Prestige is overrated

Presented by Food & Water Action: Inside the Golden State political arena
Dec 18, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO California Playbook Newsletter Header

By Melanie Mason, Dustin Gardiner and Blake Jones

Presented by 

Food & Water Action

Jerry McNerney is pictured at a cook-off.

California state Sen. Jerry McNerney, a former Democratic congressmember, holds a BBQ rib cook-off in his Stockton-area district in September during his legislative campaign. | Melanie Mason/ POLITICO

This is the first in a series of Playbook conversations with California’s new class of state lawmakers.

THE BUZZ: MR. SMITH COMES HOME FROM WASHINGTON — State Sen. Jerry McNerney is the rare kind of Capitol rookie — one with nearly two decades of legislating under his belt.

Two years ago, after eight terms in Congress, McNerney, as he recounted at his swearing-in reception this month, “hung up his spurs [and] got a real job.” He landed a cushy perch as a senior policy adviser at Pillsbury, an international law firm.

But, to steal a phrase from Michael Corleone, just when he thought he was out, Susan Eggman pulled him back in. The outgoing Stockton-area senator made an eleventh-hour plea for McNerney to run, in hopes of blocking then-Assemblymember Carlos Villapudua’s abrupt bid for her seat.

There are plenty of ambitious lawmakers who see the statehouse as their stepping stone to serving in Washington. It’s more unusual for folks to move down the political hierarchy from a federal to state-level post. McNerney is among the small group of Californians who have jumped from Washington to Sacramento or even municipal offices. Former Rep. Laura Richardson joins McNerney as a freshman state senator, marking her second stint in Sacramento. Former Rep. Jackie Speier came out of retirement to successfully run this year for San Mateo County supervisor.

Sometimes the local gigs have more heft than those in D.C., such as when Mayor Karen Bass hopped from the House to Los Angeles City Hall, or Hilda Solis and Janice Hahn left a Cabinet post and Congress, respectively, to run for powerful Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors seats.

McNerney’s decision to seek a job that, as he acknowledges, has “less prestige” than his old one is a reflection of how much serving in Congress had become a slog. McNerney, who was first elected in 2006, said the rise of the Tea Party marked a sea change in how he viewed the job. Earlier in his tenure, he’d hold town halls with his constituents that were always well-attended and respectful. But in the Tea Party era, the public-facing parts of the job became far more unpleasant.

“You had to really have some police protection. You had to have a way to control the mob so you could speak and not be over-shouted … People would stand up in a town hall and call me names,” he told Playbook.

The path to policy-making heft was long and thankless, as well. The best way to exert influence on legislation in Congress is to chair a committee, but even after 12 years on the powerful House Energy and Commerce panel, McNerney still didn’t have the seniority to chair a subcommittee. When he was drawn into a more competitive district after redistricting in 2021, he opted against a no-room-for-error reelection campaign and decided to retire.

Leaving elected office was a bit of a shock, he said. Suddenly, there was no coterie of staff to coordinate his schedules on both coasts or to watch out for his best interests.

“Also, there’s clearly a bit of an ego thing going on” as an elected official, he said. “When you walk in a room, people notice you. Often they cheer or stand up, or people want to have their pictures with you. And that’s rewarding to a degree.”

What drew McNerney to forsake his private sector salary and rejoin public life, aside from the entreaties from Eggman, was a second-chance at the policy-making that was largely out of reach in D.C. He was influenced by former colleagues like Speier and Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, who told him their time in the Legislature was the highlight of their long political careers.

“He saw that he could actually get things done in Sacramento,” his wife, Mary McNerney, told Playbook. “It has been such a fight in Washington, it really has. To work so hard and you come home and go ‘ugh’ because all the things you’re working for don’t move forward.”

McNerney is carrying over some elements of his congressional tenure, including key staffers and his annual BBQ rib cook-off. (Ever the politician, McNerney himself doesn’t serve as a judge for the contest, lest he alienate any constituents).

But he recognizes that Sacramento will be a totally different beast than Washington. He’ll be one of 40 instead of one of 435. His party dominates the state Capitol, and policy is made here at a clip that far surpasses the Hill. McNerney is especially keen to work on artificial intelligence and fusion energy policy — two issues where California’s actions can have national or even international implications — and unlike in the cumbersome committee process in Washington, he has more agency in Sacramento to advance measures he cares about.

