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Vice President-elect JD Vance is taking aim at California leadership as wildfires continue to rage in the southern part of the state, claiming "there is a serious lack of competent governance."
The speaker of the California State Assembly presides over the State Assembly. The lieutenant governor is the ex officio president of the Senate and may break a tied vote, and the president pro tempore of the California State Senate is elected by the majority party caucus. The Legislature meets in the California State Capitol in Sacramento.
California will have to spend $18 billion a year over the next decade to build the 1.2 million homes necessary to meet urgent housing needs. California leaders have not owned the scale or vastness ...
However, Rich Dad Poor Dad author Robert Kiyosaki harbors a bleak outlook for the state's future. “The problem is California is going broke,” he stated bluntly in a post on X. “California ...
The Big Five is an informal institution of California state government, consisting of the governor, the Assembly speaker, the Assembly minority leader, the Senate president pro tempore, and the Senate minority leader. Historically, members of the Big Five met in private to negotiate California's state government budget.
The California Budget Act of 1995 had required the Health and Welfare Agency Data Center (now the California Office of Systems Integration), in collaboration with the County Welfare Directors Association, to develop a plan to consolidate the systems to no more than four county consortia; ABX1 of 2011 required OSI to oversee the LRS contract and ...
There is, of course, a double standard If Democrats ever even considered conditioning aid to areas like western North Carolina, Florida, Georgia or Texas that have been hit by hurricanes, they ...
The Ralph M. Brown Act is a California law that guarantees the public's right to attend and participate in meetings of local legislative bodies. Located at California Government Code 54950 et seq., it is an act of the California State Legislature, authored by Assemblymember Ralph M. Brown and passed in 1953.