Conservative media outlets have distorted the views of California Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, according to a statement from his office. Anthony York, the governor’s communications director, set the record straight, saying that Newsom is open to the idea of delivering reparations to black Californians who are descendants of slaves, despite the sensationalized framing in outlets like Fox News.
The nine-person California Reparations Task Force recently proposed that the state apologize formally and provide financial compensation (up to $1.2 million) to black people who qualify. Despite his reservations about the committee’s proposed increase in pay, Newsom has praised their work in attempting to effect systemic change.
Newsom acknowledged the difficulty of addressing the legacy of slavery, stressing that it extends beyond simply cash settlements, in an interview with Fox News Digital. According to York, Newsom will study the final report with state legislators, and he still supports economic restitution.
Democrat and task force member Senator Steven Bradford acknowledged the political reality of reparations and voiced doubt that state lawmakers would approve them. He admired Newsom’s realism in considering the possibility that the anticipated payments would not be made.
After approving Assembly Bill 3121, which authorized a study into the viability of paying reparations to black Californians for wrongs committed before the state’s founding in 1850, Newsom established the task panel in 2020. The committee reached the verdict that the state legislature of California owes its residents an apology for the state’s role in major tragedies.
Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) argues that reparations are both ethically justifiable and have the capacity to correct long-standing inequalities in race representation in government.
After taking into account the number of years each person lived in California between 1971 and 2020, the task force estimates that black communities in California harmed by mass imprisonment and overpolicing during the War on Drugs may receive an approximate sum of $115,260 per person. Furthermore, it has been calculated that the annual cost of health disparities and discrimination is $13,619 per person, with a potential compensation of $148,099 for redlining activities between 1933 and 1977 and $145,847 representing the discrepancy in “housing wealth” between blacks and whites.
A black Californian in 2021 with a median age of death of 71 may earn as much as $1.2 million over the course of their lifetime, according to estimates by The New York Times and economists cited by The Associated Press. It is believed that California’s total reparations burden exceeds $800 billion, which is more than quadruple the state’s yearly budget.
Shortly before he announced his stance on the reparations idea, Newsom announced a state budget shortfall of about $31.5 billion, an increase of $9 billion over the budget he proposed in January.
The task force’s final report is due on July 1; if the legislature approves it, it will open the door for the establishment of a new state agency to oversee the program, establish eligibility requirements, and distribute funding.