Gropers are shit scared of him....lol

Senator Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles), President pro Tempore of the California 
State Senate, has proven to be a tenacious leader that takes on powerful 
special interests on behalf of his diverse district and those marginalized in 
California’s economy.

With a focus on using the public-policy process to empower the least fortunate 
and voiceless, he has led a bold agenda to increase economic opportunity for 
all Californians focused on education, equity for women, immigrants and 
low-wage workers, public safety, and strongly maintaining the state’s 
leadership in building a clean-energy economy that benefits everyone.

Senator de León has authored groundbreaking legislation on a variety of issues 
that have become national models and exemplify his ambitious approach to 
policymaking. He employs this today as he leads the upper house in California’s 
legislature, making real progress on critical issues that stands in stark 
contrast to the U.S. Congress which stays mired in gridlock.

De León served four years in the Assembly before his election to the Senate in 
2010. He is the first person in California history to serve as the Chair of the 
Appropriations committees in both the Assembly and Senate. In 2014 he became 
the first Latino elected leader of the Senate in over a century. He was the 
first in his family to graduate from high school, later earning a degree with 
honors from Pitzer College. He is a Rodel Fellow at the Aspen Institute and a 
guest lecturer at the University of Southern California.

Leader on the Environment and Clean Energy

Last year, De León championed sweeping new standards that double energy 
efficiency in buildings statewide and set the largest state in the union on a 
path to generate half of its electricity from renewable sources, all by 2030. 
The debate over de Leon’s SB 350, the most far-reaching climate legislation in 
the country, created a serious public discussion on how to adequately address 
climate change and severe pollution while creating equitable access to clean 
energy.

Along these lines, De León has successfully directed more clean-energy 
investments to disadvantaged communities. His SB 535 (2012) requires the 
California Air Resources Board to spend at least 25 percent of cap-and-trade 
revenue to benefit low-income communities across California disproportionately 
impacted by pollution. This law is resulting in new transit, energy efficiency, 
renewable energy and affordable housing projects across the state.

With SB 1275, he created a rebate initiative to make electric cars more 
accessible to working families with the goal of placing one million 
low-emission vehicles on the roads.

In 2012, De León co-chaired the successful Proposition 39 campaign closing a 
corporate-tax loophole and creating a $2.5 billion revenue fund for 
energy-efficiency upgrades in schools.

Exemplifying his longtime commitment to increasing access to the environment, 
de León’s first legislative measure when he arrived in Sacramento allocated 
park funds for communities lacking parks and green space, resulting in 126 park 
projects across the state - the largest initiative of its kind in the nation.

Tackling pollution in his district, de León was instrumental in bring attention 
and accountability to the hazardous pollution caused by the Exide battery 
recycling plant in Vernon, which for years had operated illegally while 
contaminating nearby communities with lead, arsenic, and other toxins. de León 
has since secured millions of dollars for cleanup, while implementing oversight 
and reform measures at the Department of Toxic Substance Control to prevent 
similar future occurrences.

Senator de León’s record on the environment and energy has been studied by 
international leaders as they lay out their own steps to confront climate 
change and build clean-energy economies. Senator de León led the California 
delegation to the U.N. Climate Talks in Peru and Morocco and accompanied 
Governor Brown to Paris in 2015 to showcase California’s landmark 
accomplishments.

Public Safety

Throughout his tenure in the legislature, De León has fought for sensible gun 
control. This year, he led the charge for the most stringent gun control 
policies in a generation, leading efforts to approve 11 measures, including his 
groundbreaking bill, SB 1235, which requires background checks for anyone who 
buys or sells ammunition. Governor Brown signed the bulk of the measures into 
law in early July 2016.

Voice for the Working Class

Senator de León negotiated with Governor Jerry Brown and the state’s unions to 
secure a $15 minimum wage in California, and then shepherded the legislation 
through both houses to the Governor’s desk. He fought to ensure the legislation 
was comprehensive and universal, opposing industry-specific and regional 
carve-outs that would have weakened the law.

