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Politics

Wistful Speaker Looks Back, Defends Record

Assembly Speaker John Pérez (D-Los Angeles) meets with reporters in Sacramento Monday as the Assembly returns for its final weeks of session.
Ben Adler, Capital Public Radio
Assembly Speaker John Pérez (D-Los Angeles) meets with reporters in Sacramento Monday as the Assembly returns for its final weeks of session.

He was sworn in as California Assembly speaker when the state faced a $60 billion budget deficit. Four years later, Los Angeles Democrat John Pérez points to a surplus and wishes he didn’t have to leave.

Looking back over his tenure as speaker in an interview with Capital Public Radio, Pérez takes credit for helping turn the state budget around.

“Some say that the banks were too big to fail. California wasn’t too big to fail. And we had to take very tough decisions to make sure that California didn’t fail,” he says.

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And the speaker says his biggest regret is that term limits are forcing him from office just as the economy has turned the corner.

On this year’s budget, Pérez criticized progressive groups’ demands of an extra $5 billion for education, health and social services programs, calling that idea unrealistic and risky. He’s pressing for a “rainy day fund” constitutional amendment instead.

“It is not responsible to spend one-time money on ongoing expenditures. That’s what got us into the problem in the first place,” he says.

The speaker expressed support for Gov. Jerry Brown’s high-speed rail project. And he put the chances of the legislature sending a new water bond to voters this year at above 80 percent.

“The single most irresponsible act that a legislator could do would be refusing to take part in the process of creating a water bond that we could put on the ballot and earn the support of the voters,” he says.

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Asked if anyone at the Capitol was doing that right now, Pérez replied: “I think there are several people who have refused to engage in the conversation” but would not name names.

Finally, the speaker pushed back at the common criticism that his leadership style is heavy-handed – calling it an inaccurate assessment.

“I expect that everybody do their job, that people show up, that people engage in a deliberative process – and I do demand that of them. And so if it’s wrong to expect the members of the legislature to legislate and to deliberate, then count me as guilty.”

Pérez hands the speaker’s gavel to Majority Leader Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) one week from Monday – just as budget talks kick into full gear.