said during a brief ceremony at a legislative office building in downtown Sacramento, “though I have better shoes than him.”

    With Gov. Gavin Newsom on vacation/another political tour of red states and Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis visiting family in Greece, Atkins is momentarily in charge as acting governor. It is usually a blissfully quiet responsibility — although Kounalakis herself signed a last-minute measure to extend eviction protections last year, the first woman in California history to sign a bill into law.

    The legislation Atkins signed — dealing with the membership of a regional transit board and a local water agency, as well as Braille signage on motorized scooters — doesn’t have nearly the same urgent statewide implications. Rather, the Newsom administration, which famously loves to make history, was having fun with a longtime political ally.

    Atkins posed for photographs at the signing desk with her spouse, Jennifer LeSar, and one audience member compared her to former President Abraham Lincoln. It was an opportunity, Atkins said, for Californians to see the diversity of the state’s citizens reflected in positions of power and influence.

    “It’s long overdue, frankly, particularly for women to be in these roles,” she said. “It is important to be in these positions and to claim them.”

    The event, naturally, prompted speculation about whether Atkins might seek a more permanent tenure in the governor’s office when she terms out of the Senate in 2024.

    growing field of potential candidates is already eyeing the next gubernatorial race, which is three years away. While Atkins hasn’t announced any plans yet, like many California politicians, she has an open campaign account for lieutenant governor where she is raising money.

    “That’s a question for another day,” Atkins said, though she later acknowledged that she hopes to continue serving in elected office in some capacity. “I’m going to keep options open.”

    Legislative union: While Atkins was making history, history is being delayed on another front in the Capitol: A bill to allow the legislative staff to form a union was changed this week so it would not take effect until 2026.

    According to CalMatters’ state Capitol reporter Sameea Kamal, the bill’s author (and former legislative staffer), Assemblymember Tina McKinnor, agreed to the amendment, in consultation with Sen. Dave Cortese, chairperson of the Senate’s labor committee and a co-author on the bill. They did a “deep dive into what it would take to make this work,” and decided to delay its implementation date, McKinnor told Sameea on Thursday.

    • McKinnor: “I just think that we have to get this right, and it’s going to take time for staff to choose a union to represent them, and that part really takes a lot of time.”

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