Here’s what a Newsom veto


View of cars crossing the Bay Bridge, headed for San Francisco, on August 24, 2022. A photo by Carlos Baria, Reuters
The cars crossing the Bay Bridge headed for San Francisco on August 24, 2022. A photo by Carlos Baria, Reuters

In the Bulletin on Tuesday I mentioned Some of the new laws California will accept. Now let’s dig into what doesn’t overcome it along the governor’s desk.

At the end of this year’s legislative session, governor Gavin Newo imposed 123 of 917 bills sent to him – a little more no -more veto rate of 13.4% Compared to last year’s 15.7%.

One of the bills he fasted on Monday would have lifted the CAP car dealers that could charge To process a motor vehicle and other documents from $ 85 to $ 260, Calmatters’ Ryan Sabalow reports.

In his VetoThe governor said users could be charged “hundreds more in just minutes inserting data”, although there are no new state requirements and DMV processes are becoming more and more rational.

Read more hereS

NEWSOM also rejected a handful of accounts designed to expand the healthcare coverage such as those who would require health insurers to cover one year worth Recipe therapy for prescription; Menopause; and Behavioral health visits for victims of fireS In his veto messages, he repeatedly said, Facing with two -digit speed increases In their health premiums ”all over the country.

Other remarkable Newsom veto accounts:

  • Immigration raids and schools: Referring to “Significant Cost Pressure,” Newsom imposed a veto bill to allow schools to avoid protection due to a decline in the presence of “immigration implementation activity”. The bill was introduced in response to Federal Immigration attacks in January in Kern CountyS

Focus on the inner empire: Every Wednesday, a CalMatters Inland Empire reporter McGruna fence He studies great stories from this part of California. Read his newsletter and Sign up here To get it.

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  • San Jose: Join Calmatters and Alianza News on Friday for a screening of surgery: a return to Sender, a short documentary revealing what happened during a border patrol attack in Bakersfield. After the movie Sergio Olmos on Calmatters, they will discuss what the team has revealed. RegistrationS
  • Stockton: Listen from some of the candidates who run for governor of the candidate for the Governor of the Governor of the Economic Meeting of California on October 23. CalMatters, California Forward and Alliance of the 21st Century Host Calcus. RegistrationS


The collision on the measure to prevent the anti -Semitism of CA

A classroom, full of high school students, sits facing a whiteboard and predicts a slide entitled
Students in the California High School in California on March 1, 2022. Photo from Salgu Wismat for CalMatters

A Newsom bill approved was an extremely controversial measure intended to limit anti -Semitism in schools By limiting what teachers can mention and teach in classrooms. The bill has forced many democratic legislators to cope with the needs of Jewish communities, a key vote block, with the intense outrage of the growing propalist base, according to YEE Stella Yu and Michael Zinshtein.

After a few rounds of rewriting, Assembly Bill 715 Ultimately, it prohibits the use of professional development materials that violate the laws of anti -discrimination of the state. It also requires “actually accurate” instructions that are without “intercession, personal opinion, bias or guerrillas.”

By issuing warnings that the measure could censor free speech, some democratic legislators voted to accept the bill. Others abstained, including a member of the assembly Robert Garcia of Rancho Kukamonga, who said the bill “only intensifies the wider national trends for … Deleting historically significant curricula.”

The question was so controversial that when the bill arrived in June before the Senate Education Committee, it still had no significant language, Saint said. Sasha Renee PerezS The Democrat and Passada chairman added that some legislators told her either to leave him untouched, or to leave her on her to “take care of it.”

  • Perez: “My ball threw myself. And people knew they were doing it.”

Read more hereS

Kaiser sisters strike

A health officer wearing scrubs and a surgical hat speaks in a megaphone during a strike, surrounded by other demonstrators who hold signs that read the
Kaiser Permanent’s striking workers hold signs while marching in front of the Kaiser Permanent Oakland Medical Center in Auckland on October 14, 2025. A photo by Justin Sullivan, Getty Images

From the Health Reporter Kristen Hanging:

At 7 o’clock Tuesday, tens of thousands of Kaiser Permanent employees in California set off work, launching the biggest strike in the history of their union.

The Union – the Association of the United Nurse of California/Union of Health Specialists – represents 31,000 registered nurses, nurses, pharmacists and other healthcare professionals.

Many, holding umbrellas and signs, saying a “fair treaty now” stood outside the medical centers in the rain.

The shot that Kaiser called “unnecessary and destructive” will end on October 19th.

The controversies are salaries, benefits and staff levels. The Union wants a 25% increase in four years and limits how many patients’ suppliers see in one day.

  • Christopher PeredaLancaster’s practitioner: “The impact is about patient care, patient safety and Kaiser’s punishment to put patients over profit.”

Kaiser claims Union’s requests will force the company to increase patient premiums.

Twelve thousand workers in Oregon and Hawaii are also striking.

Finally: Sheriff of San Mateo County makes history

A Uniform Law enforcement officer speaks on the podium during a night press conference, holds a folder and stands in front of numerous microphones marked with the News Station logos. Several people, including officers and local employees, are behind listening.
San Mateo County Sheriff Corps spoke during a press conference in the midfielder of midfielder on January 23, 2023. Photo of Nhat V. Meyer, East Bay Times via Getty Images

On Tuesday, the Council of Supervisory Bodies of San Mateo County voted to break Sheriff Christina Korps from office – ending what he considers to be a “tragic, destructive and rudely expensive head” in the history of the county. This is the first time California has removed Sheriff from his post. Read more By Nigel Duara to Calmatters.



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Lyn La is a writer of a CalMatters newsletter, focusing on the best political, political and Capitol stories in California every weekday. It produces and treats Whatmatters, the flagship daily newsletter of Salmatters …

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