“I’m the master of my own legislation. That’s rewarding,” he said.

And McNerney said he’d be happy to mentor colleagues who are eyeing the traditional Sacramento-to-Washington pipeline.

“I’m looking forward to being the sort of wise older statesman in the crowd,” he said.

GOOD MORNING. Happy Wednesday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook.

You can text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as “CA Playbook” in your contacts. Or drop us a line at dgardiner@politico.com and bjones@politico.com, or on X — @DustinGardiner and @jonesblakej.

WHERE’S GAVIN? Nothing official announced.

 

A message from Food & Water Action:

Will Gov. Newsom side with the oil and gas industry or Californians after the “worst gas leak in US history?" In 2015, the Aliso Canyon Gas Storage Facility released 100,000 tons of methane and toxic chemicals, endangering public health. Governor Newsom vowed to shut down Aliso Canyon, but his Public Utilities Commission appointees voted to expand it. The PUC will decide Aliso Canyon’s future on December 19th. Learn more.

 
ON THE HILL

PELOSI’S ACCIDENT — New details emerged regarding Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s fall last week during a congressional trip to Luxembourg, which forced her to undergo hip replacement surgery.

“I was right next to her,” Rep. Michael McCaul, a Republican from Texas, told reporters on Tuesday. “She likes to wear high heels. Very high. She was on one of her last steps on this marble staircase that didn't have a railing. She lost her footing and fell to the ground. I immediately helped pick her up.”

McCaul, who was traveling with Pelosi as part of a delegation for the 80th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge, said the former speaker waited to pose for a picture with the group before being taken to the hospital.

In a photo from the trip, Pelosi can be seen next to McCaul, who’s gripping her hand to steady her. Pelosi, iconic for her fashion, is wearing a black pair of stilettos.

Jared Huffman speaks with reporters.

Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) speaks with reporters as he emerges from a House Democratic Caucus meeting during which he was elected to be ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee on Capitol Hill Dec. 17, 2024. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

SENIORITY CONTEST — California Democrats won’t wield any gavels as Republicans retake power in the House of Representatives. But at least two veteran delegation members will still hold influence through their senior posts on several powerful committees.

Highlights of the latest committee shuffles:

— Rep. Jared Huffman, from the North Coast, will be the ranking member on Natural Resources. Huffman, 60, replaces Arizona Rep. Raúl Grijalva, 76, as the most senior Democrat on the committee. After the vote, Huffman quipped about the generational change underway in Congress. “It's like the fountain of youth, we found it,” he told The New York Times.

— Rep. Maxine Waters, from south Los Angeles County, will remain the ranking member on Financial Services. Her spot was uncontested.

— But it wasn’t all wins for the delegation. Rep. Jim Costa, from the Central Valley, lost his bid to be the ranking member on Agriculture. Costa, despite having Pelosi’s strong backing, lost to Rep. Angie Craig from Minnesota.

 

You read POLITICO for trusted reporting. Now follow every twist of the lame duck session with Inside Congress. We track the committee meetings, hallway conversations, and leadership signals that show where crucial year-end deals are heading. Subscribe now.

 
 
NEWSOMLAND

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: GAME OFF — The Newsom administration pushed back on a proposal to allow landless Native American nations to establish off-reservation casinos, siding with tribes that already run gambling operations and don’t want regional competition.

Matthew Lee, a deputy legal affairs secretary for Newsom who advises him on tribal negotiations, wrote the Department of Interior expressing “grave concern” that the department might approve gaming projects for the Koi Nation and Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians in California and the Coquille Indian Tribe in Oregon.

Lee echoed criticism from California’s congressional delegation as well as Northern California tribes that have reservation land. Those tribal opponents have in many cases not been consulted about the project, he alleged.

“In its haste to rush forward with these projects, the Department has not yet done this important work,” Lee wrote, urging Interior “to reconsider its rush to judgment, and to take the time to listen to the tribal voices it has marginalized, before making any final decisions on these projects.”

A decision on the Koi nation’s proposal for Sonoma County could come soon, the Bureau of Indian Affairs green lighted the project last month.

