CalMatters announced the publication of an analysis regarding the California Legislature’s proposed budget deal, emphasizing limited short-term actions on affordability and social services.
According to CalMatters, California legislative leaders have unveiled a state budget proposal aimed at addressing a projected $12 billion deficit. The proposal relies heavily on borrowing and internal fund shifts, avoiding the deep cuts initially proposed by Governor Gavin Newsom. The Legislature’s approach focuses on internal borrowing to maintain social services while postponing more challenging decisions. This strategy reflects an effort to prevent harm to vulnerable populations, though critics argue it delays necessary structural reforms.
CalMatters reports that the plan to address the budget deficit includes $7.8 billion in borrowing, $3.5 billion in cuts, and $1 billion in fund shifts and deferred payments. These measures are intended to address short-term fiscal gaps without implementing structural changes. The strategy indicates a preference for accounting maneuvers and delaying payments over immediate spending reductions. Critics have noted that such maneuvers—like slowing support payments and using special reserves—obscure the true fiscal situation.
As per AP News, while the Legislature rejected many of Newsom’s deeper cuts—particularly those affecting Medi-Cal, education, and reproductive health—they agreed to scale back enrollment for undocumented adults in Medi-Cal and implement premiums for some enrollees. The Legislature also opposed eliminating funding for reproductive health providers, preserving key services that Newsom had aimed to defund. However, action on homelessness has been delayed until fiscal year 2026-27, highlighting a tendency toward gradualism rather than immediate affordability relief.
CalMatters is a nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom founded in 2015 focusing exclusively on California state politics and policy. It aims to fill gaps in statehouse coverage by providing accessible journalism without paywalls to all Californians.



