A mid-air PR crisis for psychedelic advocates

From: POLITICO California Playbook - Thursday Oct 26,2023 12:57 pm
Presented by Amazon: Inside the Golden State political arena
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POLITICO California Playbook

By Dustin Gardiner and Lara Korte

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NEW YORK - AUGUST 24 : A Boeing 737-990 (ER) operated by Alaska Airlines takes off from JFK Airport on August 24, 2019 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

An off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot has been charged with 83 counts of attempted murder after authorities say he attempted to shut off a plane's engines in mid-air. | Getty Images

DRIVING THE DAY: Gov. Gavin Newsom is again in Beijing. Our colleague Blanca Begert is traveling with the governor during his tour. You can read her coverage in the California Climate newsletter.

THE BUZZ: TRIPPED UP — The effort to make California the third state to decriminalize magic mushrooms faces major headwinds after a harrowing incident on a plane headed to San Francisco.

The alarming incident happened just weeks after Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill that would have legalized the personal possession of some naturally-derived psychedelics, including mushrooms — turning what was already a risky cause into a much riskier proposition for a governor with national ambitions.

An off-duty pilot for Alaska Airlines tried to cut the engines of the flight earlier this week, after he said he had taken mushrooms and was struggling with depression.

Medical use of the hallucinogenic drug was the chief argument for the decriminalization push at the Capitol this year. But Newsom said California isn’t ready for decriminalization and vetoed the bill, angering progressive allies who have been working on new legislation since the veto.

Supporters of the bill have vowed to revive the fight, either through new legislation next year or a longshot November 2024 ballot measure to legalize mushrooms. But those efforts will face new complications following the averted catastrophe.

“This sets back the conversation about legalizing psychedelics in the state of California,” said Brian Marvel, president of the Peace Officers Research Association of California, an 80,000- member law enforcement organization that opposed the bill. “Do you really want people that are tripping on mushrooms driving cars?”

Newsom’s office declined to comment on the pilot incident. The governor wrote in his veto message that he killed the measure, Senate Bill 58, because it didn’t set enough treatment guardrails around dosing and underlying psychoses. Newsom asked lawmakers to send him a bill next year with therapeutic guidelines — signaling the governor is more interested in medicinal use than broader decriminalization.

State Sen. Scott Wiener, who wrote the bill, said he plans to introduce a new measure despite the incident with the Alaska Airlines pilot. “Anyone can abuse a substance — legal or illegal — and do something horrific,” he said. “This situation is an extreme outlier, and this guy should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

California would have been the third state to decriminalize psychedelics. In 2020, voters in Oregon approved a measure to legalize the therapeutic use of psilocybin. Colorado voters followed suit last year, legalizing the substance starting in 2024.

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

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WHERE’S GAVIN? In China. Follow along with him on the ground by signing up for our daily newsletter on how California’s response to climate change is shaping the future — across industry and government and across politics and policy.

 

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FRESH INK

In this Aug. 28, 2019, photo, Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez speaks at a labor rally.

Then-Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez speaks at a labor rally in 2019. | AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli

LABOR STANDARDS — Lorena Gonzalez has built a reputation as a no-exceptions union leader, but her recent decision to hire a corporate lobbyist to consult for the California Labor Federation has some labor allies accusing her of hypocrisy.

As our colleagues Christopher Cadelago and Melanie Mason report this morning, Gonzalez raised eyebrows last fall when she suggested a blacklist for consultants who run afoul of unions, arguing consultants can’t get paid to fight against workers and then expect to benefit from members’ money.

So, it came as a shock to some labor unions, when, earlier this year, Gonzalez quietly tapped her own longtime political strategist, one-time Willie Brown fixer Richie Ross, to formally consult for the Labor Federation.

Since then, no fewer than eight high-level people directly connected to the group and broader labor world have aired their discomfort with the arrangement to POLITICO. Several contend Gonzalez’s decision to hire Ross smacked of hypocrisy, arguing his past work opposing labor makes him a poster boy for any boycott members had contemplated.

“And she’s doing this as she’s vilifying everybody else in town about their lack of purity,” one high-profile labor leader said.

Gonzalez said in an interview that the Labor Federation has a formal process for placing consultants on its so-called “Do Not Patronize” list. If any of the unions want to put Ross on the list, she said, they can propose to do so.

“No one has done so,” Gonzalez added. She declined further comment.

Ross offered a three-word quote, in Spanish, to express how little the backlash mattered to him.

“No me importa,” he said.

Read more from Chris and Melanie about how the rift has riled the California labor community.

 

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Adam Schiff

U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) | Alex Wong/Getty Images

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: ISRAEL ALIGNED — The California Legislative Jewish Caucus has endorsed Rep. Adam Schiff in the race for U.S. Senate. Schiff, who is Jewish, has been one of Israel’s biggest defenders on Capitol Hill, especially during the conflict with Hamas.

Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel, co-chair of the caucus, said Schiff is outspoken in fighting antisemitism and has “stood strongly with the Jewish State during her most challenging moments.”

 

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A house overlooking San Francisco is pictured. | Getty Images

San Francisco | Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

HOMETOWN HECKLER — Newsom is making an example out of San Francisco.

The governor’s Department of Housing and Community Development issued a first-of-its-kind review of the city’s housing policies on Wednesday, blasting the local government for circumventing the state’s affordable housing laws and threatening to take away funding if the city doesn’t reverse course soon.

“California’s affordability crisis is one of our own making – the decisions we made limited the creation of housing we need. Nowhere is this fact more evident than in San Francisco,” Newsom said in a statement. “This report is an important first step to address the decades of issues that have held back San Francisco’s ability to build more housing.”

Facing a homelessness crisis, Newsom in recent years has turned up the pressure on local governments, going after cities for shirking their affordable housing obligations and demanding they show improvement or else risk losing state dollars.

But no other jurisdiction has received a dressing-down quite like the one given to SF on Wednesday.

“San Francisco has perfected the art of avoiding obligations under state housing laws by maneuvering around them through local rules that exploit loopholes and frustrate the intent of state housing laws,” the review said.

The report puts an uncomfortable spotlight on the city where Newsom once served as mayor, and underscores how the governor’s own political future is tied to San Francisco’s success — or its failure.

It’s been more than a decade since Newsom worked in City Hall, but as governor, he’s continually found himself intervening in municipal matters. This year he’s taken a keen interest in the fentanyl crisis, deploying state law enforcement and working with local officials on the issue.

The review is the product of an investigation from the state housing department and researchers at UC Berkeley, which found San Francisco has the longest timelines in the state for advancing a housing project.

In order to meet its housing needs, the review said, the city must add more than 10,000 housing units each year through 2031 — far more than the annual average of 4,076 homes reported over the last five years.

 

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WHAT WE'RE READING TODAY

ON THE RADAR: Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said Wednesday that police would step up patrols after a man was arrested on suspicion of breaking into a Jewish family’s home and threatening them. (POLITICO)

STEALING THE SHOW: Police were able to recover a truck with 500 puppets that was stolen from a nationally touring theater group in San Francisco's Marina District. Police recovered the U-Haul truck in Richmond early Wednesday. (San Francisco Chronicle)

 

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