“Each of these proposed projects are receiving appropriate review under the National Environmental Policy Act,” Josh Barnett, a spokesperson for Interior’s assistant secretary for Indian affairs Bryan Newland, previously told POLITICO’s E&E News for a story on the inter-tribe dispute.

 

A message from Food & Water Action:

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CLIMATE AND ENERGY

CRACKS IN THE MANTLE: An ongoing battle between Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration and progressive lawmakers over a nation-leading climate law threatens to undermine the state’s case for leading in the fight against global warming. Just as Donald Trump prepares to reenter the White House. Read more in last night's California Climate.

 

POLITICO Pro's unique analysis combines exclusive transition intelligence and data visualization to help you understand not just what's changing, but why it matters for your organization. Explore how POLITICO Pro will make a difference for you.

 
 
TOP TALKERS

— An Orange County judge on Tuesday granted Rep. Katie Porter a five-year restraining order against her ex-boyfriend. As POLITICO previously reported, Porter has alleged he caused “persistent abuse and harassment,” including sending her and her family and staff more than 1,000 text messages and emails.

Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel shouted out California Reps.-elect Derek Tran and George Whitesides as examples of Democrats whose “biographies conveyed authenticity,” a quality he said will be key for the party to prioritize as it plots a path back to power.

San Francisco Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie appointed Ned Segal, a former chief financial officer of X, to be his chief of housing and economic development, reports the San Francisco Chronicle’s J.D. Morris.

AROUND THE STATE

— A California law will take effect on Jan. 1 banning employers from espousing their views on politics, religion and unions at mandatory meetings. So too will laws allowing local governments to create “entertainment zones” free from open container laws, and allowing Amsterdam-style cannabis cafes to open in California. (CalMatters)

— Colonies of captive dogs continue to supply the majority of blood that California veterinarians use for canine transfusions, despite state legislative efforts to move away from that source. (Los Angeles Times)

— The Biden administration approved nearly $2 billion in state and federal funds that California will use to beef up its behavioral health workforce as states rush to get Medicaid programs accepted before Donald Trump takes over. (POLITICO Pro)

 

A message from Food & Water Action:

Will Gov. Newsom side with the oil and gas industry or Californians after the “worst gas leak in US history?" In 2015, the Aliso Canyon Gas Storage Facility released 100,000 tons of methane and toxic chemicals. SoCalGas’ disaster forced thousands to evacuate their homes to avoid further exposure to cancer-causing benzene and other chemicals.

SoCalGas took four months to seal the gas leak. Families near Aliso are still suffering the consequences. Instead of shutting it down like Gov. Newsom promised, the PUC allowed Aliso to expand by 3,000%, perpetuating the public health threat.

Over 150 organizations have come together to call for a shutdown of Aliso by 2027, but the PUC is considering kicking the can down the road instead of protecting communities. Gov. Newsom and allies should stand with families, not SoCalGas’ profits. On December 19th, the PUC will decide the future of Aliso Canyon. Learn more.

 
PLAYBOOKERS

PEOPLE MOVES — Aaron McLear, former VP of comms at Cruise, has joined the firm Bully Pulpit International as senior counsel.

BIRTHDAYS — Matthew Ceja of the South Coast Air Quality Management District … Nate Willard Jesse Suskin Emily Jane Fox (was Tuesday) ... Emilie Simons … Sony’s Christina MulvihillPaul Gordon Devon KearnsHeather King Jacy Reese Anthis 

(was Sunday): Lenny Young of Rep. Julia Brownley’s (D-Calif.) office … Jeff Le of SecurityScorecard … Julie Lazar Alison Omens … (was Saturday) ... Michael Ovitz Kalman ToppTrey Ditto … (was Friday): Lewis Wolff

WANT A SHOUT-OUT FEATURED? — Send us a birthday, career move or another special occasion to include in POLITICO’s California Playbook. You can now submit a shout-out using this Google form.

CALIFORNIA POLICY IS ALWAYS CHANGING: Know your next move. From Sacramento to Silicon Valley, POLITICO California Pro provides policy professionals with the in-depth reporting and tools they need to get ahead of policy trends and political developments shaping the Golden State. To learn more about the exclusive insight and analysis this subscriber-only service offers, click here.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO California has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Golden State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness amongst this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Rebecca Haase to find out how: rhaase@politico.com.

 

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