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Is California a Nation-State?

AENN

Gov. Gavin Newsom said he doesn’t mean “nation-state” literally.

But he’s proud of it.


But it’s far from new, William Deverell, a history professor at the University of
Southern California focusing on California and the West, told me.
California, of course, has always held a unique position within the United States
— and hasn’t been shy about it.


While California isn’t unusual among states in that its first residents were Native
Americans who were violently removed from their land by Europeans, its
geography and its long history under Spanish and Mexican control have made
California distinct.


Briefly, in 1846, a group of American settlers rebelled against Mexican
authorities and declared a “Republic of California.” In September 1850, California became a state.
“The historian in me wants to go back to the days of the Gold Rush, and the
notion that California was so far beyond the reaches of the union itself,” Mr.
Deverell said.

More recently, in the late 1960s, California pushed for many of the environmental
regulations that would eventually become federal law. And during the AIDS
crisis, Californians’ activism was far ahead of the federal government, he said.
Still, in the Trump era, the divide between California’s leaders and the federal
government has become wider and more explicit, and the response to the
pandemic has made it even more stark.


“The union is set up with this glorious tension,” Mr. Deverell said. Mr. Newsom’s
description of California as a nation-state is “a recognition of that tension, which
has been exacerbated in recent years by the blueness of California and the
redness of the administration.”

Still, the question of whether California is a nation-state doesn’t have a clear
answer, said Henry Brady, dean of the Goldman School of Public Policy at the
University of California, Berkeley.

Why Does Gov. Newsom Call California a Nation-State? – The New York Times 3/24/24, 2:39 PM
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