Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Gov. Newsom’s Orwellian plan to ‘penalize’ the oil companies

- Jon Coupal Columnist

The 1970s were a long time ago. It might be hard to imagine, or remember, what it was like back then. So, I’ll paint you a picture: Inflation was skyrocketi­ng, costs were soaring, Iran was in turmoil and the United States was in proxy war with Russia over the latter’s invasion of a neighborin­g nation.

Now that I think about it, I guess it isn’t so hard to imagine. The 2020s have a lot in common with the 1970s. So, here’s another blast from the Disco-laden past that’s apparently making a comeback: Price controls.

The state Legislatur­e reconvened last week for the 20232024 session. It also convened a special session to go after oil and gas companies for what the governor calls “price gouging.” The special session only lasted about three minutes, the members voted to reconvene it in January where it will apparently run “concurrent­ly” with the regular session (proving it to be the election stunt we knew it was), but it did give Gov. Gavin Newsom the cover to introduce his proposal to the Legislatur­e.

The governor’s proposal would impose a “maximum gross gasoline refining margin” of a yet-to-be-determined number of cents per gallon. If a refiner exceeds the margin, the California Energy Commission can impose a civil penalty that will be deposited into the “Price Gouging Penalty Fund” that will supposedly refund the money back to consumers.

There are a lot of issues with this proposal, the first of which is that price controls simply don’t work. It’s basic economics. As David R. Henderson, a research fellow with the Hoover Institutio­n, wrote just this year, “prices are an indicator of underlying economic phenomena, namely supply and demand.”

Without price balancing supply and demand, buyers will demand more than they did at the free-market price and sellers will supply less. But we don’t need an economist to tell

us that, the 1970s proved it. Price controls led to shortages and rationing, a greater dependence on foreign oil and, ironically, higher prices.

There is also a question of whether this “civil penalty” is, in fact, a tax. When Newsom first introduced the idea in October, he referred to his proposal several times as a “windfall tax.” But somewhere between then and when he unveiled his proposal last week, his tax had become a “penalty.” The reason for this is clear: thanks to Propositio­n 13, any tax increase must be approved by two-thirds of the Legislatur­e.

Even with Democratic supermajor­ities in both houses, getting two-thirds of them to sign on to such a radical proposal was going to be a tough sell. Many that represent oiland gas-producing areas, like in the Central Valley and along the Central Coast, have seen their districts grow more competitiv­e, and killing good-paying jobs doesn’t win you votes.

A penalty, however, only requires a simple majority vote to pass. That would give Democrats

in tougher districts room to sit this one out. But then calling it a penalty for the sake of political expediency doesn’t make it one. In 2010, taxpayer advocates joined with the business community to put Propositio­n 26 on the ballot specifical­ly to address the abuse of tax hikes disguised as other forms of government exactions.

In order to qualify as exempt, Newsom’s “penalty” would have to be adjudicate­d to be a “fine, penalty, or other monetary charge imposed by the judicial branch of government or the State, as a result of a violation of law.” Whether the tax could survive a legal challenge may be up to the courts.

But even if it survives a legal challenge, what the governor is attempting is frightenin­g and worse than a political stunt.

The governor who presides over the fourth largest economy in the world is trying to give government the power to decide whether profits from free enterprise are excessive, and to declare those profits “a violation of law.”

If this gets through the Legislatur­e, it won’t stop with oil companies. California could declare “excessive” profits in any business, from health care to supermarke­ts to car dealership­s, and give itself the power to redistribu­te the money through “civil penalties.”

That policy would be perfectly at home in the old Soviet Russia, but it has no place in California.

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 ?? JOSÉ LUIS VILLEGAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom walks through the assembly chamber with California Controller Malia Cohen during the opening session of the California Legislatur­e in Sacramento on Monday. The legislatur­e returned to work on Monday to swear in new members and elect leaders for the upcoming session.
JOSÉ LUIS VILLEGAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Gavin Newsom walks through the assembly chamber with California Controller Malia Cohen during the opening session of the California Legislatur­e in Sacramento on Monday. The legislatur­e returned to work on Monday to swear in new members and elect leaders for the upcoming session.

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