In a recent op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle, death penal­ty schol­ar Franklin Zimring sug­gest­ed that the close (52 – 48%) vote in November on Californias Proposition 34 to end cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment means the repeal effort is far from over. Zimring, a law pro­fes­sor at the University of California, Berkeley, wrote, For decades, it has been assumed that the death penal­ty was the third rail of California pol­i­tics …. Measured against that rep­u­ta­tion, the nar­row­ly divid­ed elec­torate on Prop. 34 is quite a sur­prise.” He sug­gest­ed two tra­di­tion­al ways – oth­er than anoth­er ref­er­en­dum – that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment might be abol­ished. One way involves a find­ing by the courts that California’s law is uncon­sti­tu­tion­al: A fed­er­al court has been con­sid­er­ing whether the cur­rent California laun­dry list of aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances is too promis­cu­ous to meet min­i­mum con­sti­tu­tion­al stan­dards. If this cur­rent grab bag is struck down, the California Legislature then would have to con­sid­er whether and how to write a new death penal­ty statute. After courts struck down state statutes in New York and Massachusetts, the leg­is­la­tures of each state decid­ed the best course was no death penal­ty.” A sec­ond alter­na­tive would be for the gov­er­nor to declare a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions, fol­lowed at a lat­er time by com­plete abo­li­tion. Zimring con­clud­ed, Whatever the endgame for state exe­cu­tion in California, the saga of 2012’s Prop. 34 will have been an impor­tant step toward an out­come that now looks inevitable on the near hori­zon.” Read full op-ed below.

Endgame for death penal­ty in California; CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Prop. 34’s nar­row loss a big step toward abo­li­tion of execution

The elec­tion-night head­lines did­n’t seem cheer­ful for those ded­i­cat­ed to end­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in California. Proposition 34, the auda­cious attempt to use bal­lot ini­tia­tives to abol­ish the death penal­ty, was defeat­ed. The nar­row­ness of the final vote (52 – 48 %) was some con­so­la­tion, but this was in part the result of the lack of an ener­getic cam­paign by the state’s district attorneys.

And isn’t it folk wis­dom that close calls only count in horse­shoes? Don’t the anti-death-penal­ty par­ti­sans belong in the bal­lot ini­tia­tive loser’s brack­et for 2012 along with the food label­ers and union busters?

I don’t think so. A clos­er read­ing of both the 2012 elec­tion in California and of the cur­rent cir­cum­stances of the death penal­ty sug­gests that the endgame for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the Golden State is well under way. And, in the future, a his­to­ry of the end of California’s death penal­ty will give sub­stan­tial cred­it to the quixot­ic cru­sade of Prop. 34.

The thin mar­gin of Prop. 34’s defeat con­tra­dicts the con­ven­tion­al wis­dom about California pol­i­tics in ways that should per­ma­nent­ly alter polit­i­cal and judi­cial assump­tions about pub­lic atti­tudes. For decades, it has been assumed that the death penal­ty was the third rail of California pol­i­tics — demon­strat­ed by the 71 per­cent sup­port for the 1978 Briggs Amendment that cre­at­ed the cur­rent death penal­ty and majori­ties vot­ing to remove 3 state Supreme Court judges in 1986.

Measured against that rep­u­ta­tion, the nar­row­ly divid­ed elec­torate on Prop. 34 is quite a sur­prise. And this almost even divi­sion of vot­ers sends a sig­nal that the pub­lic will tol­er­ate judi­cial scruti­ny of the death penal­ty. Elected offi­cials who have assumed that tak­ing a stand against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was a high-risk ven­ture now know that the polit­i­cal price tag for moral lead­er­ship is much low­er in 2012 than it has been in a generation.

Rather than shoring up the polit­i­cal rep­u­ta­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, the 52 – 48 split over Prop. 34 recalls the joke about the board of direc­tors that passed a motion wish­ing the cor­po­ra­tion’s pres­i­dent a speedy recov­ery — by a vote of 4 to 3.

Political shift
The luke­warm sup­port for the death penal­ty comes in an elec­tion that also shift­ed polit­i­cal pow­er in the state toward peo­ple and groups that are the nat­ur­al ene­mies of state exe­cu­tion. Gov. Jerry Brown — a long­time oppo­nent of the death penal­ty — was pre­oc­cu­pied in 2012 with pass­ing his tax mea­sure, Prop. 30. The vic­to­ry of Prop. 30 makes him a much more pow­er­ful fig­ure in California pol­i­tics and pro­vides the oppor­tu­ni­ty to use some of his ener­gy and polit­i­cal cap­i­tal on death penalty reform.

The near-even divi­sion on Prop. 34 masks a deep con­sen­sus on one issue — every­body thinks the cur­rent sys­tem is a cat­a­stroph­ic mess. And both leg­isla­tive branch­es of California gov­ern­ment will enter 2013 with Democratic super­ma­jori­ties. This would not put cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment high on a leg­isla­tive agen­da if all those Democrats were ter­ri­fied that 75 % of the elec­torate would rebel if some­body touched the 3rd rail. But when the price of moral lead­er­ship goes down, the like­li­hood of leg­isla­tive respon­si­bil­i­ty goes up.

2 paths to reform
Does all this mean we should gear up for anoth­er round of ini­tia­tives on the death penal­ty? That might not be nec­es­sary or desir­able. The most like­ly paths to extract the Golden State from its cost­ly and mis­er­able death penal­ty dead­lock are 2 tra­di­tion­al mech­a­nisms used in oth­er demo­c­ra­t­ic nations and in states that recent­ly have abol­ished capital punishment.

One path out of the morass involves a com­bi­na­tion of judi­cial scruti­ny and leg­isla­tive action. A fed­er­al court has been con­sid­er­ing whether the cur­rent California laun­dry list of aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances is too promis­cu­ous to meet min­i­mum constitutional standards.

If this cur­rent grab bag is struck down, the California Legislature then would have to con­sid­er whether and how to write a new death penal­ty statute. After courts struck down state statutes in New York and Massachusetts, the leg­is­la­tures of each state decid­ed the best course was no death penal­ty. This sequence is not unlike­ly in the California of 2013 or 2014.

A 2nd route out of the cur­rent mess would be a for­mal exec­u­tive mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions. California has already gone more than 6 years with­out a state killing as a con­se­quence of pro­ce­dur­al prob­lems with meth­ods of exe­cu­tion. A brave and pow­er­ful gov­er­nor could take the ini­tia­tive of a for­mal 5‑year mora­to­ri­um near the end of his cur­rent term. Brown could make a his­toric ges­ture on a par with his Prop. 30 states­man­ship if he announced a mora­to­ri­um before run­ning for re-elec­tion, if he chose to do so. The mora­to­ri­um first, abo­li­tion lat­er” tech­nique was used in England, Australia and recent­ly in Illinois. For Brown to do this before stand­ing for re-elec­tion, how­ev­er, would be sin­gu­lar and historic.

Whatever the endgame for state exe­cu­tion in California, the saga of 2012’s Prop. 34 will have been an impor­tant step toward an out­come that now looks inevitable on the near hori­zon. The myth of the 3rd rail is dead. The death penal­ty itself can­not long survive.

-Franklin E. Zimring is a pro­fes­sor of law and the Wolfen Distinguished Scholar at UC Berkeley.

(F. Zimring, Endgame for death penal­ty in California; CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Prop. 34’s nar­row loss a big step toward abo­li­tion of exe­cu­tion,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 8, 2012). See Recent Legislation and Articles.

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