Title: PS 103A: Professionalizing the California Legislature
1PS 103A Professionalizing the California
Legislature
- Californias voters
- 43 Democrats
- 34 Republicans
- 19 decline to state
- 56 of Latinos voted for Cruz Bustamante
2Professionalizing the California Legislature
- Artie Samish and His Amateurs
- Jesse Unruh and Professionalism
- Moving the 3rd House into the Speakers Office
- Defining Professionalism
- Evaluating the Reforms
3Artie Samish and His Amateurs
- "And how are you today, Mr. Legislature?"
Colliers Magazine, August, 1949.
4Artie Samish and His Amateurs
- Until his 1953 income tax evasion conviction,
Artie Samish claimed to be the Secret Boss of
California. -
- He represented the liquor industry, horse racing,
banks, chemical manufacturers, and
transportation. - Samish took payments from companies and turned
them into votes.
5Artie Samish and His Amateurs
- How Did the System Work?
- Select and Elect. Samish says that he mostly
selected likeminded candidates and helped them
win. - Campaign Contributions in exchange for influence.
- Shrimp Hour
6Artie Samish and His Amateurs
- What was the Legislature like circa 1950?
- Influenced by the third house, which dangled
answers and treats. - Possessed of less information and patience than
the full time executive branch. - Tilted in favor of rural interests.
7Artie Samish and His Amateurs
- Malapportionment Any drawing of legislative
districts that does not lead to equal populations
in districts. - Californias 80-member Assembly was loosely based
on population, but 40-member Senate went by
county lines. - 7 million voters vs. 29,000 voters.
- Outlawed by Baker v. Carr (1962)
8Jesse Unruh and Professionalism
- Elected to the Assembly from Los Angeles in 1954,
Unruh shifted power in the Legislature by - Moving the 3rd House to the Speakers office
- Professionalizing the Legislature through
Proposition 1A in 1966
9Jesse Unruh and ProfessionalismMoving the Third
House
- How Did the New System Work?
- Howard Ahmansons Home Savings and Loan Money
went to Unruh. - Big Daddy dispensed campaign funds, legislative
perks, and other goodies to those in need. - Legislators supported him for Speaker and his
interests
10Jesse Unruh and ProfessionalismProfessionalizatio
n
- As Speaker from 1961-68, Unruh professionalized
the Legislature - Staff More and more expert
- Salaries Enough to make it a career
- Session Length Full time.
11Jesse Unruh and ProfessionalismProfessionalizatio
n
12Jesse Unruh and ProfessionalismProfessionalizatio
n
- Proposition 1A in 1966
- Allowed the Legislature to set its own calendar
and salaries. - Passed by a 3-1 margin.
- Unruh also hired expert staffers so that the
Legislature could be independent of lobbyists and
the governor.
13Evaluating the Reforms
- The Benefits of Professionalism
- Made Legislature transformative. In contrast to a
parliament that rubber stamps cabinet requests,
it could change proposals and design bills of its
own - Expert staff made lobbyists less powerful
- Full-time members not tied to the whims or
special interest of a day job
14Evaluating the Reforms
- The Problems with Professionalism
- Power of incumbency grows with increased
resources, makes government less responsive - Special interests still wield power through
campaign contributions - Career politicians drawn from ranks of staff
and local office
15Evaluating the Reforms
16Discussion Questions
- Has the Californias Legislature come full circle
from the Artie Samish era to today? - Would you support an initiative to
deprofessionalize the legislature? Why or why
not?