Senator de León overcame powerful opposition from Wall Street to pass SB 1234 
which created Secure Choice retirement-savings program for California’s 
private-sector low-income workers. Secure Choice is the first automatic IRA 
program of its kind in the nation and de León has worked with the White House 
and Labor Secretary to remove any federal legal barriers that could prevent 
California and other states that followed from fully implementing their 
programs.

Senator de León has also authored workers’ compensation reform that lowered 
insurance costs for businesses, while increasing workers’ benefits. De León 
also authored legislation that strengthens the Labor Commissioner’s authority 
in tackling the scourge of wage theft in cities across California - especially 
Los Angeles which has been dubbed the “Wage Theft Capital of the U.S.”

De León also negotiated the expansion of California’s Film and Television Tax 
Credit Program, replacing the program’s lottery system with a process that 
quantifies job creation and economic benefits to the state’s economy.

At the start of his Senate career, De León led efforts that cleaned out corrupt 
governance in the city of Vernon and put in motion political reforms that have 
since created a real community and good neighbor to Los Angeles.

Leader on Immigration

Senator de León is a leading international voice on immigrant rights and 
proudly represents a district comprised of many different cultures and 
ethnicities. During his time in the legislature, he has facilitated numbers of 
immigration reform laws that together have been recognized as a model for the 
nation. In 2013, de León brokered a compromise with Governor Jerry Brown to 
ensure signage of a law which allowed undocumented immigrants to obtain drivers 
licenses, gain access to insurance, and step out of the shadow economy.

This year, he led a bicameral coalition to sponsor legislation that addresses 
lapses in our justice and labor systems creating serious challenges for the 
California’s immigrant community, including stronger wage theft laws, securing 
u-visas from law enforcement, and providing healthcare for undocumented 
children. Before joining the Legislature, De León taught citizenship courses to 
immigrants and led opposition to 1994’s Proposition 187, a voter-approved 
statewide initiative that denied government services to undocumented immigrants.

Women’s Advocate

In 2014, his bill to prevent sexual assault on college campuses was first law 
in the nation to require affirmative consent, earning him the recognition from 
Marie Claire last year as one of the “ten biggest supporters of women’s right 
in U.S. government.” Ms. Magazine selected his “yes means yes” measure as the 
most significant legislative victory on behalf of women for 2014.

This year, he followed up with legislation that requires public high schools 
teaching health education classes to include sexual assault prevention in their 
curricula.  He also authored legislation this year that would make significant 
investments in child care with a focus on empowering women in the workforce. 
The state budget resulted with new funding for thousands of more slots for 
subsidized child care.

Running the Senate

In his two years leading the Senate, de León has empowered his caucus members 
to take on big and bold legislation that truly shape the policy conversation in 
the nation. The Senate continues to prove why California’s legislature is the 
nation’s R&D center for common-sense and forward-thinking policies (Read full 
Senate Democrats accomplishments here and here). Senator de León also 
strengthened the Senate’s oversight functions with an unprecedented amount of 
hearings on the operations, effectiveness, and failures of government 
departments, agencies, and programs. To increase transparency and public 
participation in the legislative process, de León implemented video of all 
hearings to be livestreamed and archived online for the first time.

Negotiating the Budget

In two years serving as the Senate’s lead in negotiating the budget, De León 
has secured critical investments that strengthen the bookends of a student’s 
educational career, pushing for new investments in childcare and higher 
education. Under Senator de León’s leadership, California has added over 20,000 
additional slots for California students in the University of California and 
the California State University. In 2016, he also championed the “No Place Like 
Home” initiative, an innovative and ambitious proposal to address homelessness 
in California by securing $2 billion in bond financing for construction and 
rehabilitation of permanent supportive housing for chronically homeless 
Californians suffering from mental illness. Both budgets during his tenure as 
Senate leader have been delivered on time, provided protective reserves, payed 
down debt, provided relief funding for the drought, and wisely invested in 
children and working families.

Appointments

As leader of the Senate, Pro Tem De Leόn also serves as Chair of the Rules 
Committee, which is responsible for the vetting of Governor’s appointments that 
are subject to confirmation by the Senate. This role also provides additional 
opportunity for the oversight of Administration activities, as the confirmation 
process allows for the review and evaluation of state agencies, departments, 
and boards and commissions.

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