October 2, 2003 - www.wsws.org
California Governor Gray Davis and the Politics of Law and
Order
By Shannon Jones
The right-wing character of the administration of Gray Davis,
who faces an October 7 recall election, is underscored by the
Democratic governor's close links to California's huge prison
and law enforcement apparatus.
Despite California's $38 billion budget deficit, the prison
system escaped with only a tiny overall reduction in funding
in the recently approved state budget. The corrections budget
included $160 million for a new department headquarters and $220
million for a new death row unit at San Quentin prison.
Davis's 2003-04 budget also maintained funds for a new maximum
security prison in Delano, now set to open in 2005. Cuts in the
prison budget were almost all in the area of prisoner welfare
and rehabilitation, including a reduction in funding for literacy
and vocational programs and the elimination of 500 substance
abuse treatment beds.
The same budget included a large pay increase for prison guards,
while other state employees, such as college teachers and health
care workers, took layoffs and pay freezes. Under the terms of
the new compensation agreement, by 2006 the average pay of a
prison guard will be three times that of a starting public school
teacher.
The fact that Davis insists on expanding the state's prison
system under conditions of a virtual financial meltdown says
a great deal about the social base upon which his administration
rests. It is also a telling exposure of the Democratic Party,
which has systematically adapted itself to the program of the
Republican right, abandoning its previous connection to policies
of liberal reform and competing with its rival big business party
for the mantle of law-and-order "toughness."
The 2003-2004 California budget allocates some $5.2 billion
for the prisons. By comparison, California community colleges
will get $4.4 billion and the University of California system
just $2.9 billion. A total of only $14 billion is allocated for
health care, under conditions where more than 7 million Californians
lack health insurance.
The growth of California's prison population has been astounding,
even by US standards. In 1976 California had just 19,600 inmates
and it spent six times more on higher education than prisons.
Since 1980 California has built 23 prisons and only one new
university. California currently incarcerates more than 160,000people.
Its prison system is the third largest in the world behind China
and the United States as a whole. More people are held in jail
in California than in France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands
and Singapore combined. More young black and Latino men are in
prison than are attending college.
Cheap Labor
The Davis administration has sought to give corporations access
to California prisons as a source of cheap labor. The state allows
companies to set up operations behind prison walls and offers
them tax incentives and lower workers compensation charges. It
also permits them to forego payment of sick leave and retirement,
vacation and medical benefits.
A notice on the State of California web site extols the benefits
of inmate labor, declaring: "The California Department of
Corrections' Joint Venture Programs are located in over 30 California
prisons and provide a unique opportunity for today's progressive
business leaders. The Joint Venture Program offers an untapped
labor market for you, the employer, and serves as a link between
qualified businesses and highly motivated inmate employees. Businesses
can set up operations inside California State Prisons and hire
inmates at competitive wages."
The claim that this program of forced prison labor in some
way helps prepare inmates for life on the outside is dispelled
by an examination of figures on recidivism. A higher percentage
of prison inmates, once released, returns to jail in Californiathan
in any other US state. According to one study, 58 to 62 percent
of the state's parolees return to prison within two years. The
national average is a 10 to 15 percent return rate over three
to five years.
One of the reasons for the high recidivism rate in California
is the exceptionally brutal regime in the state's prisons, which
is geared to humiliating and degrading prisoners, not at rehabilitating
them. This is exemplified by conditions at Corcoran State Prison.
In a six-year period between 1989 and 1995, guards at Corcoran
shot more than forty prisoners, killing seven. In 1998 California
investigated allegations that prison guards at Corcoran set up
gladiator-style fights between prisoners, pitting rival gangs
against each other as a form of entertainment.
Eight guards were eventually brought to trial. The refusal
of fellow guards to testify against the defendants, which led
to their acquittal, provoked Amnesty International to accuse
authorities of abetting a cover-up. The human rights group wrote:
"The shootings during the period of the gladiator fights
raise serious questions about the failure to ensure a safe environment
for inmates and staff and about the use of lethal force on prisoners."
It noted that between 1988 and 1994 more prisoners were shot
by guards in California than in the rest of the country.
In his campaigns for governor in 1998 and 2002 Davis received
$3.4 million in donations from the California Correctional Peace
Officers Association (CCPOA), including a check last year for
$251,000-the largest single contribution he has ever received
from an organization.
In his 2000 election campaign Davis boasted that he funded
all grades of law enforcement at the highest levels ever. In
addition to the prison guards, Davis won the endorsement of almost
every major police organization, including the California Highway
Patrol and the Los Angeles Police Protective League, whose members
have been the subject of a series of high-profile corruption
and police brutality prosecutions.
The law-and-order policies of the Davis administration orient
it toward some of the most backward and reactionary social elements,
which in turn form a crucial base of support. At the same time
Davis and the Democratic Party as a whole have increasingly alienated
the Democrats' traditional base among workers, the poor, minorities
and immigrants.
Davis has essentially continued the reactionary law-and-order
policies of his predecessor, Pete Wilson, a Republican who oversaw
a vast expansion of the prisons. The numbers held in California
penitentiaries grew by some 60 percent during Wilson's two terms
in office.
California resumed capital punishment in 1992 after a 25-year
moratorium, and Davis has overseen several executions.
The "three strikes law and you're out" law-which
mandates sentences of 25 years to life for all three-time felons,
even those convicted of nonviolent and petty offenses-has led
to a large influx of long-term prisoners. This, combined with
the wholesale jailing of sellers and users of drugs, during the
1990s gave California the fastest growing prison population in
the United States.
In California, reportedly 50 percent of third strikes are
for minor offenses. In one well-publicized case, a man received
a 25-year to life sentence for stealing a bottle of vitamins.
The US Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal. In another case,
a homeless man received a 25-year to life sentence for trying
to steal food.
The two Republican replacement candidates in the special recall
election-film actor Arnold Schwarzenegger and State Senator Tom
McClintock-who are baying for further budget cuts, have not suggested
any reductions in the prison budget. Nor has the major Democratic
replacement candidate, Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante.
Davis and Bustamante as well as McClintock and Schwarzenegger
support the continuation of the three-strikes law, aptly described
by advocates of prison reform as a job security program for prison
guards.
Meanwhile, Davis has overruled the state parole board in more
than 200 cases, denying release to prisoners deemed to be no
longer a threat to society. His refusal to grant parole to women
convicted of killing abusive spouses prompted an appeal by prisoner
rights groups to the California Supreme Court.
The malignant growth of the prison system in California and
the US as a whole is an expression of a social order in deep
crisis, one that is capable of only the most reactionary and
repressive responses to social problems such as poverty, deteriorating
education, lack of affordable housing and lack of access to health
care.
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